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  • Press Release — PIPSC AGM concludes with renewed strength and a clear plan to defend public services

    Press Release — PIPSC AGM concludes with renewed strength and a clear plan to defend public services

    Toronto, December 13, 2025 — The Professional Institute of the Public Service of Canada (PIPSC) concluded its national AGM today. This event marked President Sean O’Reilly’s first year in office, and charted a focused path forward as federal public services face deep cuts, accelerating outsourcing, and rapid technological change.

    Over 800 delegates, stewards and board members from across the country gathered to assess the year’s progress and set priorities for the months ahead. O’Reilly highlighted that, over the past year, PIPSC has invested in steward training and digital modernization, thereby creating a stronger foundation for the challenges ahead.

    “This AGM marks a turning point,” said PIPSC President Sean O’Reilly. “We’ve rebuilt our internal strength, we’ve shown governments that we are a serious, solutions-focused voice, and we’re ready for the difficult period ahead. Our members deliver the critical services Canadians rely on every day, and we will defend that work with clarity, determination and unity.”

    A major theme of the AGM was the union’s response to the federal government’s newly signaled cuts to the public service. PIPSC emphasized the real risks these cuts pose to Canadians, from slower inspections to weaker emergency response to delays in scientific and regulatory work. These decisions are not just reducing headcount; they’re weakening the systems that keep this country functioning. At the same time, new return to office (RTO) mandates are adding instability and stress.

    Delegates reflected on the national Lobby Week that saw members meet MPs across the country to raise concerns about cuts, outsourcing, and workforce adjustment (WFA) pressures.The AGM also showcased PIPSC’s leadership on federal science and artificial intelligence. The union’s recent Science Roadmap report revealed significant strain in labs and research programs across government, while PIPSC continued pushing for responsible, evidence-based AI adoption that supports rather than replaces professional expertise.

    PIPSC celebrated important member-driven wins this year, including the successful CRPEG strike — the union’s first in more than 30 years — and membership growth in specialized groups, such as Crown Counsel in Newfoundland and Labrador.

    As the AGM closed, PIPSC reaffirmed its commitment to strengthening public service capacity, protecting evidence-based decision-making and advocating for the resources professionals need to serve Canadians effectively.

    PIPSC represents over 85,000 public-sector professionals across the country, most of them employed by the federal government. Follow us on Facebook, on X (formerly known as Twitter) and on Instagram.

     


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  • Fordham 82-53 Manhattan (Dec 13, 2025) Game Recap – ESPN

    1. Fordham 82-53 Manhattan (Dec 13, 2025) Game Recap  ESPN
    2. Men’s Basketball Takes Battle of the Bronx, 82-53  Fordham University Athletics
    3. Manhattan plays Fordham on 3-game road slide  ABC News
    4. How to watch Fordham Rams vs. Manhattan Jaspers: Live…

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  • Washington state contends with devastating flooding as Midwest braces for arctic blast

    Washington state contends with devastating flooding as Midwest braces for arctic blast

    A blast of arctic air is sweeping south from Canada and spreading into parts of the northern U.S., while residents of the Pacific Northwest brace for possible mudslides and levee failures from floodwaters that are expected to be slow to…

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  • Notre Dame 82-58 Evansville (Dec 13, 2025) Game Recap – ESPN

    1. Notre Dame 82-58 Evansville (Dec 13, 2025) Game Recap  ESPN
    2. 13. Evansville | In-state Battle Slated For Saturday Afternoon  Notre Dame Athletics
    3. Shrewsberry sets career highs with 28 points, 8 3-pointers in Notre Dame’s win over Evansville  The…

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  • Drone strike on UN facility in war-torn Sudan leaves six peacekeepers dead | Sudan

    Drone strike on UN facility in war-torn Sudan leaves six peacekeepers dead | Sudan

    A drone strike has hit a United Nations peacekeeping logistics base in war-torn Sudan, killing six peacekeepers, the UN secretary general António Guterres has said.

    Eight other peacekeepers were wounded in the strike on Saturday in the city of…

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  • How Were GLP-1 Drugs and Bone Health Linked?

    How Were GLP-1 Drugs and Bone Health Linked?


    The 24-hour news cycle is just as important to medicine as it is to politics, finance, or…

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  • Anglesey family home being raffled for £5 a ticket

    Anglesey family home being raffled for £5 a ticket

    Jennie Bailey’s friends thought she was “bonkers” when she told them she was raffling her family’s £325,000 home for £5 a ticket.

    Her family has lived in what was originally their holiday home for two-and-a-half years after deciding to swap…

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  • Google increases support of AI utilization for science research

    Google increases support of AI utilization for science research

    Google LLC is seeking to expedite scientific and medical studies by partnering with Japanese universities and offering the assistance of state-of-the-art artificial intelligence technology and donations.

    The U.S-based tech giant will donate $1 million (150 million yen) to a research project at Tohoku University aimed at reducing the risk of dementia using artificial intelligence.

    Google similarly announced its ongoing collaboration with Kyoto University’s Center for iPS Cell Research and Application (CiRA) on Nov. 17.

    Google and the CiRA are currently proceeding with a joint verification test on an AI-driven system designed to autonomously propose scientific hypotheses.

    These academic partnerships were announced at an event held in Tokyo as part of Google’s recent efforts to beef up investment in the “AI for Science” field. Google has increasingly been pouring resources into scientific surveys and ventures.

    Researchers at Google were among the laureates of not only the 2024 Nobel Prize in Chemistry, awarded to an AI-adopted study team, but also the 2025 Nobel Prize in Physics, which recognizes quantum computing research.

    Known by the name of AlphaFold, an AI model of Google is currently utilized by more than 3 million scientists worldwide, including 150,000 from Japan, in a quest to illustrate protein structures that were previously difficult to analyze or predict.

    Google is already establishing itself as a major platform in the science domain, beyond its original area of expertise.

    Pushmeet Kohli, an official from the Google DeepMind team, who is responsible particularly for AI development for scientific purposes, emphasized in an interview that the non-human form of intelligence will help accelerate science and thereby lead humanity into a new era.

    Kohli likewise stated that science discoveries made by AI will, in turn, have a commercial impact at some point in the future.

    On the day of the announcement, Shinji Okuyama, president of the Japanese arm of Google, revealed a series of endeavors to extend support to university and college labs, with an eye toward further speeding the trend along.

    The project at Tohoku University will utilize an AI model to reproduce past sights of towns and cities through images and videos by referring to old photos and other records.

    Making the most of the AI-generated materials, it will examine whether stimulating people’s cognitive functions can lessen the risk of dementia.

    Working with Kyoto University’s CiRA, Google embarked on a validation trial in September for the “AI co-scientist” system.

    Interpreting and analyzing data from both inside and outside the CiRA, the digitized colleague can reportedly suggest adequate hypotheses for a range of research objectives, inclusive of the next-generation way to efficiently produce induced pluripotent stem (iPS) cells.

    Hirohide Saito, a biological professor at Kyoto University, took the stage during the presentation session organized in the capital’s Shibuya Ward on Nov. 17.

    “Teaming with the system makes me feel as if I have an additional, exceptionally skilled scientist in my lab,” Saito said while praising Google for its technology. “I am seeing firsthand how powerful it is, just as I did at the advent of AlphaFold.”

    Saito continued, “The use of AI will become an essential part of science from here on out.”


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  • Fighting rages on Thailand-Cambodia border despite Trump’s claimed ceasefire

    Fighting rages on Thailand-Cambodia border despite Trump’s claimed ceasefire

    SURIN, Thailand (AP) — Fighting raged Saturday morning along the border of Thailand and Cambodia, even after U.S. President Donald Trump, acting as a mediator, declared that he had won agreement from both countries for a…

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  • Three in a Row: Women’s Basketball Downs Altoona

    ALTOONA, Pa. – Alaina Fabin posted a career-high 28 points to lead the Penn State Behrend women’s basketball team past Penn State Altoona 70-64 in Allegheny Mountain Collegiate Conference (AMCC) action on Saturday…

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