London police investigating two instances of gunshots in the city
London police are investigating two separate incidents where shots were fired early Tuesday morning.

London police are investigating two separate incidents where shots were fired early Tuesday morning.
The Middlesex-London Health Unit saw tremendous response after opening up vaccinations to area residents over the age of 80.
Southwestern Public Health (SWPH) is getting set to start putting needles in arms by the middle of March.
Some colourful new Canada Post trucks will soon be zipping around cities across Canada.
With many regions still facing COVID-19 restrictions, people itching to go on vacation are wondering what options they do have for some safe summer fun.
Just a month into retirement from the Royal Canadian Navy, David Lewis knew he needed to find a new career.
A pair of recent studies looking at how health-care workers are navigating the second wave of the COVID-19 pandemic show rising anxiety.
A new national study conducted by Mental Health Research Canada has found COVID-19 is having a big impact on stress, anxiety and depression among Canadians.
The story of Desmond Ryan is the story of a crime fighter turned crime writer.
The province is providing more than $550,000 to help create affordable housing for Indigenous mothers and their children in the Sault.
Starting Monday, some seniors in York Region and Hamilton will be able to start booking appointments for the COVID-19 vaccine.
B.C.’s paramedics union says staffing levels across the province are now 'critical,' causing ambulances to sit empty and wait times to balloon.
Albertans aged 65 or older will not receive the newly approved AstraZeneca vaccine following new advice from a national advisory committee on who should and shouldn’t get the shot.
Quebec cancer specialists are asking the province to bump their patients up in the priority lineup, not just soon, but now, getting shots alongside the elderly.
Calling it 'disgusting behaviour' that needs to be 'denounced strongly' Mayor Naheed Nenshi called out anti-lockdown protesters who carried tiki torches through downtown Calgary over the weekend.
A Toronto photographer is working with Ugandan girls to preserve their history in pictures.
A Toronto man says he found hundreds of his grandparents' touching love letters from the Second World War.
Watch as an almost 2-year-old condor is released back into the wild in Utah after being treated for lead poisoning.
More than 50 dogs were rescued from Texas and await a new home in Toronto, after a historic snowstorm pummeled the state.
Ontario is reporting fewer than 1,000 new COVID-19 cases for the first time in a week.
A small new study out of Italy found that children as young as four months old did not experience any respiratory change as a result of wearing a surgical mask, raising questions about mask advice for young children.
Albertans aged 65 or older will not receive the newly approved AstraZeneca vaccine following new advice from a national advisory committee on who should and shouldn’t get the shot.
The Canadian economy posted its worst showing on record in 2020 as the COVID-19 pandemic swept across the country, shutting down businesses and putting millions out of work.
March is fraud prevention month and on CTVNews.ca, financial commentator Pattie Lovett-Reid highlights the 5 most popular scams Canadians are falling victim to during the COVID-19 pandemic.
The de facto U.S. and Canadian embassies in Taiwan have praised the quality of pineapples grown on the island, depicting photographs of their top diplomats in Taipei with the fruit after an import ban by China.
The time between first and second COVID-19 vaccine doses will be extended again, B.C. health officials announced Monday.
An Ontario woman who went overseas to attend her father's funeral says she feels gouged by the government's 'ill-conceived' hotel quarantine plan that cost her $3,458 for a one-night stay.
Six Dr. Seuss books -- including 'And to Think That I Saw It on Mulberry Street' and 'If I Ran the Zoo' -- will stop being published because of racist and insensitive imagery, the business that preserves and protects the author's legacy said Tuesday.
Manitoba health officials say people aged 95 and up and First Nations adults aged 75 and up can apply to be vaccinated.