Kelly Grant’s career in journalism began in high school, when she worked as a night and weekend tape editor at her local television station in London, Ont. She’s been hooked on reporting ever since. After earning a Bachelor of Journalism degree from Carleton University in Ottawa, Kelly worked as a cop reporter and editorial writer at the Windsor Star and as a general assignment writer and Toronto city hall reporter at The National Post. She joined The Globe and Mail in 2008. Kelly has held a variety of posts at The Globe, including Toronto editor and Toronto City Hall bureau chief. She is now a national health reporter with a special interest in health policy, medical research, drug pricing, COVID-19 and health care in the far north. In 2022, she undertook a special assignment reporting on health care in Nunavut. When not reporting, she can usually be found at the arena, cheering on her three sons.
Kelly Grant’s journalism career began in high school, when she worked as a night and weekend editor at her local television station in London, Ontario. Since then, she has been addicted to reporting. After graduating from Carleton University in Ottawa with a bachelor’s degree in journalism, Kelly worked as a crime reporter and columnist for the Windsor Star and as a general tasks editor and reporter at Toronto City Hall for the National Post. Kelly held positions at The Globe, adding editor-in-chief of Toronto and the head of the Toronto City Council bureau. She is now a national fitness journalist with a specific interest in fitness policy, medical research, drug pricing, COVID-19, and fitness. attention in the far north. In 2022, she undertook a special project to inform about physical care in Nunavut. When she is not reporting, she can regularly be found in the arena, cheering on her 3 children.
During her 15 years as a national fitness reporter for the Globe and Mail, Carly Weeks gained recognition as one of the nation’s leading governments on fitness-related issues.
Carly was one of the journalists who led the Globe’s coverage of the COVID-19 pandemic and continues to cover the fallout of the pandemic and its effects on the physical care system. She has spent years covering many pressing fitness issues, adding to the growing risk of medical misinformation, the lack of access to abortion in many parts of Canada, and the critical shortage of physical care staff across the country. country.
Kelly Grant’s journalism career began in high school, when she worked as a night and weekend editor at her local television station in London, Ontario. Since then, she has been addicted to reporting. After graduating from Carleton University in Ottawa with a bachelor’s degree in journalism, Kelly worked as a crime reporter and columnist for the Windsor Star and as a general tasks editor and reporter at Toronto City Hall for the National Post. Kelly held positions at The Globe, adding editor-in-chief of Toronto and the head of the Toronto City Council bureau. She is now a national fitness journalist with a specific interest in fitness policy, medical research, drug pricing, COVID-19, and fitness. attention in the far north. In 2022, she undertook a special project to inform about physical care in Nunavut. When she is not reporting, she can regularly be found in the arena, cheering on her 3 children.
In her more than 15 years as a national health reporter with The Globe and Mail, Carly Weeks has developed a reputation as one of the country’s leading authorities on health-related issues.
Carly was one of the sleuths who led global coverage of the COVID-19 pandemic and continues to cover up the consequences of the pandemic and its effects on the physical care system. He has spent years covering up many pressing fitness issues, adding to the developing risk of medical diseases. misinformation, lack of access to abortion in many parts of Canada, and critical shortages of physical care staff across the country.
Greg Mercer is a member of The Globe and Mail’s investigative team, and was formerly The Globe’s Atlantic Canada reporter. He’s worked as a journalist across Canada for more than 20 years, reporting for The Guardian, The Narwhal, Huffington Post, Toronto Star, National Post, New Brunswick Telegraph-Journal, Sportsnet.ca and the Waterloo Region Record.
His reporting on the poisonous legacy of Kitchener’s rubber industry earned him a nomination for the 2019 Michener Award and the National Newspaper Award and led Ontario to revisit many past denied claims of rubber workers with health issues. This research also led to the 2019 Michener-Deacon Investigative Journalism Fellowship to read about occupational diseases in Canada.
Other career highlights come with two extended tours in Haiti after the 2010 earthquake and the politics of the 2012 and 2016 Olympics in London and Rio de Janeiro.
Emma Graney has been covering energy from The Globe and Mail’s Calgary office since 2019, adding oil and fuel, select fuels, renewables, passives and green technology. She helps keep an eye on the energy sector across the country, from the tar sands in Alberta (1, 2) to geothermal prospecting in Saskatchewan, the explosive threat of old fuel wells in Ontario and renewable hydrogen in Newfoundland and Labrador.
Emma was part of the Globe’s team of correspondents deployed to Europe in the days following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022. In 2023, she was part of the Oxford Climate Journalism Network cohort, and in 2020, she was an Energy Journalism Fellow at Columbia University.
Emma first landed in Alberta in 2016 as a provincial affairs reporter for the Edmonton Journal, where she hosted the weekly Press Gallery podcast on Alberta politics and was part of the team that won a National Newspaper Award for its policy on the Fort McMurray bushfires. She worked in Saskatchewan, Newfoundland and Labrador, the UK, Indonesia and her home Australia, and researched synthetic intelligence in China as an Asia Pacific Foundation Media Fellow. She holds a Bachelor of Arts in Journalism and a Bachelor of Commerce from Queensland University of Technology in Brisbane.
Kelly Grant’s career in journalism began in high school, when she worked as a night and weekend tape editor at her local television station in London, Ont. She’s been hooked on reporting ever since. After earning a Bachelor of Journalism degree from Carleton University in Ottawa, Kelly worked as a cop reporter and editorial writer at the Windsor Star and as a general assignment writer and Toronto city hall reporter at The National Post. She joined The Globe and Mail in 2008. Kelly has held a variety of posts at The Globe, including Toronto editor and Toronto City Hall bureau chief. She is now a national health reporter with a special interest in health policy, medical research, drug pricing, COVID-19 and health care in the far north. In 2022, she undertook a special assignment reporting on health care in Nunavut. When not reporting, she can usually be found at the arena, cheering on her three sons.
During her 15 years as a national fitness reporter for the Globe and Mail, Carly Weeks gained recognition as one of the nation’s leading governments on fitness-related issues.
Carly was one of the sleuths who led global coverage of the COVID-19 pandemic and continues to cover up the consequences of the pandemic and its effects on the physical care system. He has spent years covering up many pressing fitness issues, adding to the developing risk of medical diseases. misinformation, lack of access to abortion in many parts of Canada, and critical shortages of physical care staff across the country.
During her 15 years as a national fitness reporter for the Globe and Mail, Carly Weeks gained recognition as one of the nation’s leading governments on fitness-related issues.
Carly was one of the sleuths who led the Globe’s coverage of the COVID-19 pandemic and continues to cover up the fallout from the pandemic and its effects on the physical care system. He has spent years covering up many pressing fitness issues, adding to the developing risk of medical diseases. misinformation, lack of access to abortion in many parts of Canada, and critical shortages of physical care staff across the country.
In her more than 15 years as a national health reporter with The Globe and Mail, Carly Weeks has developed a reputation as one of the country’s leading authorities on health-related issues.
Carly was one of the sleuths who led the Globe’s coverage of the COVID-19 pandemic and continues to cover up the fallout from the pandemic and its effects on the physical care system. He has spent years covering up many pressing fitness issues, adding to the developing risk of medical diseases. misinformation, lack of access to abortion in many parts of Canada, and critical shortages of physical care staff across the country.
Kelly Grant’s journalism career began in high school, when she worked as a night and weekend editor at her local television station in London, Ontario. Since then, she has been addicted to reporting. After graduating from Carleton University in Ottawa with a bachelor’s degree in journalism, Kelly worked as a crime reporter and columnist for the Windsor Star and as a general tasks editor and reporter at Toronto City Hall for the National Post. Kelly held positions at The Globe, adding editor-in-chief of Toronto and the head of the Toronto City Council bureau. She is now a national fitness journalist with a specific interest in fitness policy, medical research, drug pricing, COVID-19, and fitness. attention in the far north. In 2022, she undertook a special project to inform about physical care in Nunavut. When she is not reporting, she can regularly be found in the arena, cheering on her 3 children.
Kelly Grant’s career in journalism began in high school, when she worked as a night and weekend tape editor at her local television station in London, Ont. She’s been hooked on reporting ever since. After earning a Bachelor of Journalism degree from Carleton University in Ottawa, Kelly worked as a cop reporter and editorial writer at the Windsor Star and as a general assignment writer and Toronto city hall reporter at The National Post. She joined The Globe and Mail in 2008. Kelly has held a variety of posts at The Globe, including Toronto editor and Toronto City Hall bureau chief. She is now a national health reporter with a special interest in health policy, medical research, drug pricing, COVID-19 and health care in the far north. In 2022, she undertook a special assignment reporting on health care in Nunavut. When not reporting, she can usually be found at the arena, cheering on her three sons.
Kelly Grant’s career in journalism began in high school, when she worked as a night and weekend tape editor at her local television station in London, Ont. She’s been hooked on reporting ever since. After earning a Bachelor of Journalism degree from Carleton University in Ottawa, Kelly worked as a cop reporter and editorial writer at the Windsor Star and as a general assignment writer and Toronto city hall reporter at The National Post. She joined The Globe and Mail in 2008. Kelly has held a variety of posts at The Globe, including Toronto editor and Toronto City Hall bureau chief. She is now a national health reporter with a special interest in health policy, medical research, drug pricing, COVID-19 and health care in the far north. In 2022, she undertook a special assignment reporting on health care in Nunavut. When not reporting, she can usually be found at the arena, cheering on her three sons.
In her more than 15 years as a national health reporter with The Globe and Mail, Carly Weeks has developed a reputation as one of the country’s leading authorities on health-related issues.
Carly was one of the sleuths who led the Globe’s coverage of the COVID-19 pandemic and continues to cover up the fallout from the pandemic and its effects on the physical care system. He has spent years covering up many pressing fitness issues, adding to the developing risk of medical diseases. misinformation, lack of access to abortion in many parts of Canada, and critical shortages of physical care staff across the country.
Kelly Grant’s journalism career began in high school, when she worked as a night and weekend editor at her local television station in London, Ontario. Since then, she has been addicted to reporting. After graduating from Carleton University in Ottawa with a bachelor’s degree in journalism, Kelly worked as a crime reporter and columnist for the Windsor Star and as a general tasks editor and reporter at Toronto City Hall for the National Post. Kelly held positions at The Globe, adding editor-in-chief of Toronto and the head of the Toronto City Council bureau. She is now a national fitness journalist with a specific interest in fitness policy, medical research, drug pricing, COVID-19, and fitness. attention in the far north. In 2022, she undertook a special project to inform about physical care in Nunavut. When she is not reporting, she can regularly be found in the arena, cheering on her 3 children.
Kelly Grant’s journalism career began in high school, when she worked as a night and weekend editor at her local television station in London, Ontario. Since then, she has been addicted to reporting. After graduating from Carleton University in Ottawa with a bachelor’s degree in journalism, Kelly worked as a crime reporter and columnist for the Windsor Star and as a general tasks editor and reporter at Toronto City Hall for the National Post. Kelly held positions at The Globe, adding editor-in-chief of Toronto and the head of the Toronto City Council bureau. She is now a national fitness journalist with a specific interest in fitness policy, medical research, drug pricing, COVID-19, and fitness. attention in the far north. In 2022, she undertook a special project to inform about physical care in Nunavut. When she is not reporting, she can regularly be found in the arena, cheering on her 3 children.
During her 15 years as the Globe and Mail’s national fitness reporter, Carly Weeks earned recognition as one of the nation’s top leaders on fitness issues.
Carly was one of the reporters leading the Globe’s coverage of the COVID-19 pandemic and continues to cover the fallout of the pandemic and its effects on the health care system. She has spent years covering many urgent health issues, including the growing threat of medical misinformation and disinformation, lack of access to abortion services in many parts of Canada and the critical shortage of health workers across the country.
Kelly Grant’s journalism career began in high school, when she worked as a night and weekend editor at her local television station in London, Ontario. Since then, she has been addicted to reporting. After graduating from Carleton University in Ottawa with a bachelor’s degree in journalism, Kelly worked as a crime reporter and columnist for the Windsor Star and as a general tasks editor and reporter at Toronto City Hall for the National Post. Kelly held positions at The Globe, adding editor-in-chief of Toronto and the head of the Toronto City Council bureau. She is now a national fitness journalist with a specific interest in fitness policy, medical research, drug pricing, COVID-19, and fitness. attention in the far north. In 2022, she undertook a special project to inform about physical care in Nunavut. When she is not reporting, she can regularly be found in the arena, cheering on her 3 children.
During her 15 years as a national fitness reporter at The Globe and Mail, Carly Weeks gained recognition as one of the nation’s leading fitness governments.
Carly was one of the reporters leading the Globe’s coverage of the COVID-19 pandemic and continues to cover the fallout of the pandemic and its effects on the health care system. She has spent years covering many urgent health issues, including the growing threat of medical misinformation and disinformation, lack of access to abortion services in many parts of Canada and the critical shortage of health workers across the country.
Greg Mercer is a member of The Globe and Mail’s investigative team and was a former Globe reporter for Atlantic Canada. He has worked as a journalist across Canada for over 20 years, reporting for The Guardian, The Narwhal, Huffington Post, Toronto Star. , National Post, New Brunswick Telegraph-Journal, Sportsnet. ca and Waterloo Region record.
His reporting on the poisonous legacy of Kitchener’s rubber industry earned him a nomination for the 2019 Michener Award and the National Newspaper Award and led Ontario to revisit many past denied claims of rubber workers with health issues. This research also led to the 2019 Michener-Deacon Investigative Journalism Fellowship to read about occupational diseases in Canada.
Other career highlights come with two extended tours in Haiti after the 2010 earthquake and the politics of the 2012 and 2016 Olympics in London and Rio de Janeiro.
Emma Graney has covered energy from The Globe and Mail’s Calgary Bureau since 2019, including oil and gas, alternate fuels, renewables, liabilities and green technology. She keeps her eye on the energy sector across the country, from the oil sands in Alberta (1, 2) to geothermal potential in Saskatchewan, the explosive liabilities of old gas wells in Ontario, and renewable hydrogen in Newfoundland and Labrador.
Emma was part of the Globe’s team of correspondents deployed to Europe in the days following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2022. In 2023, she was part of the Oxford Climate Journalism Network cohort, and in 2020, she was an Energy Journalism Fellow at Columbia University.
Emma first landed in Alberta in 2016 as a provincial affairs reporter for the Edmonton Journal, where she hosted the weekly Press Gallery podcast on Alberta politics and was part of the team that won a National Newspaper Award for its wildfire policy of Fort McMurray. She worked in Saskatchewan, Newfoundland and Labrador, the United Kingdom, Indonesia and her local Australia, and researched synthetic intelligence in China as an Asia Pacific Foundation media fellow. She has a Bachelor of Journalism and a Bachelor of Commerce from the Queensland University of Technology in Brisbane.
Kelly Grant’s journalism career began in high school, when she worked as a night and weekend editor at her local television station in London, Ontario. Since then, she has been addicted to reporting. After graduating from Carleton University in Ottawa with a bachelor’s degree in journalism, Kelly worked as a crime reporter and columnist for the Windsor Star and as a general assignment editor and Toronto City Hall reporter for the National Post. She joined The Globe and Mail in 2008. Kelly held positions at The Globe, including Toronto editor-in-chief and Toronto City Council bureau chief. She is now a national fitness journalist with a specific interest in fitness policy, medical research, drug pricing, COVID-19, and fitness. attention in the extreme north. In 2022, she undertook a special project to report on physical care in Nunavut. When she’s not reporting, she can regularly be found in the arena, cheering on her three children.
During her 15 years as a national fitness reporter for the Globe and Mail, Carly Weeks gained recognition as one of the nation’s leading governments on fitness-related issues.
Carly was one of the sleuths who led the Globe’s coverage of the COVID-19 pandemic and continues to cover up the fallout from the pandemic and its effects on the physical care system. He has spent years covering up many pressing fitness issues, adding to the developing risk of medical diseases. misinformation, lack of access to abortion in many parts of Canada, and critical shortages of physical care staff across the country.
In her more than 15 years as a national health reporter with The Globe and Mail, Carly Weeks has developed a reputation as one of the country’s leading authorities on health-related issues.
Carly was one of the sleuths who led global coverage of the COVID-19 pandemic and continues to cover up the consequences of the pandemic and its effects on the physical care system. He has spent years covering up many pressing fitness issues, adding to the developing risk of medical diseases. misinformation, lack of access to abortion in many parts of Canada, and critical shortages of physical care staff across the country.
During her 15 years as the Globe and Mail’s national fitness reporter, Carly Weeks earned recognition as one of the nation’s top leaders on fitness issues.
Carly was one of the journalists who led the Globe’s coverage of the COVID-19 pandemic and continues to cover the fallout of the pandemic and its effects on the physical care system. She has spent years covering many pressing fitness issues, adding to the growing risk of medical misinformation, the lack of access to abortion in many parts of Canada, and the critical shortage of physical care staff across the country. country.
Kelly Grant’s journalism career began in high school, when she worked as a night and weekend editor at her local television station in London, Ontario. Since then, she has been addicted to reporting. After graduating from Carleton University in Ottawa with a bachelor’s degree in journalism, Kelly worked as a crime reporter and columnist for the Windsor Star and as a general tasks editor and reporter at Toronto City Hall for the National Post. Kelly held positions at The Globe, adding editor-in-chief of Toronto and the head of the Toronto City Council bureau. She is now a national fitness journalist with a specific interest in fitness policy, medical research, drug pricing, COVID-19, and fitness. attention in the far north. In 2022, she undertook a special project to inform about physical care in Nunavut. When she is not reporting, she can regularly be found in the arena, cheering on her 3 children.