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2005 in Canada

2005 in Canada: Encyclopedia - 2005 in Canada

See also: list of 'years in Canada' 2005 in Canadian politics 2005 in Canadian culture 2005 Canadian incumbents 2004-05 NHL season 2005-06 NHL season other events of 2005 2005 in Canada - Incumbents. Head of State - Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II Governor General - Adrienne Clarkson then Michaëlle Jean Prime Minister - Paul Martin Premier of Alberta - Ralph Klein Premie ...

Including:

2005 in Canada, 2005 in Canada - April, 2005 in Canada - Arts and literature, 2005 in Canada - August, 2005 in Canada - Births, 2005 in Canada - Deaths, 2005 in Canada - December, 2005 in Canada - Events, 2005 in Canada - February, 2005 in Canada - Incumbents, 2005 in Canada - January, 2005 in Canada - July, 2005 in Canada - June, 2005 in Canada - March, 2005 in Canada - May, 2005 in Canada - November, 2005 in Canada - October, 2005 in Canada - September, 2005 in Canada - Sports

2005 in Canada: Encyclopedia - 2005 in Canada



2005 in Canada

See also:

  • list of 'years in Canada'
  • 2005 in Canadian politics
  • 2005 in Canadian culture
  • 2005 Canadian incumbents
  • 2004-05 NHL season
  • 2005-06 NHL season
  • other events of 2005

2005 in Canada - Incumbents

  • Head of State - Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II
    • Governor General - Adrienne Clarkson then Michaëlle Jean
  • Prime Minister - Paul Martin
  • Premier of Alberta - Ralph Klein
  • Premier of British Columbia - Gordon Campbell
  • Premier of Manitoba - Gary Doer
  • Premier of New Brunswick - Bernard Lord
  • Premier of Newfoundland and Labrador - Danny Williams
  • Premier of Nova Scotia - John Hamm
  • Premier of Ontario - Dalton McGuinty
  • Premier of Prince Edward Island - Pat Binns
  • Premier of Quebec - Jean Charest
  • Premier of Saskatchewan - Lorne Calvert
  • Premier of the Northwest Territories - Joe Handley
  • Premier of Nunavut - Paul Okalik
  • Premier of Yukon - Dennis Fentie

2005 in Canada - Events

2005 in Canada - January

  • January 7: Minister of Health Ujjal Dosanjh arrives in Sri Lanka to survey the aftermath of the Indian Ocean tsunami damage.
  • January 8: Disaster Assistance Response Team arrives in Sri Lanka to provide fresh water, tents, food and medical assistance to victims of the tsunami disaster.
  • January 10: The Canadian government increases its monetary contribution in the Humanitarian response to the 2004 Indian Ocean earthquake to $425 million.
  • January 14: Minister of Citizenship and Immigration Judy Sgro resigns from her cabinet post as she is being investigated for illegal immigration practices.
  • January 16: Prime Minister Paul Martin begins a nine-day trip to Asia in Indonesia surveying the aftermath of the Indian Ocean tsunami damage. Martin also travelled to Sri Lanka, India, Japan and China.
  • January 20: Norman Kwong is appointed the new Lieutenant Governor of Alberta, following the death in office of Lois Hole.
  • January 21: China opens its borders to allow tourists to travel to Canada.

2005 in Canada - February

  • February 1: Ontario Progressive Conservative Party member Ernie Eves resigns from the Ontario legislature.
  • February 2: Harjit Singh is deported to India.
  • February 6: A group of Ontarians file a class action lawsuit against Agropur Cooperative after they became sick from chocolate milk tainted by chemical cleaner.
  • February 8: Controversial Toronto police chief Julian Fantino is appointed Ontario's new commissioner of emergency management.
  • February 8: Edmonton police chief Fred Rayner is fired after news of a police sting targeting a journalist and the chair of the city's police board comes to light.
  • February 10: Wal-Mart says it will close one of its stores in Jonquière, Québec, just as its 200 workers are about to win the first-ever union contract from the world's largest retailer.
  • February 14: The Canadian government signs a multi-billion dollar deal with Newfoundland and Labrador and Nova Scotia for offshore natural resource revenues.
  • February 18: Quebec Premier Jean Charest does a cabinet shuffle to improve his party's popularity.
  • February 22: Canada rejects a proposed missile defence plan with the United States.
  • February 23: The 2005 Canadian budget is presented.
  • February 25: The Anglican Church of Canada is asked to voluntarily withdraw for the time being from the Anglican Consultative Council on account of the blessing of same sex unions at six parishes in the Diocese of New Westminster.

2005 in Canada - March

  • March 1 - Frank McKenna becomes the new Canadian Ambassador to the United States.
  • March 3 - Four Royal Canadian Mounted Police officers -- Peter Schiemann, Lionide Johnston, Anthony Gordon and Brock Myrol -- are killed by local James Roszko in a drug raid on his farm in Mayerthorpe, Alberta.
  • March 10 - Governor General Adrienne Clarkson announces that she will create a trophy for women's hockey in Canada. (The National Hockey League's Stanley Cup was donated in 1892 by a predecessor of Clarkson's, Lord Frederick Stanley.)
  • March 11 - 2004 Canadian sponsorship scandal: The Canadian government launches a $39 million lawsuit against Lafleur Communication Marketing, GroupAction, Groupe Everest and Le Groupe Polygone.
  • March 11 - Without warning, Jetsgo immediately ceases all operations.
  • March 16 - Ripudaman Singh Malik and Ajaib Singh Bagri are found not guilty by the Supreme Court of British Columbia at the Air India Trial.
  • March 24 - Paul Martin arranges the appointment of Roméo Dallaire, Art Eggleton, Lillian Dyck, Jim Cowan, Elaine McCoy, Grant Mitchell, Robert Peterson, Nancy Ruth and Claudette Tardif to the Senate of Canada.

2005 in Canada - April

  • April 1 - Thompson Rivers University is born from the merger of University College of the Cariboo and British Columbia Open University.
  • April 12 - Kelly Ellard is found guilty of second degree murder in the 1997 murder of Reena Virk.
  • April 13 - Neo-Nazi leader Wolfgang Droege, leader of the Heritage Front, is found shot dead in his apartment.
  • April 21 - Prime Minister Paul Martin and the leaders of the opposition address the nation separately on television on the subject of the sponsorship scandal and the possibility of a general election being called this spring.
  • April 26 - The Liberal Party of Canada and the New Democratic Party announce that they have come to an agreement in principle on the 2005 Canadian budget. This agreement is a move by the Liberals to avoid a vote of no confidence in the House, which would cause a general election to be called.
  • April 29 - Sean Eagan dies from a heart condition while climbing Mount Everest.

2005 in Canada - May

  • May 1 - Canada imposes a 15% surtax sanction on U.S. imports of cigarettes, oysters and live swine, after the Byrd Amendment was found to be illegal by the World Trade Organization.
  • May 5 - A Canadian Forces Maritime Command board of inquiry finds no one accountable for the fatal fire aboard HMCS Chicoutimi.
  • May 8 - Steve Nash becomes the first Canadian player to win the NBA MVP Award
  • May 10 - The House passes a motion, which the opposition says should topple the government. The governing Liberals refuse to resign following this by claiming that this is a procedural matter and not a vote of no confidence.
  • May 13 - Jetsgo declares bankruptcy
  • May 17 - Belinda Stronach who ran for the leadership of the Conservative Party crosses the floor to the Liberal Party and becomes Minister of Human Resources and Skills Development.
  • May 17 - Queen Elizabeth II arrives in Canada for a nine-day visit to celebrate the centennial of Alberta and Saskatchewan.
  • May 17 - British Columbia general election and electoral reform referendum
  • May 19 - In the House of Commons, Paul Martin's minority government survives two confidence votes. For the first time in Canadian history, the Speaker of the House votes to break a tie in a confidence vote, which the government wins 153 to 152.
  • May 20 - Six oil workers die and another two dozen are injured in Alberta when their bus is T-boned by a tractor-trailer.
  • May 23 - The four Canadian soldiers killed in the friendly fire incident by United States Airforce fighter pilot Major Harry Schmidt on April 18, 2002 are posthumously remembered at a ceremony in Fort Campbell, Kentucky, along with three Americans, whose names were added to a memorial wall.
  • May 24 - Todd Russell of the Liberal Party wins a federal by-election held in Labrador to replace the late Lawrence O'Brien.
  • May 31 - Miss Canada Natalie Glebova became Miss Universe in Bangkok.

2005 in Canada - June

  • June 1 - Ottawa's HOT 89.9 plays host to the wedding of Lynn and Alex from The Amazing Race 7.
  • June 6 - Pat O'Brien quits the Liberal Party to sit as an independent in the House of Commons.
  • June 6 - Conservative MP Gurmant Grewal takes a "stress leave" from Parliament, after Air Canada reveals that he's under a security investigation.
  • June 9 - The Supreme Court of Canada rules against the Quebec Health Insurance Act and Quebec Hospital Insurance Act sections that prohibit buying private health insurance for medically necessary medical services.
  • June 11-12 - A heatwave hits central Canada, producing temperatures of about 31 °C with a humidex of 41.
  • June 15 - Wayne Gretzky is appointed executive director of Team Canada for the 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin, Italy.
  • June 16 - Canada's first three satellite radio services are licensed by the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission. One is licensed to Canadian Satellite Radio in conjunction with XM Satellite Radio, one to Standard Broadcasting and the CBC in conjunction with Sirius Satellite Radio, and one to a partnership between CHUM Limited and Astral Media.
  • June 23 - Court of Queen's Bench of New Brunswick Justice Judy L. Clendenning ruled the prohibition of same-sex marriage was unconstitutional.
  • June 28 - Canadian Forces restructures the military of Canada by creating Canada Command
  • June 28 - The Supreme Court of Canada restores a deportation order issued to Léon Mugesera.
  • June 28 - Bill C-38 passes third reading in the House of Commons, virtually assuring same-sex marriage in Canada. The final vote count was 158-133 in favour, after a Conservative motion failed 158-127 to send it back to committee.

2005 in Canada - July

  • July 2 - Live 8 takes place in Park Place, Barrie, Ontario.
  • July 4 - Karla Homolka is released from prison.
  • July 8 - Adrienne Clarkson undergoes pacemaker surgery. Beverly McLachlin, as chief justice, becomes administrator of the government during Clarkson's convalescence.
  • July 13 - Dodge White, an American man, is arrested in Victoria, British Columbia by Canada Border Services Agency for possession of an explosive device.
  • July 13 - Bernard Ebbers, an Edmonton, Alberta–born American businessman, is sentenced by U.S. Federal Judge Barbara Jones to 25 years in prison for corporate fraud.
  • July 14 - A United States appelate court rules that beef imports from Canada do not hurt the food supply despite mad cow disease concerns, effectively re-opening the border.
  • July 20 - Same-sex marriage in Canada becomes federal law when Chief Justice Beverley McLachlin (acting as the governor general's deputy or administrator of the government) gives royal assent to the Civil Marriage Act.

2005 in Canada - August

  • August 2 - Air France Flight 358 bursts into flames after overrunning the runway while landing at Toronto Pearson International Airport. Everyone on board survives.
  • August 2 - Prime Minister Martin appoints five new senators: Andrée Champagne and Dennis Dawson of Quebec, Hugh Segal of Ontario, Larry W. Campbell of British Columbia, and Rod Zimmer of Manitoba.
  • August 3 - Martin announces that CBC journalist Michaëlle Jean will be appointed the next Governor General.
  • August 4 - The Supreme Court of Canada suspends for 12 months its recent ruling that the Quebec government cannot prevent people from paying for private insurance for health-care procedures covered under medicare.
  • August 9 - Ernest "Smokey" Smith's remains lie in state at Parliament Hill's foyer with the Canadian flag draped across his coffin.
  • August 13 - Ernest "Smoky" Smith receives a full military funeral.
  • August 15 - The Canadian Broadcasting Corporation enters a labour dispute with its staff, significantly affecting programming on all of the CBC radio and television networks. Only staff in Quebec and Moncton, New Brunswick are unaffected, due to membership in a different union.
  • August 18 - HMCS Fredericton is deployed to the Canadian Arctic to prohibit illegal fishing and to reassert sovereignty in the North.
  • August 19 - Former New Brunswick cabinet minister Vaughan Blaney leads team into CFB Gagetown to investigate claims of Agent Orange being used.
  • August 19 - The RCMP decides not to press criminal charges against former employees of Hollinger International.
  • August 20 - Airport security workers security system debuts, after three years.
  • August 21 - British Columbia mortgages serial killer Robert Pickton's land for $10 million dollars.

2005 in Canada - September

  • September 1 - Saskatchewan and Alberta celebrate their centennials as provinces.
  • September 2 - The Canadian government deploys an Airbus A321 to New Orleans, to transport Canadians stranded in the area after Hurricane Katrina, to airlift them to Lackland Air Force Base in San Antonio, Texas. Four warships and a Canadian Coast Guard vessel with relief supplies.
  • September 5 - Global groups unite against Islamic arbitration in Ontario.
  • September 9 - Halifax International Airport terminal named for Premier of Nova Scotia Robert Stanfield.
  • September 19 - Sponsorship scandal: Paul Coffin is sentenced to two years less a day conditional sentence for his involvement.
  • September 19 - Canadian warships head home from Hurricane Katrina relief mission.
  • September 19 - Canada and Denmark agree to Hans Island process.
  • September 25 - New Brunswick New Democratic Party elected Allison Brewer as leader.
  • September 27 - Michaëlle Jean succeeds Adrienne Clarkson as Governor General.
  • September 27 - Newfoundland and Labrador municipal elections, 2005 occur.

2005 in Canada - October

  • October 10 - Education strike begins in British Columbia closing down 40,000 schools, and turning down 600,000 students.
  • October 24 - Education strike ends in British Columbia exactly two weeks after the beginning of the strike.
  • October 26 - An evacuation of over 800 members of the Kashechewan First Nation by the Government of Ontario to Ottawa, Sudbury, and other communities in Ontario begins after E. coli is found in their water supply network.

2005 in Canada - November

  • November 24- Opposition leader Stephen Harper moves a motion of no confidence in the government of Paul Martin
  • November 28 - The House of Commons passes a motion of no confidence in the government of Paul Martin
  • November 28 - 190 nations gather for the Montreal Climate Change Conference 2005 until December 9th
  • November 29 - The governor general, on the advice of the prime minister, dissolves Parliament and calls a general election for January 23, 2006.
  • November 30 - A Montreal judge overturns the 14 conditions imposed on killer Karla Homolka.

2005 in Canada - December

2005 in Canada - Arts and literature

  • February 25 - Frank Parker Day's novel Rockbound is named the winner of Canada Reads 2005
  • March 26 - Ian and Sylvia's "Four Strong Winds" is named the greatest Canadian song of all time on CBC Radio One's 50 Tracks
  • June 29 - The Rooms, a new cultural facility in St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador housing the province's art gallery, provincial historical museum and provincial archives, is officially opened.
  • September 12 - Peter C. Newman's controversial book The Secret Mulroney Tapes: Unguarded Confessions of a Prime Minister is released.
  • September 20 - Canadian rocker J.D. Fortune is named the winner of the television reality show Rock Star: INXS, becoming the new lead singer of popular Australian rock band INXS.

2005 in Canada - Sports

  • January 4: The Canadian junior men's hockey team wins the IIHF World Junior Championship, defeating Russia 6-1. The team, which went undefeated over the course of the tournament, was touted as the "Greatest Team" to ever play in the Junior men's tournament. They won Canada's first gold medal at the tournament since 1997.
  • May 8: Steve Nash becomes the first Canadian player to win the NBA MVP Award
  • November 17 Paul Boehm wins silver in skeleton in the World Cup at Lake Placid, New York
  • November 27 - The Edmonton Eskimos defeat the Montreal Alouettes 38–35 in overtime in the 93rd Grey Cup.
  • December 3- Clara Hughes wins gold for the Womens 5000 metres in speed skating at the World Cup
  • December 3- Cindy Klassen wins bronze for the Womens 5000 metres in speed skating at the World Cup.
  • December 3- Denny Morrison, Arne Dankers and Justin Warsylewicz win silver for the 3,200 metre Mens Team Pursuit in speed skating at the World Cup.
  • December 3- Wilfred Laurier Golden Hawks beat the Saskatchewan Huskies 24-23 for the Vanier Cup.
  • December 3- Marie-France Dubreuil and Patrice Lauzon win gold in figure skating at the NHK Trophy event.
  • December 3 - Vanier Cup: the Wilfrid Laurier Golden Hawks beat the Saskatchewan Huskies 24–23 at Ivor Wynne Stadium, Hamilton, Ontario

2005 in Canada - Births

2005 in Canada - Deaths

  • January 6: Lois Hole, Lieutenant Governor of Alberta
  • January 6: Louis Robichaud, Premier of New Brunswick
  • January 13: Earl Cameron, 1960s CBC news anchor
  • January 14: Charlotte MacLeod, Canadian-born American author
  • January 15: Dan Lee, animator, creator of Finding Nemo title character
  • January 22: Harry Boyle, CBC broadcaster
  • January 26: Fraser Elliott, lawyer
  • January 27: Jonathan Welsh, actor
  • January 30: Martyn Bennett, Canadian-born Scottish musician
  • January 31: Ron Basford, former Member of Parliament and Minister of Justice
  • February 1: John Vernon, actor (Wojeck)
  • February 5: Bob McAdorey, television and radio broadcaster
  • February 21: Gérard Bessette, author
  • March 12: Bill Cameron, television and radio broadcaster, author, writer
  • March 28: Robin Spry, filmmaker
  • April 3: Frank Clair, Canadian Football League coach
  • April 22: Stephane Provost, National Hockey League linesman
  • April 27: Red Horner, National Hockey League defenceman
  • April 27: Christina McCall, political writer
  • April 29: Sean Egan, professor
  • May 2: Robert Hunter, journalist and environmentalist
  • May 22: Terry Carisse, country musician
  • May 25: Domenic Troiano, rock guitarist
  • June 14: Norman Levine, short story writer
  • June 17: Ben Kerr, busker and perennial candidate for Mayor of Toronto
  • July 9: Chuck Cadman, Member of Parliament for the riding of Surrey North
  • July 9: Alex Shibicky, former NHL forward
  • July 10: Frank Moores, former Premier of Newfoundland
  • July 20: James Doohan, actor (Star Trek)
  • July 21: Long John Baldry, blues musician
  • August 3: Smokey Smith, last living Canadian Victoria Cross recipient.
  • August 7: Peter Jennings, Canadian-born journalist and news anchor for ABC in the United States
  • August 11: Kay Tremblay, actress best known for role on Road to Avonlea
  • August 21: James Jerome, jurist, Speaker of the Canadian House of Commons and Member of Parliament for Sudbury
  • October 8: George Hislop, pioneering gay activist
  • October 29: Lloyd Bochner, actor in Dynasty and The Twilight Zone
  • October 30: David Bazay, CBC journalist
  • December 3: Allan Waters, founder of CHUM Ltd..

Category: 2005 in Canada

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