A Regina Police Service cruiser and a 19-year-old cyclist collided on Elphinstone Street on Friday.
Regina's city council will vote Monday on changes to city manager Glen Davies contract that would up his base annual salary from $200,834 to $250,000.
Ila Fehr’s eight-year-old son Nathan got his H1N1 shot on Nov. 12, but it must be redone.
Scouts Canada is dedicating a $1 million fund to support initiatives under an action plan for the growth of the organization, Steve Kent — its chief commissioner — announced Friday in Regina.
Police seized a large supply of illegal hair straighteners, with an estimated value of $19,300, from a man trying to sell the products to a north Regina educational institution on Friday.
The Canadian Union of Public Employees says the provincial government shouldn't defer funding to replace 13 outdated long-term care facilities when care for the elderly is already an area of "chronic neglect."
Rare is the conference that sets aside a quiet space where participants can slip away and find healing. But it makes perfect sense at a Regina meeting dedicated to victims of intimate partner violence.
An online survey conducted with Angus Reid Forum panelists for IBM Canada gives insight into problems facing cities, notes Pat Horgan of IBM Canada.
Even with two more hotels in Regina this year, finding a room in the Queen City this weekend will be a problem.
A 19-year-old man from White City is dead following a single-vehicle rollover in Emerald Park.
The CFL West Division final game and the Canadian Western Agribition both will place demands on parking in the same area of Regina Sunday, but organizers don't foresee major difficulties.
Cash the province doled out in February to build 13 new long-term care facilities as part of an infrastructure "booster shot" is now on hold as the Saskatchewan Party government tightens its belt.
Leon Vande Velde will be able to operate a grader for the City of Regina, thanks to new technology created by city employees to train individuals with hearing impairments on the equipment.
According to the federal government, the number of registered status Indians can increase by up to five per cent by April — once changes to the Indian Act come into effect.
Everybody in Saskatchewan will be able to roll up their sleeves for the H1N1 vaccination beginning next week.
If he could talk, Icon probably wouldn't say he's had a tough year. He'd probably say it's been great fun.
A Saskatchewan Party government that once boasted of being in the pink is now awash in red ink.
The City of Regina's executive committee gave the green light on Wednesday to funding upgrades to Leibel Field and to changing some bylaws.
Just under 950 diagnostic images — or 2.38 per cent of the diagnostic exams perused by Yorkton radiologist Dr. Darius Tsatsi — were deemed to contain enough of a variance in interpretation to potentially affect patient care.
Personal H1N1 pandemic kits don't cost a lot at the Saskatchewan Abilities Council, but assembling them is a priceless opportunity for those with disabilities.