2025 NNA FINALISTS
ARTS and ENTERTAINMENT
Emily Donaldson, The Globe and Mail, for her unique profile of British nature writer Robert Macfarlane, which doubles as a profile of the landscapes he chronicled.
Sarah Krichel, The Tyee, for her essays on the escapist necessity of reality TV and nostalgia for AI slop in the era of inconspicuous AI.
- I Used to Love ‘Selling Sunset.’ Now Escapism Is Wearing Thin
- Help! I’m Nostalgic for the Days of AI Slop
Ben Waldman, Winnipeg Free Press, for his in-depth feature on Captain Canuck, the creation of a Winnipeg illustrator 50 years ago finding new audiences and relevance today.
JOAN HOLLOBON AWARD for
BEAT REPORTING
As the Globe and Mail’s medical reporter from 1959 to 1985, Joan Hollobon set the standard for beat reporting, tackling breaking news, investigative pieces and explanatory articles with equal ease. The award is sponsored by the Globe and Mail.

Jacques Gallant, Toronto Star, for his cohesive coverage of the Hockey Canada trial and all of its complexities.
- Hockey Canada’s ‘unfair’ probe cost a ‘trove’ of evidence
- Inside the police investigations into the Hockey Canada case
- How the Hockey Canada sexual assault case fell apart
- Hockey Canada trial hinges on legal meaning of consent
Ariane Lacoursière, La Presse, for wide-ranging health coverage spanning news reports, in-depth features and investigative pieces.
- Leur bébé meurt après une visite chez le dentiste
- Une enquête et des questions
- Une médecin sonne l’alarme | Pénurie d’eau majeure à Puvirnituq
- Allégations de maltraitance dans un CHSLD | Une travailleuse sociale accusée de « manquer de loyauté »
Terry Pender, Waterloo Region Record, for his tenacious ongoing coverage of threats against the Waterloo region’s water supply.
- The long cleanup in Elmira
- Retired urban planner watches his work get ‘wiped out’
- Kitchener plans to build on top of aquifer recharge zones
- Civil engineer says Region can easily fix water supply
STUART M. ROBERTSON AWARD for
BREAKING NEWS
Stuart M. Robertson was one of Canada’s top media lawyers, renowned for his dedication to finding a way to publish information of public interest, even in the face of potential legal obstacles. This award is sponsored by Paul and Lauraine Woods.

The Canadian Press, for responsive and compassionate coverage of the Lapu Lapu street festival attack in Vancouver.
- Nine dead after SUV plows through Vancouver Filipino festival, man arrested
- ‘Tragedy all around’: Murder charges follow Vancouver festival attack that killed 11
- ‘A weapon’: Vancouver ramming is latest attack to turn vehicles into deadly tools
- Shock, devastation among Filipino community after Vancouver SUV attack that killed 11
- Father, mother, five-year-old daughter, killed in Vancouver attack, leave son behind
- Mourning the victims of the Vancouver Filipino festival attack
- The latest developments on the deadly street festival attack in Vancouver
Videos
- Several dead as SUV plows through Vancouver festival
- SUV plows through Vancouver festival leaving at least nine dead
- Several dead and injured in Vancouver festival ramming attack
- Prime Minister Mark Carney expresses shock over ‘horrific’ Vancouver attack
- Death toll in Vancouver festival attack rises to 11
- B.C.’s Filipino community reeling after deadly festival attack
- B.C. Premier, Vancouver Mayor vow support for community after deadly festival attack
Daniel Renaud, Mayssa Ferah and Vincent Larouche, La Presse, for their authoritative coverage of the Montreal underworld’s connection to drug kingpin Ryan Wedding.
- Un redoutable chef de gang arrêté pour meurtre
- Qui est Atna Onha ? | L’ascension silencieuse d’un chef de gang
- Ryan Wedding, ex-olympien canadien | « C’est le Pablo Escobar des temps modernes
The Winnipeg Free Press, for sensitive, far-reaching coverage of the mass stabbing in Hollow Water First Nation, a semi-remote Indigenous community.
- Man kills sister, injures seven others in Hollow Water First Nation stabbing rampage
- Shocking violence leaves residents in disbelief
- Searching for answers in wake of horror
- ‘Thank God I’m still alive’
- Close to home
BUSINESS
Jameson Berkow, The Globe and Mail, for his ongoing coverage of the rapidly growing Indigenous-led business sector and its outsized role in driving Canada’s economic growth.
- Canada’s new Indigenous-run capital markets firms are hitting their stride
- First Nations Finance Authority offers solution to help Indigenous businesses bid on government procurement contracts
- BMO issues North America’s first bond aimed at raising funds for Indigenous businesses
Kathryn Blaze Baum and Alexandra Posadzki, The Globe and Mail, for their series of stories about the digital black market created by Meta’s failure to address hacked accounts and its impact on businesses.
- How underground brokers use their connections inside Meta to profit from hacked accounts
- Business Brief: Meta’s black market problem
- The black market for getting hacked Meta accounts back
Marco Chown Oved, Toronto Star, for his persistent coverage of how Tesla exploited the federal government’s electric vehicle rebate program and its impact on Canadian auto dealers.
- End to Canada’s EV subsidy led to wild Tesla sales spike
- Tesla $43M rebate rules changed on Transport Canada website
- Tesla used bots to run the bank on Canadian EV rebates
MARY ANN SHADD CARY AWARD AWARD for
COLUMNS
Mary Ann Shadd Cary was a pioneering 19th-century newspaper publisher who founded the Provincial Freeman, a southern Ontario newspaper fighting for the abolition of slavery.

Rima Elkouri, La Presse, for her columns on the immigration debate and the many ways it divides Quebec.
- Demandeurs d’asile | Quand le ministre Roberge dit n’importe quoi
- Accueil de migrants | À la recherche de la solidarité perdue
- La peine d’amour de Kim Thúy
Arno Kopecky, National Observer, for his dispatches from a self-guided campaign trail following Pierre Poilievre’s announcement he wouldn’t allow journalists to travel with him.
- At Poilievre’s Windsor rally, a YouTuber collides with a ‘mainstream journalist’ (That journalist was me)
- In disaster-stricken Okanagan, a conspicuous silence from Poilievre
- True lies on the Poilievre campaign trail
Niigaan Sinclair, Winnipeg Free Press, for columns on the death of Pope Francis, the gut punch of Thomas King’s admission he was not Indigenous, and the power of Wab Kinew’s comments on child pornography legislation.
- Pope wasn’t perfect but showed us another path
- The inconvenient truth: Thomas King’s admission he isn’t Cherokee hits hard
- Premier’s words got people to pay attention; maybe that was the point
DIGITAL STORYTELLING
Jeremy Agius, The Globe and Mail, for his portfolio of work on mapping the measles outbreak, tiny condos and housing policy and Margaret Atwood’s Toronto.
- The era of the shoebox condo is over. How Canada can start building livable apartments
- Margaret Atwood’s Toronto: A literary tour of her home city
- How the measles made its way back to Canada
Magdaline Boutros, Cédric Gagnon and Catherine Bombardier, Le Devoir, for their immersive, multimedia work on daily life in Gaza.
Nathan Pilla, Toronto Star, for his portfolio of work on a wrong-way police pursuit, heat risk and workers, and ways to make Toronto better.
- Hwy. 401 wrong-way crash leadup captured on video, audio
- Why hot days are making Ontario’s workplaces more dangerous
- 26 ways you can make Toronto better in 2026
CLAUDE RYAN AWARD for
EDITORIAL WRITING
Claude Ryan was the renowned editor of Le Devoir and had a great influence on the world of journalism in Quebec. He was one of Quebec’s most distinguished editorialists. This award is sponsored by Le Devoir.

Kennedy Gordon, Prince George Citizen, for editorials on funding for seniors programs, the significance of the debate over funding local media, and misinformation and NIMBYism.
- Grinches on Prince George city council yank seniors’ Christmas gift away
- Debate about local media is proof of its importance to Prince George
- Open, clear communication vs. rumour, misinformation
Stéphanie Grammond, La Presse, for editorials on seizing the opportunity Trump provides for Canada, Canada Post and the catastrophic hidden costs of low-cost trucking.
- Trump offre une occasion en or au Canada
- Postes Canada agonise, les facteurs vont l’achever
- Pour bloquer la route aux « chauffards inc. »
Louise-Maude Rioux Soucy, Le Devoir, for editorials on the sweeping scope of a school scandal, the provincial government’s dispute with doctors and the immigration debate.
- De quoi Bedford est-il le nom?
- Le retour de la carotte
- L’immigration au Québec dans le miroir de Kim Thúy
EXPLANATORY WORK
Magdaline Boutros, Le Devoir, for her reporting from Nuuk, Greenland, a region thrust into the heart of global geopolitics, and its connection to the Inuit of Canada.
- En quête d’indépendance, les habitants du Groenland ne veulent être ni Américains ni Danois
- «Le Devoir» au Groenland: sous la neige et dans le sol, les rêves d’indépendance
- Convoité par Donald Trump, le Groenland est névralgique pour la défense de l’Amérique du Nord
- Avec Jørgen Boassen, son fan numéro 1, les paroles de Trump trouvent un écho au Groenland
- Les Inuits du Groenland, peuple frère des Inuits du Canada
Lindsay Jones and Patrick White, The Globe and Mail, for their in-depth reporting on the toxic aftermath of forever chemicals in Newfoundland communities.
Marsha McLeod, Winnipeg Free Press, for explaining the origins of the second-generation cut-off in Canada’s Indian Act, its impact on Indigenous families and possible alternatives.
FEATURE PHOTO
Marie-France Coallier, Le Devoir, for her photo from the agricultural fair at Expo Brome, an annual event in the Eastern Townships.

Meagan Hancock, Globe and Mail, for her photo from Kings Theatre, a beloved, community venue in Annapolis Royal, N.S.

Richard Lautens, Toronto Star, for his photo from the cooling pad at Celebration Square in Mississauga.

ILLUSTRATED COMMENTARY
Michael de Adder, The Globe and Mail, for his political satire on the impact of the Trump presidency.





Judith Lachapelle, La Presse, for her multi-panel illustration about daily life in Ukraine and the challenges of travelling into an active conflict.








David Parkins, The Globe and Mail, for a portfolio of cartoons ranging from domestic politics to international, to the search for missing and murdered Indigenous women.





INNOVATION IN JOURNALISM
Cody Gault and Lucas Timmons, Toronto Star, for their automated natural language search engine which provided real-time riding data for all 343 ridings across Canada in the 2025 election.
- Election Results
- Live Canada election results: Maps, seat changes and voter turnout
- Carleton live federal election results
Taproot Edmonton, for its Taproot Survey, created to inform the city’s municipal election and guide its voters on an unprecedented scale.
- Taproot Survey – 2025 Edmonton Municipal Election
- Taproot Survey responses by leading/elected candidates – 2025 Edmonton Municipal Election
- Candidates – 2025 Edmonton Municipal Election
- 2025 Edmonton Municipal Election – Taproot Edmonton
- That’s a wrap on Taproot’s 2025 election project
Rory White, Bruno De Bondt, David McKie, Jimmy Thomson and Linda Solomon Wood, National Observer, for Civic Searchlight, a tool for any Canadian journalist or civic worker that transcribes municipal council meetings and makes them searchable by keyword and location.
NORMAN WEBSTER AWARD for
INTERNATIONAL REPORTING
Norman Webster had a remarkably influential career at the Globe and Mail. As an international reporter, he is best remembered for his coverage of “ping-pong diplomacy” in the early 1970s, when relations between China and the Western world began to thaw. This award is sponsored by the Webster family.

Vincent Larouche and Martin Tremblay, La Presse, for their reporting from the Democratic Republic of Congo, revealing the little known links between the ongoing conflict and Canada.
- Groupe M23 | De Gatineau à la rébellion en République démocratique du Congo
- Le minerai de toutes les convoitises
- « Nous n’étions pas prêts, mais ils nous ont forcés »
- Goma | La métropole déchirée qui veut redémarrer
- La Presse en République démocratique du Congo | Au secours des victimes de viol
Mark MacKinnon, The Globe and Mail, for his reporting from “the new Syria” on the rapid changes unfolding in the country and the enormity of the challenges ahead.
- There is hope in post-Assad Syria, but also strife and skepticism of the new rulers
- Crackdowns at the beach heighten Syrian women’s fears for their freedoms Syrians with close Canadian ties play outsized role in postwar government
Karine Tremblay, La Tribune, for her series, the Dark Side of Chocolate, documenting the harsh working conditions and exploitation rampant in cocoa production in Côte d’Ivoire.
- L’ENVERS DU CHOCOLAT | Combien de kilos de souffrance dans votre chocolat?
- L’ENVERS DU CHOCOLAT | Sortir les enfants du champ
- L’ENVERS DU CHOCOLAT | Entre machettes et mafia
GEORGE BROWN AWARD for
INVESTIGATIONS
George Brown was the founder of the Globe, who made it his mission to demand that governments apply both fairness and compliance with constitutional principles. This award is sponsored by The Globe and Mail.

Leah Borts-Kuperman, The Narwhal, for her investigative series into contamination on military sites across Canada.
- Staff at Canadian Armed Forces base say contamination made them sick
- National Defence plans housing on contaminated sites
- Internal studies at CFB Moose Jaw reveal contamination risk
Nora T. Lamontagne, Louis-Philippe Bourdeau, Le Journal de Montréal, for their investigation uncovering a concentration of ALS cases in Charlevoix, leading to a public health investigation.
- Une concentration troublante de personnes atteintes de SLA dans Charlevoix
- La Santé publique déclenche une enquête sur la SLA dans Charlevoix
- SLA dans Charlevoix: une papetière historique montrée du doigt
Carrie Tait, Tom Cardoso, Mark MacKinnon, Stephanie Chambers and Alanna Smith, The Globe and Mail, for a series of scoops on the procurement controversy at Alberta’s health authority.
- Who is Sam Mraiche? Inside Alberta’s health care controversy
- Alberta ousted health services CEO amid probe into medical contracts, document alleges
- Alberta surgical companies with contracts under scrutiny linked to firm that imported children’s pain meds
- Former chief of staff to Alberta Premier lived in home owned by Sam Mraiche’s sister
- Alberta paid more than six times usual price for pain medications in $70-million import deal, according to government briefing note
- Alberta private clinics adviser worked for firm vying for contract, confidential report says
- Alberta health officials were also directors at a company linked to a supplier
- Alberta ends procurement talks with two firms tied to businessman at centre of health care controversy
- Sam Mraiche was investigated by Elections Alberta over alleged illegal political donations
E. CORA HIND AWARD for
LOCAL REPORTING
The E. Cora Hind Award for Local Reporting honours one of Canada’s pioneering women journalists. E. Cora Hind was one of the first women to work as a news reporter, and was instrumental in the suffrage movement.

Small Market
Jennifer Hamilton-McCharles, North Bay Nugget, for revealing the mayor used taxpayers’ money on personal expenses, leading to internal debate at city council, resignations and public outcry.
- North Bay mayor’s $16,000 in expenses flagged by oversight process
- Mayor’s expenses approved by North Bay’s chief administrative officer
- Wings, beer, cigarettes, Battalion tickets, among mayor’s expenses
- North Bay CAO advised to take away mayor’s credit card in March 2024
- North Bay City Council votes to suspend Mayor Peter Chirico
Jenny Lamothe, Sudbury.com, for her reporting on seniors left stranded in their homes by broken elevators and the landlords and city officials responsible for oversight.
- Lack of working elevators traps seniors in 16-story apartment building
- Trapped: Bonik Tower owners also leave Rideau Place tenants stranded
- More seniors stranded as elevator issues plague downtown building
- Sudbury seniors say vermin, violence and neglect plague their housing
- Who is running Centreville, the city-funded non-profit housing complex?
Mary Newman, James Westman, Yara El Murr, Aia Jaber and Anthony Lippa-Hardy, The Green Line, for their series on ‘demovictions’ associated with the construction of a new transit line in Toronto.
- How to navigate renting around the Eglinton Crosstown
- How to navigate renting around the Eglinton Crosstown part 2
- How renters can fight to benefit from new transit lines
- Rental prices along the Eglinton Crosstown
- How to navigate renting around the Eglinton Crosstown part 4
Medium Market
Lise Denis, Le Droit, for her reporting on the military community in the Ottawa-Gatineau region, particularly women impacted by equipment not tailored to their body shape, leading to safety concerns.
- DOULEURS AU SEIN DE L’ARMÉE | «Mon corps a dû être modifié»
- DOULEURS AU SEIN DE L’ARMÉE | «On commençait le matin, on prenait des Advil»
- Les femmes militaires ont été «abandonnées»
Joanna Frketich, Hamilton Spectator, for tracking the precarious staffing situation at Hamilton’s hospitals and the extent of its impact on spending, staff and care.
- Hamilton nurses working excessive overtime
- Hospitals spent millions on temp workers
- St. Joseph’s Healthcare told to hire back library staff
- Hamilton hospitals use foreign workers for staff shortage
- Hamilton hospital jobs cut amid $177 million shortfall
- Ontario on path to lose 7,200 nurses and 2,400 hospital beds
Maegen Kulchar, Kingston Whig-Standard, for her reporting on the suicide of a prison guard and the toxic workplace culture of bullying.
- CSC conducting investigation following death of a Kingston officer
- More CSC employees claim bullying between correctional officers
- Federal prison watchdog says CSC lacks care for mentally ill inmates
- Correctional Service Canada working to change culture among staff
Large Market
Francine Kopun, Toronto Star, for her coverage of Toronto’s complex waterfront and the diverse issues surrounding it.
- Toronto ferry hit Billy Bishop property: What happened?
- Harbour chaos: Inside Toronto’s unregulated boats-for-hire
- Family speaks out after Toronto party boat death
- Man charged over Toronto Harbour drowning appears in court
- ‘The cormorants are winning’ the battle for Toronto Islands
- Why is a community pool in a Toronto luxury tower closed?
- Toronto residents fight tower threat to waterfront jewel
- How Toronto plans to make visits to islands more comfortable
- The Trillium, a part of Toronto history, has been towed away
Omar Mosleh and David Rider, Toronto Star, for their ongoing coverage of supervised consumption sites and the intersection of politics, public safety, mental health and addiction.
- Ont. PI’s surveil safe consumption sites: findings revealed
- Supervised consumption sites saved lives; closure spark fear
- Residents describe impact of closed supervised consumption site
- What’s happened since 4 Toronto safe injection sites closed
- Toronto vending machines a possible lifesaver for drug users
- Parkdale supervised consumption site to close as funding cut
- Are Ford government’s much-touted HART Hubs working?
Vancouver Sun and Province, for rigorous, ongoing coverage of the Lapu Lapu festival attack and its aftermath.
- Update: 11 people killed, many injured at Lapu Lapu Day in Vancouver
- Vancouver grieves, tries to make sense of deadly Lapu Lapu Day attack
- How to investigate a crime involving a mentally ill suspect
- Driver charged with murder in Vancouver’s Lapu Lapu Day tragedy
- The terrible toll of the Lapu Lapu Day tragedy: The victims
- Lapu Lapu Day attack: After tragedy, what’s the future for festivals?
- Filipino BC upset with Vancouver’s Lapu Lapu Day memorial decision
- Proposed class-action lawsuit launched by Lapu Lapu festival survivor
- ‘Keep breathing’: One woman’s recovery after Lapu Lapu Day tragedy
- Lapu Lapu Day attack survivors, families still fighting to survive
WILLIAM SOUTHAM AWARD for
LONG FEATURE
William Southam was a legendary Canadian newspaper publisher who rose from paper boy to founder of what became the country’s first and largest newspaper group. This award is sponsored by the Fisher, Bowen and Balfour families.

Isabelle Hachey, La Presse, for her report on the underground world of online scamming centres in Southeast Asia and the men and women forced to work there.
Marsha McLeod, Winnipeg Free Press, for her investigation into the RCMP’s fatal shooting of 18-year-old Conor Rae and the investigation by the province’s police oversight agency.
Shannon Proudfoot, The Globe and Mail, for her in-depth profile of Mark Carney.
NEWS PHOTO
Darryl Dyck, The Canadian Press, for his photo of a candlelight march in Vancouver during a vigil for the victims of the Lapu Lapu festival attack.

Greg Locke, The Globe and Mail, for his photo of an air tanker water-bombing summer wildfires in Newfoundland.

Martin Tremblay, La Presse, for his photo of a Hells Angel arrest on Montreal’s south shore.

PHOTO STORY
Goran Tomasevic, The Globe and Mail, for his photo series from a Russian-run field hospital in Donbas, where wounded soldiers from both sides are treated just steps from the front lines.










Martin Tremblay, La Presse, for his photos from the Democratic Republic of the Congo, documenting the lives of Congolese workers and the mines that supply the world’s advanced technologies.










Chris Young, The Canadian Press, for his series, From Moss Park with Love, documenting the human side of the safe consumption site at the epicentre of Toronto’s opioid crisis.










JOHN WESLEY DAFOE AWARD for
POLITICS
John Wesley Dafoe was the longtime editor of the Winnipeg Free Press, whose writing was required reading in the corridors of power. This award is sponsored by Ron Stern.

Katia Gagnon, Ulysse Bergeron, Hugo Joncas and Vincent Larin, La Presse, for their investigation into the scandal at Quebec’s automobile insurance board, resulting in massive public service delays, soaring project costs and a government inquiry.
Jessica Smith Cross, Charlie Pinkerton and Jack Hauen, The Trillium, for their ongoing coverage of power and influence in Ontario politics.
- Meet the bagman: the Ontario PC fundraising chief and his developer ties
- Groups led by PC donors received majority of recent Ontario training funds
- Former Ford staffers deny accusation of fraud over alleged agreement to rezone land using ‘backchannel contacts’
Carrie Tait, The Globe and Mail, for her exclusives-driven coverage of Alberta’s health care political controversy.
- Alberta plans to allow doctors to deliver public and private services
- Alberta Justice Minister has personal relationship with man whose businesses are tied to AHS investigation
- Independent Alberta MLAs revive Progressive Conservative name to create new provincial party
JOHN HONDERICH AWARD for
PROJECT OF THE YEAR
John Honderich had an outstanding career at the Toronto Star as a reporter, foreign correspondent, editor, publisher and chair of the board. He was a life-long advocate for excellence and integrity in journalism. This award is sponsored by the Honderich family.

Liam Casey and Christopher Katsarov Luna, Canadian Press, for their extensive coverage from the Ring of Fire region in Northern Ontario, highlighting the landscape, the people and the powerful politics at play.
- Inside the Ring of Fire: A tale of two First Nations and a road that could change everything
- Why northern First Nations still rely on diesel fuel — and what could power the coveted Ring of Fire
- IN PICTURES: On the road to the Ring of Fire | Photo Galleries
- IN PICTURES: What will power the Ring of Fire? | Photo Galleries
- How two northern Ontario communities are diverging on Ring of Fire development
The Globe and Mail, for Poisoned, a series of stories on the opioid crisis, its impact in communities across the country, and devastating consequences.
- How fentanyl transformed Victoria’s Pandora Avenue from downtown hub to open-air drug market
- How opioid deaths are hollowing out the construction industry
- After taking drastic steps on opioids, an Ontario city struggles to find its footing
- Northwestern Ontario wrestles with fentanyl threats from within, and politics from without
- Why are fentanyl deaths in Europe a fraction of those seen in North America?
- No ‘increasing threat’ from sales of fentanyl precursors via India and China, RCMP says
- How ‘tranq’ became a deadly, and increasingly common, addition to Canada’s illicit drug supply
- B.C.’s superlab case underscores challenges of Canada’s resurgent war on drugs
Philippe Mercure and François Roy, La Presse, for The Great Crossing project, a federal election, cross-country road trip aimed at understanding the issues that matter to Canadians.
BOB LEVIN AWARD for
SHORT FEATURE
Bob Levin was a true writer’s editor. After 20 years at Maclean’s, he spent a decade at The Globe and Mail, where he was renowned as someone who understood the power of the story being told and the nuance of each word choice. This award is sponsored by the Globe and Mail

Simon Drouin, La Presse, for his powerful piece on the final moments of his friend, Pierre Foglia, one of the most influential columnists in Quebec.
Mike Hager, The Globe and Mail, for his entertaining look at the colourful characters who sell waterbeds to the devoted.
Nono Shen, The Canadian Press, for her novel tariff impact story that took readers on an impromptu journey from Vancouver’s docks to the kitchen of one of Canada’s most renowned Asian chefs.
SPECIAL TOPIC – Journalism in a language other than French or English
Debbie Chen, Marcel Tong and Norman Sin, Sing Tao, on the human cost of British Columbia’s overdose crisis and the systemic gaps.
- 14歲華裔少女吸毒致死 父母痛問政府:為何不能強制戒毒? | 多倫多 | 加拿大中文新聞網 – 加拿大星島日報 Canada Chinese News
- 卑詩衛生廳長如何看待14歲華裔女孩吸毒過量致死事件? | 多倫多 | 加拿大中文新聞網 – 加拿大星島日報 Canada Chinese News
- 【專訪/有片】兒子染毒卻屢被戒毒中心拒於門外 母親痛訴毒品政策失敗 | 多倫多 | 加拿大中文新聞網 – 加拿大星島日報 Canada Chinese News
- 【星島民調結果】14歲少女之死大激辯 華裔與主流社會毒品政策看法大不同? | 多倫多 | 加拿大中文新聞網 – 加拿大星島日報 Canada Chinese News
- 【毒品非刑事化項目將終止】14歲女兒死於毒品的華裔母親說:可惜太遲了! | 多倫多 | 加拿大中文新聞網 – 加拿大星島日報 Canada Chinese News
Nunatsiaq News, for a special edition showcasing the impact of the James Bay hydroelectric project and the subsequent James Bay and Northern Quebec Agreement with Inuit and Cree communities.
SPORTS
Gare Joyce, Kingston Whig-Standard, on Don Cherry’s life and complicated legacy in his hometown of Kingston, Ontario.
- Don Cherry, one of the greatest Canadians in the nation’s history
- Ron MacLean calls Poppygate Don Cherry’s “exit strategy” after illness
Ariane Lacoursière and Olivier Jean, La Presse, for their features on amateur sport in Norway, which boasts one of the highest ratios of Olympic medalists per capita in the world.
- « Ne pas faire de sport compétitif trop tôt »
- La piscine nordique d’un jeune Colombien
- Une grande diversité de sports comme tremplin
Jana G. Pruden, The Globe and Mail, for her stories of three professional athletes that examine issues of human resilience, courage and identity.
- In the ring, Cree wrestler Sage Morin finds a way to get back up from personal tragedy
- Maven Maurer, first pro football player to come out as trans, tells her story
- Trouble in Gretzkyville: For the first time, The Great One finds himself shunned by Edmonton fans
SPORTS PHOTO
Barbara Davidson, The Globe and Mail, for her photo on the heartbreak of Blue Jays fans after the team’s 18th inning loss.

Darryl Dyck, Canadian Press, for his celebration soccer photo from the Canadian Championship quarterfinal in Vancouver.

Frank Gunn, The Canadian Press, for his portrait of L.A. Dodgers’ Shohei Ohtani mid-pitch.

GEOFFREY STEVENS AWARD for
SUSTAINED NEWS COVERAGE
Geoffrey Stevens was managing editor of The Globe and Mail and Maclean’s, author of six books about Canadian politics, and widely regarded for his quality, fact-based journalism. This award is sponsored by the family and friends of Geoffrey Stevens.

Michelle Berg, Brandon Harder, Larissa Kurz, Kayle Neis and Rob O’Flanagan, Regina Leader Post and Saskatoon Star Phoenix, for their up-close look at the people most impacted by Saskatchewan’s summer of wildfires.
- Men of Weyakwin make a stubborn stand against marauding wildfires
- ‘Anguish is eating me up’: Roaring fires, helping hands in Saskatchewan
- ‘It felt like a death:’ One Saskatchewan family’s flight from wildfires
- A historic Métis site becomes a modern-day haven for evacuees
- ‘Very extreme:’ Looking back on Sask.’s record-setting wildfire season
Toronto Star, for its cross-newsroom coverage of the Blue Jays playoff run as a prolonged civic story that mattered to every part of the city.
- Blue Jays vs. Dodgers World Series Game 3 score, highlights
- Blue Jays lose World Series heartbreaker to Dodgers in Game 7, final score, highlights
- How the 2025 Blue Jays compare to past playoff teams
- Joey Votto: The 1993 Blue Jays changed my childhood
- What U.S. media said after Blue Jays oust Yankees in ALDS
- Blue Jays dream run ends two outs from World Series crown
- Toronto’s Cinderella Blue Jays will live on in our memory
Nathan VanderKlippe, Alanna Smith, Grant Robertson and Kelly Grant, The Globe and Mail, for their extensive coverage tracking how measles made a comeback in Canada.
- How the measles made its way back to Canada
- ‘If the numbers are right, we’re in trouble’: Behind the comeback of measles in Canada
- On the ground in the epicentre of Ontario’s measles outbreak
- Measles resurgence exposes fault lines over vaccines and faith in Alberta town
- Internal documents show how Alberta’s measles outbreak began to spiral out of control
- Alberta government rejected expert advice to report probable measles cases, documents show
- Canada is close to losing its measles elimination status. What happens then?
- Opinions on measles vaccine differ in Southwestern Ontario after baby’s death
