Take action to protect yourself and others – extreme heat can affect everyone’s health. Determine if you or others around you are at greater risk of heat illness. Check on older adults, those living alone and other at-risk people in-person or on the phone multiple times a day.
Watch for the early signs of heat exhaustion in yourself and others. Signs may include headache, nausea, dizziness, thirst, dark urine and intense fatigue. Stop your activity and drink water.
Heat stroke is a medical emergency! Call 9-1-1 or your emergency health provider if you, or someone around you, is showing signs of heat stroke which can include red and hot skin, dizziness, nausea, confusion and change in consciousness. While you wait for medical attention, try to cool the person by moving them to a cool place, removing extra clothing, applying cold water or ice packs around the body.
Drink water often and before you feel thirsty to replace fluids.
Close blinds, or shades and open windows if outside is cooler than inside.
Turn on air conditioning, use a fan, or move to a cooler area of your living space. If your living space is hot, move to a cool public space such as a cooling centre, community centre, library or shaded park.
Follow the advice of your region’s public health authority.
Plan and schedule outdoor activities during the coolest parts of the day.
Limit direct exposure to the sun and heat. Wear lightweight, light-coloured, loose-fitting clothing and a wide-brimmed hat.
Never leave people, especially children, or pets inside a parked vehicle. Check the vehicle before locking to make sure no one is left behind.
A prolonged period of near heat warning levels begins today.
What:
Daytime highs of 29 to 32 degrees Celsius and a humidex of 35 to 40.
Overnight lows of 19 to 23 degrees Celsius, providing little relief from the heat.
When:
Today, possibly to Thursday.
Additional information:
This week southern Ontario will experience hot and humid conditions. The temperatures and humidex will meet or be extremely close to heat warning criteria, with the hottest day being Saturday. A shift in the weather pattern on Thursday will likely end this multi-day period of heat and humidity.
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For more information: https://www.canada.ca/en/health-canada/services/climate-change-health/extreme-heat/how-protect-yourself.html https://www.canada.ca/en/health-canada/services/climate-change-health/extreme-heat/who-is-at-risk.html
Please continue to monitor alerts and forecasts issued by Environment Canada. To report severe weather, send an email to ONstorm@ec.gc.ca or post reports on X using #ONStorm.
The City of Windsor had more people looking for a job in June than other metropolitan areas, according to Statistics Canada.
For the first time since January, more Canadians were able to find a job.
July 11 for the monthly labour force survey, and showed 83,000 new jobs were created last month.
Employment rose among core-aged men and women, aged 25 to 54 years old, the government agency said.
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But the caveat is that employment growth was concentrated in part-time work, with approximately 70,000 jobs.
Young and old still seeking work
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According to the June labour force survey, many teens still trying to find work across the country, as the youth unemployment rate held steady at 14.2 per cent in June.
And the job situation also didn’t improve much for older workers, as the unemployment rate among people aged 55 years and older was similar to last year, at 5.4 per cent in June.
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What StatCan noted in its report is some employees are now waiting longer to find a position. Compared to 2024, the length of time people searched for a job was up in June 2025. More than one in five unemployed people had been searching for work for 27 weeks or more in June — an increase from 17.7 per cent in June 2024.
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Windsor experiences job lossesÂ
Areas that did see a decline in employment included the agriculture sector, and Windsor’s working sector.
Even though StatCan noted the “layoff rate in June was virtually unchanged on a year-over-year basis,†it added the “unemployment rate (in Windsor) has increased markedly in recent months amid trade disruptions in automotive manufacturing industries.
The unemployment rate in Windsor was 11.2 per cent in June, the highest among the Census Metropolitan Areas (CMA). Since January 2025, it has increased 2.1 percentage points.
Stellantis has an assembly plant in Windsor, and after facing some temporary closures, it announced last month it was returning to full production beginning the week of June 23.
Overall job losses
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Turning to the rest of the province,  overall in manufacturing, natural resources, utilities, agriculture, business, building and other support services and “other services.â€
To see the full labour market survey, visit .
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