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Maple Chronicles 🇨🇦
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🌱Steven Guilbeault a “national embarrassment,” Danielle Smith says after COP28

Alberta Premier Danielle Smith and Environment Minister Rebecca Schulz issued a joint statement calling to immediately replace Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault in response to the federal government’s approach to climate change policy at the COP28 conference.

We were gravely disappointed to see federal Minister of Environment and Climate Change Steven Guilbeault and other radical activists continue to push an approach that would consign the world to
energy poverty and economic stagnation
by focusing only on ending all fossil fuel use.

read the statement.

We once again call on the prime minister to replace this minister immediately, as he continues to damage Canada’s international reputation and sell out the interests and livelihoods of millions of Canadians with his misguided personal obsessions.

said Smith and Schulz.

#Alberta #Saskatchewan #energy

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📉 B.C. sees record stretch of people moving out-of-province

🔹B.C. has recorded its largest period of interprovincial migration losses in 20 years, with more than 12,800 people moving elsewhere in Canada since July 2022, according to Statistics Canada.

It's the first time in a decade B.C. has seen 15 months in a row of more people moving out-of-province than it gains — and most are moving to Alberta in the exodus, StatsCan said Tuesday.

🔹However B.C. has added 151,437 people to its 5.6 million population so far in 2023, largely international immigrants who far outnumber interprovincial and natural losses, or deaths outpacing births.

In all, B.C.'s population has risen approximately 4.2 per cent in the last year.

#BritishColumbia

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🇨🇦🇮🇳 Trudeau says he's sensed a 'tonal shift' from India since U.S. reported alleged murder plot

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says he believes India's relations with Canada may have undergone "a tonal shift" in the days since the unsealing of a U.S. indictment alleging a conspiracy to murder a Sikh activist on American soil.

Last week, Trudeau said he went public with the allegation after weeks of fruitless quiet diplomacy in order to "put a chill on India" and deter any Indian agents who might be thinking of carrying out further attacks on Canadian territory.

I think there is a beginning of an understanding that they can't bluster their way through this and there is an openness to collaborating in a way that perhaps they were less open before.

Trudeau said.

#India #US

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🪖Nova Scotia sees spike in military personnel living in tents, couchsurfing amid housing crisis

Active-duty military personnel in Nova Scotia are experiencing an “epidemic” of homelessness and housing vulnerability while others are turning down postings in the province because housing is either unaffordable or unavailable.

Executive director of the Royal Canadian Legion Nova Scotia/Nunavut Command said he has heard stories of actively serving members posted to the province who are “living rough” in tents, living in their vehicles, couch surfing and even entering into relationships to secure housing.

Demand for assistance from the Nova Scotia Legion’s benevolent funds, raised through the annual poppy campaign and other donations, have been increasing exponentially. It’s to the point where the legion is having to look for additional ways to raise money.

#NovaScotia

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🛢Some Canadian oil firms await Trudeau's fate rather than cut emissions faster

Some Canadian oil and gas producers say they will not rush to accelerate emissions cuts until they see if unpopular Prime Minister Justin Trudeau survives long enough to implement his proposed oil and gas emissions cap.

The long-delayed framework demands oil companies in Canada cut carbon emissions by up to 38% by 2030 from 2019 levels.

But with Conservatives, who oppose the cap, leading in the recent polls, some oil companies are openly asking if the Liberals losing in the 2025 election would avert the need to accelerate emissions cuts.

Alberta has also vowed to develop a "constitutional shield" against the cap.

#energy

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🚙🌱Canada to announce all new cars must be zero emissions by 2035

Canada expects to announce this week that all new cars will have to be zero emissions by 2035, a senior government source said.

The new rules, known as the Electric Vehicle Availability Standard, would help ensure supply is available to the Canadian market and shorten wait times to get an electric vehicle. The Canadian provinces of British Columbia and Quebec already have the same regulated sales targets.

Zero-emission vehicles - which include battery electric, plug-in and hydrogen models - must represent 20% of all new car sales in 2026, 60% in 2030 and 100% in 2035, according to sources.

Officials at Canada's environment ministry declined comment.

#energy
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Chrystia Freeland “definitely running in the next election” amid Liberal freefall in polls

Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland confirmed her plans to run in the next federal election.

Freeland, who has been a member of Parliament since 2013 and a member of Trudeau’s cabinet since 2015, deflected questions about her ambitions for the Liberal party’s leadership.

Recent polling by Ipsos shows that 72% of Canadians think Trudeau should step down as party leader. Even 33% of Canadians who plan to vote Liberal want Trudeau to step down, up from 28% in September. Of all potential replacements, Freeland received the most positive reviews in the poll.

Freeland sidestepped the question but said the Liberals can “absolutely” win the next election.

#Freeland #Trudeau
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CRA has fired 185 employees for 'inappropriately' claiming COVID-19 CERB benefits

The Canada Revenue Agency says 185 employees have been fired to date for claiming a federal COVID-19 benefit when they were not eligible for it.

That's an increase of 65 since the CRA last updated the public on its review in September.

The CRA is reviewing approximately 600 cases in which current employees received the Canada Emergency Response Benefit during the COVID-19 pandemic.

The benefit was worth $2,000 a month to Canadians whose jobs were lost or downgraded as a result of public-health restrictions.

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🚙🌱Alberta to fight federal mandate banning sale of gas-powered vehicles by 2035

The province of Alberta says it will do everything within its legal jurisdiction to prevent the federal government from banning the sale of gas-powered vehicles by 2035.

Premier Danielle Smith says the federal government has no legal or moral authority to tell Albertans what vehicles they can and cannot buy.

Smith added that there simply isn’t infrastructure to uphold the mandate. She also cited a lack of electric vehicle charging stations, no plans for rural and remote areas, and that the province’s electrical grid isn’t equipped to handle the surge in demand that would come with a full-scale electric vehicle transition.

#Alberta #energy #Smith
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Head of RCMP's advisory board resigns, citing frustrations with federal government

Pointing to his frustrations with the federal government, the head of the RCMP's Management Advisory Board has resigned after less than a year in the chair. Kent Roach was appointed chair of the 13-member civilian body in January.

Roach argued he was left out of a crucial conversation about the future of RCMP contract policing.

The federal government is reviewing the RCMP's contract policing obligations. Some municipalities have been considering ditching the Mounties for their own police forces.

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💉Just 15% of Canadians got updated COVID vaccines this fall, new figures show

Federal figures show only 15 per cent of the population aged five and up had received an updated vaccine by Dec. 3.

Pandemic fatigue, muddled messaging and complex vaccination timelines might be dissuading Canadians from getting another round of vaccines, experts note.

Canada's chief public health officer, Dr. Theresa Tam, said the door is still open for another spring vaccination push, though she noted uptake last spring was also relatively low.

#healthcare
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🏦 Freeland approves RBC's $13.5B takeover of HSBC Canada with conditions

Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland has approved RBC's $13.5-billion takeover of HSBC Canada, despite calls from opposition politicians and other groups to block it over concerns of reduced competition.

Freeland's approval was the last hurdle for the deal after the Competition Bureau approved it in September.

The minister's approval comes with conditions on RBC, including that none of HSBC Canada's 4,000 employees be fired within six months of the closing date, or two years for front-line staff, and that banking services continue to be provided at a minimum of 33 HSBC branches for four years.

#Freeland
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B.C. premier vows to improve cancer care system amid pressure from patients

Premier David Eby concedes that B.C. has to do more to respond to unacceptable cancer care wait times that are currently among the longest in the country.

In a year-end interview, Eby addressed the frustration and angst of cancer patients and their families who say they were let down by a cancer care system that is so backlogged, some patients have died while waiting for treatment.

While Eby committed to publicly release information on the wait times to see an oncologist and for chemotherapy, he dismissed the need for a public reporting tool that would measure how the province is doing nationally and internationally.

Asked about whether B.C. would consider a cancer quality council similar to what exists in Ontario, Eby said comparing B.C.’s cancer wait times to other provinces is “pretty cool comfort” to British Columbians “if you’re still not able to get the care.”

#BritishColumbia #healthcare
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🏠 Average asking rent price hit $2,174 in November

A report says the average asking price for a rental unit in Canada was $2,174 in November, relatively flat from the previous month but an 8.4 per cent increase year-over-year.

The data showed the annual rate of rent growth in Canada continues to slow, following increases of 9.9 per cent in October and 11.1 per cent in September.

The average cost of a one-bedroom unit in November was $1,911, up 13.6 per cent from the same month in 2022, while the average asking price for a two-bedroom was $2,260, up 10.5 per cent annually.

Vancouver saw asking rents rise 0.7 per cent from last year to $3,171, while average asking rents in Toronto decreased 2.4 per cent to $2,913.

#housing

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🩺 Quebec wait lists for cancer and other surgery set record highs

Quebec has again set two dubious records in health care: highest number of people waiting for non-urgent surgery and highest number of patients in need of cancer operations, according to the latest government data.

As of Oct. 10, nearly 164,000 Quebecers were on wait lists for elective surgery, up by about 2,000 since the start of the year and by more than 48,000 since January 2020. As for cancer surgery, the wait list has swelled to 4,401 from 4,160 since the beginning of the year.

Among oncology patients, 616 were waiting longer than the medically acceptable time limit of 57 days, increasing the likelihood their cancer may further spread.

Health Minister Christian Dubé last week blamed nurses who are on rotating strikes for indirectly lengthening surgical wait lists, estimating 500 operations have been postponed for each strike day.

#Quebec #healthcare

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🇨🇦🇺🇸 Canadian military buying armed drones for $2.49 billion

A fleet of 11 MQ-9B Reaper drones, built by U.S. defence contractor General Atomics, will be purchased in a $2.49 billion package, Liberal MPs announced on behalf of Defence Minister Bill Blair.

Delivery of the remotely piloted aircraft won't take place until 2028 and the air force doesn't expect to have the full fleet up and running until 2033.

The Reapers will be delivered through a direct contract with the U.S. manufacturer, with some components — such as weapons and other technology — purchased under the framework of U.S. foreign military sales.

#US

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Quebec teachers' strikes carry on despite one union nearing tentative deal

Teachers will keep striking after one union representing teaching staff and the Quebec government reached a tentative agreement Friday on non-monetary issues.

The Fédération des syndicats de l'Enseignement (FSE-CSQ) said it will present the potential deal to its federal council executives. Salaries are still up for discussion.

The union, representing 95,000 teachers, had rejected the government's last offer on Tuesday.

This week, the common front requested a 72-hour negotiation blitz with the government and threatened to launch an unlimited strike in January.

#Quebec
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Wishing you a Merry Christmas!

Cheers to a wonderful season and a Happy New Year!

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📈 Alberta gains another 17,000 people from other provinces in 3 months, ends 'Alberta is Calling' ad campaign

Alberta gained another 17,094 people, on net, from other provinces and territories from July through September.

That continues a trend that started more than a year ago for Alberta: the province has now registered interprovincial migration gains of at least 10,000 people for five consecutive quarters.

Most of Alberta's population gains through interprovincial migration were due to its exchanges with Ontario and British Columbia, according to Statistics Canada.

Finance Minister Nate Horner said the "Alberta is Calling" campaign, launched in August 2022, had been successful in its goals but it was time to bring it to an end.

There are now 4,756,408 people living in the province, according to Statistics Canada's latest estimates, which marks a 4.3-per-cent increase in the past year.

#Alberta

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Ottawa ready to pay financial settlements to the two Michaels over their ordeal in Chinese prisons

Ottawa is willing to sign off on multimillion-dollar settlement packages for Canadians Michael Spavor and Michael Kovrig to compensate them for the nearly three years they were incarcerated under harsh conditions in Chinese prisons, two government sources say.

Mr. Spavor alleges that China arrested and imprisoned him and Mr. Kovrig because he unwittingly provided information to Mr. Kovrig that was shared with Canadian and other Western spy services.

The government has offered around $3-million to each but the sources say Mr. Spavor’s lawyer is seeking $10.5-million, alleging gross negligence on how Ottawa handled GSRP operations in China.

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Despite a difficult 2023, Trudeau says he's not ready to 'walk away'

While it hasn't been a terrific year for the Liberal government, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says he has no intention of stepping aside.

Trudeau told CBC News chief political correspondent Rosemary Barton in a year-end interview that he's determined to stay on as Liberal leader.

With the challenges that people are facing right now, with the way the world is going now and everything that we are doing that's making positive differences in a very difficult time that isn't done yet, I wouldn't be the person I am and be willing to walk away from this right now.

he said.

#Trudeau

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