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Quebec wants to make it easier for companies and trade professionals to do business in the province

Quebec wants to make it easier for companies and trade professionals to do business in the province

Quebec Politics
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QUEBEC — The province wants to authorize the sale and consumption of goods made in other provinces and territories in Canada without having to go through Quebec's manufacturing and production regulatory hoops a second time.
And a worker certified by a regulatory authority in another province to practise a trade or profession can apply to the equivalent Quebec agency without any requirement to take additional training or exams.
The measures are included in new legislation designed to ease some interprovincial trade barriers presented Friday in the legislature by Quebec's minister for the economy, Christopher Skeete.
Bill 112 is a first step by Quebec toward dropping some trade and labour barriers, which could help the Canadian economy weather the effects of U.S. trade tariffs.
Skeete is to hold a news conference later Friday to explain the bill, which lands just days before Premier François Legault heads to Saskatoon for a meeting of Canada's premiers and Prime Minister Mark Carney to discuss measures to shore up the Canadian economy.
New polling data shows Canadian and Quebec companies are eager to drop barriers to make up for lost sales south of the border.

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