2006 in Canada

Incumbents

Crown

Federal government

Provincial governments

Lieutenant governors

Premiers

Territorial governments

Commissioners

Premiers

Events

January to March

April to June

  • April 16 – Hunter Jim Martell kills a Grizzly-polar bear hybrid on Banks Island in the Northwest Territories.
  • May 15 – The village of Embrun, Ontario has its 150th anniversary.
  • May 16 – Canada 2006 Census day.
  • May 29 – A labour dispute leads to a one-day shutdown of the Toronto Transit Commission, stranding commuters in Toronto, Ontario.
  • May 31 – 100 millimeters of rain in a few hours caused landslides in and around the small town of La Tuque, in central Quebec, damaging roads and flooding houses. State emergency was decreed right away and people were evacuated.
  • June 2 – Terrorism plot—more than 400 police officers raided homes in Toronto and Mississauga, Ontario, and arrest 15 people (10 men and five youths), part of a terrorist cell. All men were born in Canada and were reportedly planning to attack the Parliament in Ottawa, the Bank of Toronto, some military installations, kidnap deputies and try to behead the Prime Minister Stephen Harper.
  • June 13 – The 2006 Nova Scotia general election is won by Rodney MacDonald's Conservatives.
  • June 26 – Prime minister Stephen Harper apologizes on behalf of the Canadian government for the Chinese head tax.

July to September

  • July 7 – Two police officers are shot and killed in Spiritwood, Saskatchewan.
  • July 17 – A series of severe thunderstorms hits Ontario, causing the worst damage to the province's power grid since the Ice Storm of 1998 and killing two people. Some communities in the Sudbury, Manitoulin and Nipissing regions go without power for a week before it can be restored. See the Great Lakes-Atlantic Coast derecho.
  • August 2 – The day after record-breaking heat in Ontario and Quebec and just two weeks following another series of powerful storms, severe thunderstorms hit a vast swath of Cottage country in central and eastern Ontario. Eight confirmed tornadoes touch down, the single largest one-day outbreak in the province since 1985. The two strongest tornadoes are rated F2, one near Bancroft and other a direct hit on the town of Combermere in Renfrew County. Close to 200,000 residents lose power in the storms and more than 20,000 remain without power for over one week after the event. Extensive property and forest damage results. Amazingly no fatalities result.
  • August 9 – Journalist Barbara Kay publishes a controversial piece in the National Post, "The Rise of Quebecistan", which accuses several Quebec politicians of endorsing terrorism and anti-semitism.
  • August 13 – The XVI International AIDS Conference opens in Toronto. Prime Minister Stephen Harper is widely criticized in the media for declining to attend.
  • August 26 – Elizabeth May is elected leader of the Green Party of Canada.
  • September 13 – Two people are killed and nineteen injured in the Dawson College shooting in Montreal.
  • September 16 – Jan Wong publishes a controversial piece in The Globe and Mail, "Get under the desk", alleging that Kimveer Gill, the Dawson College shooter, was motivated by linguistic and cultural alienation from Quebec society.
  • September 18 – The 2006 New Brunswick general election is won by Shawn Graham's Liberal Party.
  • September 30 – A highway overpass on Autoroute 19 in Laval collapses, killing five people and injuring six others.

October to December

Full date unknown

Arts and literature

New music

New books

Awards

Film

  • January 20 – Karla, the controversial movie about the murders of two Canadian teens, Leslie Mahaffy and Kristen French, is released in Canada.
  • August 11 – Bon Cop, Bad Cop, movie dark comedy-thriller buddy cop film about an Ontarian and a Québécois police officer who reluctantly join forces. The dialogue is a mixture of English and French and is claimed to be Canada's first bilingual feature film.
  • September 7 – The Journals of Knud Rasmussen
  • October 11 – Media reports announce that Bon Cop, Bad Cop has beaten Porky's to become the top-grossing Canadian film of all time in domestic box office; these are later disputed as not having taken inflation into account.
  • C.R.A.Z.Y. is named best picture at the 26th Genie Awards.

Television

Sport

Births

Deaths

January to June

July to September

October to December

See also

References

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