- B.C. appoints mediator Vince Ready to assist 911 operator negotiations
- Pratt’s lead over Raman narrows in Los Angeles mayoral race as voters await results
- Kingston Council apologises over sexist language in e-bike report
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UK public borrowing exceeds official forecast in September
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Government borrowing overshot official projections in September, which is a sign of the difficult fiscal position that the Chancellor faces as she puts the finishing touches on her first tax and spending budget.
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Get you up to speed: B.C. appoints veteran labour mediator Vince Ready for 911 call taker labour dispute
B.C.’s labour minister has appointed veteran mediator Vince Ready to assist in negotiations between the province and the union representing 911 operators. The situation involves ongoing discussions over terms of employment for the emergency service personnel.
B.C.’s labour minister has tasked Vince Ready with facilitating negotiations, indicating the urgency of resolving ongoing disputes impacting emergency services. The talks aim to address issues that have left 911 operators under significant pressure, but no timeline for resolution has been established.
B.C.’s labour minister has tasked veteran mediator Vince Ready with facilitating negotiations between the province and the union representing 911 operators. The next steps will involve Ready initiating dialogue to address ongoing concerns and work towards a resolution.
What remains unclear — The timeline for the mediation process and potential outcomes has not been specified.
B.C. appoints mediator Vince Ready to assist 911 operator negotiations

B.C.’s labour minister has appointed veteran mediator Vince Ready to help negotiations between the province and the union representing 911 operators.
Get you up to speed: Pratt’s lead over Raman further erodes in new L.A. mayoral race results as voters await California governor’s race news
In the Los Angeles mayoral race, Spencer Pratt’s lead over Nithya Raman has narrowed to 1% as of Saturday evening, with 78% of the votes counted. Meanwhile, in the gubernatorial primary, former U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra has advanced to the general election, surpassing Republican Steve Hilton in the latest results.
County election offices across California are continuing to count ballots, with final results expected within the next 30 days as provisional ballots are processed. As of the latest updates, 78% of votes have been counted in the mayoral race, with Spencer Pratt holding 27.3% and Nithya Raman at 26.2%.
Election officials reported that the race for Los Angeles mayor has tightened, with Spencer Pratt’s lead over Nithya Raman narrowing to 1% as ballots continue to be counted. Meanwhile, former U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra has officially advanced to the general election for governor, with Republican Steve Hilton competing closely for the second spot against billionaire Tom Steyer.
What remains unclear — It is uncertain when the next ballot results for California’s gubernatorial and mayoral primaries will be released.
Pratt’s lead over Raman narrows in Los Angeles mayoral race as voters await results
Outcomes in California’s two most closely watched primaries for governor and Los Angeles mayor remained unresolved Saturday evening, but new results saw the mayoral race tighten significantly as voters await who will advance to the November election in both key races.
Political newcomer Spencer Pratt’s lead over L.A. City Councilwoman Nithya Raman in the race for mayor has continued to diminish since election night, with a narrow 1% margin separating the two as of Saturday evening’s latest update from the L.A. County Registrar-Recorder. Incumbent Democratic L.A. Mayor Karen Bass was already projected earlier this week to advance to the runoff, where she will face either Raman, a Democrat, or Pratt, a Republican.
The waiting game also isn’t over after California’s chaotic primary to succeed term-limited Democratic Gov. Gavin Newsom, which took a big step forward Friday, with WTX US News projecting that former U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra, a Democrat, had advanced to the general election.
County election offices across the state released their latest results late Friday afternoon, launching Becerra to victory and shifting the focus to who would challenge the former California attorney general to become the state’s next chief executive.
Under California’s top-two primary system, the two candidates with the most votes will advance to November’s general election, regardless of party affiliation.
If elected, Becerra would become the first Latino governor of California in 150 years since Republican Romualdo Pacheco in 1875.
Hilton in lead for second spot in gubernatorial election
Before Becerra advanced on Friday to the general election, Republican challenger Steve Hilton, a former Fox News host, had been the leading candidate in the race since polls closed on Tuesday. Becerra remained in second place before gaining enough votes to overtake Hilton in the latest results released by election officials.
Hilton is now battling for the second spot on the November ballot, with billionaire environmentalist Tom Steyer, a Democrat, in third place. While Steyer gained some ground in the latest returns, election experts including Paul Mitchell of Political Data Inc. said a second-place finish could prove elusive for the 2020 presidential candidate.
“The challenge there is that with these late voters, Hilton actually seems to be doing pretty well,” Mitchell said Thursday.
Throughout the week, Hilton has continued to position himself as the change candidate in the race and criticized the pace of California’s ballot counting, suggesting he would enact a major overhaul of the state’s election process if elected governor.
“We’re not there yet, but it’s looking good,” Hilton said Tuesday night. “It looks very much like Californians really will have the chance to vote for change in November and take our state in a new direction.”
Pratt’s lead over Raman erodes in LA mayoral race
Bass is still waiting to learn who she will face in the November election as reality TV star Pratt’s considerable lead over Raman continued to shrink late Saturday.
After holding a nearly 6% lead over Raman on Thursday, Pratt’s advantage over the councilwoman narrowed even further following the release of L.A. County’s latest ballot count on Saturday, with Pratt up 27.3% to 26.2% for Ramen with 78% of the votes counted.
“Spencer Pratt has been losing share of the vote with every one of these new ballot dumps, and we expect that to continue,” Mitchell said on Thursday. “The question is, will he drop? Will Nithya Raman rise? And at some point, will there be an inflection point where Nithya Raman would take over that second spot?”
After polls closed on Tuesday, Pratt appeared confident that he was going to face Bass in November, saying that the incumbent was “not a candidate that I’m too concerned about.”
“I’m ready for whatever god puts in front of me,” Pratt said. “Obviously, I was going to accept whatever god’s plan was tonight. I was going to be happy if I wasn’t moving forward because I would’ve known god didn’t want me to be the mayor. Now, I feel very confident.”
Leading up to Election Day, analysts predicted that the race would be tight with the trio virtually tied. According to a May 28 UC Berkeley-LA Times poll, which cited a margin of error of around 3%, Bass had the most support from likely voters at 26%, Raman was close behind at 25% and Pratt came in third at 22%.
As the last candidate to announce her bid, Raman spoke to supporters after polls closed on Election Day about what she called her “long shot” bid for mayor.
“No one knew who I was; I was the last to enter this race,” Raman said. “We had no institutional backing. But what we did have was a vision for Los Angeles.”
When will more California primary election results be released?
According to the California Secretary of State, counties have 30 days to count ballots on a provisional basis. Mail-in votes must be postmarked no later than Election Day, and they must be counted as long as they are received within seven days.
Here are when some major population centers expect their next ballot drops:
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