
Letters to the editor, July 16: ‘Do Canadian businesses need more tax incentives and even lower tax rates than they already enjoy?'
Canadian businesses owe tens of billions of dollars in unpaid, uncontested taxes each year, and this debt to the public is growing. Moreover, Canada is already the king of corporate welfare: Its spending is among the highest in the developed world relative to population and GDP, and it has grown much faster than in most other major economies.
This stands in stark contrast to Canada's comparatively low investment in social programs, setting it apart from European peers who prioritize social spending over business subsidies. Notably, business subsidies in Canada have increased by 140 per cent at the federal level since 2014.
Calls for further tax breaks ignore the already generous environment Canadian businesses enjoy and the mounting public cost.
Timothy Kwiatkowski London, Ont.
Re 'The small-bore view of oil-pipeline critics' (Editorial, July 11): Experts at garden hose use are well aware that having an extra bucket at the ready is indeed an essential strategy. At some stage, however, there should be a run to the tap to mitigate the flow.
It is fine to suggest pipeline investors are the ones to shoulder the risk, but such risk extends well beyond their pockets and into the lives of future generations.
Peter Tobin Ottawa
It was the Alberta NDP and federal Liberals who permitted and built the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion.
It was the B.C. NDP and federal Liberals who permitted the Coastal GasLink pipeline and LNG Canada export plant.
And it may very well be the federal Liberals who permit and possibly build another oil pipeline to the West Coast – this time to one of the safest locations for an oil terminal in Prince Rupert – and a pipeline to a liquefied natural gas plant in Quebec.
The antagonism, especially in Alberta, against Ottawa, Liberals and 'leftist radicals' feels little more than a divisive ruse to mislead a gullible sector of the public by power-seeking right-wing groups.
Let's not go down a Trump-like path.
Mike Priaro Calgary
Re 'Money to burn' (Letters, July 9): The letter sounding the climate change alarm, and expressing distress about the state of the world our grandchildren will inherit, resonated with me.
Since Prime Minister Mark Carney stated in his victory speech, 'It is time for ambition,' and that Canadians 'need to think big and act bigger,' then is this not the time to go full bore on decarbonization?
Climate change is upon us with a vengeance, adversely impacting our air quality, lifestyles as well as our mental and physical health.
The time to push the green agenda, not more oil and gas infrastructure, is now: The alarm bells are clanging!
Our descendants are depending on us to get it right.
L.H. MacKenzie Vancouver
Re 'More money for Canada's military should mean more transparency and accountability' (Opinion, July 11): I am no economist.
However, it seems quite clear that boosting spending to 5 per cent of GDP by 2035 means that it has to happen over a possibly longer horizon than has been laid out, and we must aggressively grow the economy, hence revenues, or else taxes will have to be increased, the size of the civil service diminished, and program spending reduced.
So let's get real and get to work as it's not possible to have your cake and eat it, too, and most importantly, Canadians know this.
Desmond Pouyat Toronto
I note many articles lately concerning Canada's proposed military budget. What about forming a firefighting army around military principles, which can be complete with a contingent of appropriate planes, helicopters and boots on the ground that can be rapidly deployed in numbers anywhere needed?
Perhaps during our winters, they could be sent elsewhere to fight, and in doing so, will go some length to resurrect that Canadian reputation of providing willing, selfless assistance to those in need, even south of the border should fires break out there.
Creative redeployment of our current firefighting expenditure in favour of this army would solve many problems.
Evan MacDonald Markham, Ont.
Re 'Healthcare of Ontario Pension Plan CEO shakes up the fund's top leadership' (Report on Business, July 10): By my count, four women were promoted to new positions and one man was replaced.
What's that sound I hear? Is that a glass ceiling exploding?
Peter Shier Toronto
Re 'Alberta to ban books deemed sexually explicit from school libraries' (July 11): Raise a hand if you think the books in school libraries are too 'sexually explicit.' That's what I thought.
Teach students how sex works, then let them read the library books – all of them, before they are purged for whatever reasons that are embarrassing to Alberta school officials.
Sex is normal and natural. That's how we all got here.
Know about it. Do it. Get on with life.
I really don't know why adult humans are so embarrassed by sex.
Kathleen Moore EdD Toronto
Re 'The very courageous six-year-old learning to ride a bike for the very first time' (July 10): When my six-year-old daughter told me she had ridden a friend's bicycle, I was skeptical.
When my second daughter was the same age, I saw her get on a friend's bike and just ride it. No problem.
Puzzle, solution: They'd both spent a lot of time riding scooters. They'd learned the body language of riding on two wheels.
Riding a bicycle? No problem.
Barbara Shaw Cambridge, Ont.
I remember the bike stage for both our children very clearly.
The best advice I can offer parents training their kids on first rides is this: Take the pedals off and put them on the shelf, then make sure the kids can touch the ground. It is also best to use a bike with handlebar brakes rather than pedal coaster brakes.
(Forget training wheels: They only prop kids up and don't actually give them a sense of balance.)
Push the kids slowly, in small increments; they very quickly learn balance. Soon they push off and go 50 metres coasting. My son and daughter were riding by the next day.
Put the pedals back on and kids will combine their coasting with pedal motions.
Brian Layfield Oakville, Ont.
Letters to the Editor should be exclusive to The Globe and Mail. Include your name, address and daytime phone number. Keep letters to 150 words or fewer. Letters may be edited for length and clarity. To submit a letter by e-mail, click here: letters@globeandmail.com
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Global News
10 minutes ago
- Global News
RCMP watchdog found ‘clear call for change' in workplace culture: Documents
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There were also multiple complaints of 'a toxic work environment' due to the behaviour and practices of leadership. 'The staff expresses a strong desire to address and resolve this toxic environment,' the report says. 'They seek an anonymous reporting system to report workplace misconduct, especially involving senior managers.' Employees also wanted additional support for mental health issues and a more compassionate means of accommodating staff needs. Many employees said supervisors and team managers should have more autonomy over decisions about investigative outcomes and allowing people to work remotely, the report adds. 'They believe some current leaders lack the necessary skills and hold positions due to favouritism.' The questionnaire, distributed to current and recently departed employees, revealed a consensus that the commission lacked vision, strategy and a cohesive plan for its future, the report says. 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Vancouver Sun
10 minutes ago
- Vancouver Sun
The Doug Ford Doctrine: 'We really have to flex our muscles'
Ontario Premier Doug Ford is hosting Canada's premiers in Muskoka starting Monday at a Council of the Federation summer gathering. Premiers of the 13 provinces and territories can look forward to enjoying Alberta-bred and Ontario-fed beef on the grill at the Ford family cottage. They will have a special guest: Prime Minister Mark Carney. 'For the first time ever that I can remember,' Ford says, 'the prime minister is invited. That would have never happened with Trudeau, but it's happening under Mark Carney. And he's going to be welcomed with open arms.' Rather than the premiers getting together 'to bitch and complain about the federal government,' Ford chuckles, 'we get to present it right to him (Carney) as he's sitting around the dinner table and we're talking to him.' Start your day with a roundup of B.C.-focused news and opinion. By signing up you consent to receive the above newsletter from Postmedia Network Inc. A welcome email is on its way. If you don't see it, please check your junk folder. The next issue of Sunrise will soon be in your inbox. Please try again Interested in more newsletters? Browse here. 'The access is phenomenal,' Ford says of his own relationship with the PM, 'I'll message him, he gets right back to me. It's all about communication and relationship-building. 'And, he's a very, very great business person,' Ontario's premier enthuses, listing off Carney's credentials (without a mention of potential conflicts of interest). 'He gets it,' Ford says. 'He's going to go in there and he's going to clean house in Ottawa, which is well overdue.' Figuring out how Team Canada will respond to U.S. President Donald Trump's declaration of a blanket 35 per cent tariff on goods imported from Canada as of Aug. 1 — on top of previously implemented tariffs on auto parts, steel, aluminum and copper — will no doubt be the premiers' top priority in cottage country next week. 'Elbows up or elbows down? 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This week, Carney announced measures to protect the nation's steel industry, including guarding against foreign steel entering Canada to bypass Trump's tariffs. Breaking down trade barriers between provinces is a strategy Ontario has embraced; the province has signed memorandums of understanding with all provinces except Quebec, B.C. and Newfoundland. And Ford sees other cards to be played, other ways to pressure the Trump administration for a fair trade deal. 'I've been very transparent with Secretary Lutnick, we're going to start on-shoring everything,' Ford says. 'We're going to on-shore the steel beams, the I-beams. We have more cranes in the sky in Toronto and the GTA than their top 10 cities combined.' 'We're going to on-shore the aluminum cans, the beer cans … to make sure we don't have to see a tariff of 25 per cent on the aluminum going down (to the U.S.), they convert it, print it, and send it back up (to Canada) with another 25 per cent; that's 50 per cent.' Ford's government is giving incentives to companies — to turn aluminum into cans, produce steel I-beams, and manufacture steel rails used in transit projects. This strategy tracks with Carney's recent commitment to rely more on Canadian steel for Canadian projects. 'Canada buys more off the U.S. than China, than Japan, than Korea, U.K. and France combined,' Ford elaborates. 'We're their largest customer, and yes, they're our largest customer. But Ontario alone employs nine million Americans who wake up every morning to build a widget or provide a service to Ontario alone.' '(Americans) are going to feel the pressure,' Ford says. 'They're going to feel the pressure when Americans start losing their jobs because we're going to start on-shoring everything, and once that happens, I told Lutnick, it's hard to turn that tap off.' And, Ford continues, Canada can leverage its supplies of critical resources. American governors, both Republicans and Democrats, tell Ford the same thing: 'There are two things they're interested in: our nuclear energy and our critical minerals.' Repeating his well-worn adage — 'Canada is not the threat; China is the real threat' — Ford explains how China's lock on 90 per cent of the world's critical minerals makes Ontario's resources in the Ring of Fire all the more essential to Americans. 'And we don't believe in rip and ship,' Ford assures me, 'we're going to make sure that we mine it with Ontario workers, we're going to refine it here in Ontario with Ontario workers, and then we'll have the option of shipping it around the world.' Ford's also pitching a deep sea port to facilitate exports, in a couple of locations — one in Ontario, in Hudson's Bay, and one in Manitoba. 'It will wake up President Trump real quick,' Ford quips, 'if we start shipping it to our other allies around the world and not to him.' 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'We have to start moving forward and create the conditions for the rest of the world to look at investing in not just Ontario but other jurisdictions across Canada, from coast to coast to coast.' I moved from Ontario to Alberta in the early 1980s — a time when Alberta premier Peter Lougheed was struggling with prime minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau's National Energy Program — and can still recall the bitter disappointment of Ontario premier Bill Davis's unwillingness to support Alberta's interests. I admit to being impressed by Ford's visit to the recently concluded Calgary Stampede, and not just by his commitment to flip pancakes alongside Smith, whose griddle experience is legendary. Ontario's premier also inked two MOUs with Alberta, to advance freer trade between the provinces and publicly endorse mutually beneficial national-interest projects, including an oil pipeline from Alberta to Ontario (fabricated with Ontario steel). 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CTV News
10 minutes ago
- CTV News
Goodwill opens in south London
Grand opening of the new Goodwill Community Store & Donation Centre at 3245 Wonderland Road South, London, ON. (Source: Goodwill Industries) A new Goodwill has opened in south London on Wonderland Road. The grand opening was July 17, bringing 16,500 square feet of shopping space and a drive-through drop-off donation centre. The store is located at 3245 Wonderland Road South and is creating jobs for people who have been shut out of the labour market, according to the store manager, Danielle Greer. 'At the point of opening, we created 60 new jobs for the community, filling most positions through our partnerships,' said Greer. Their partnerships include multiple local employment services, such as Fanshawe College Community Employment Services and WILL Employment Solutions. The Goodwill store aims to divert up to 3.5 million pounds of waste from the London landfill per year. The store will be open seven days a week.