Showing posts with label Charbonneau. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Charbonneau. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 5, 2012

Morning News Wrap: "Cyber-NORAD," CAN-U.S. Border and Generic Drugs, Toronto’s Mayor Wins Stay, U.S. Loses Out at WTO, Canada’s Provinces Steal the Show, and More


By Keith Edmund White, Editor-in-Chief

Woodrow Wilson Center’s Canada Institute Talks NORAD and Cyber-Security @ 1 PM.  Cyber-security and protecting critical infrastructure are big (and irksome) issues facing both Canada and the United States.  You can watch the event here.

From WWC: 
Experts expect that cyber attacks from hostile nations and rogue actors will represent one of the most dangerous threats to Canada and the United States in the coming decades. The perils are numerous and the consequences are severe for such an attack. However, there are many measures that both nations can take, individually and collectively, to ensure peace and prosperity, free from the threat of a "cyber Pearl Harbor" disaster. The Canada Institute is pleased to host a distinguished panel to discuss these threats as well as the most effective measures and best practices that the private and public sector actors can use to make both countries more secure. The panel will discuss many issues including: the vulnerability of our linked supply chain system, the role of the private sector in enhancing the national security of the United States and Canada, policy options for creating a better information sharing process while respecting privacy rights, threats to energy production in Canada, and the possibility of creating a “cyber-NORAD” to help deal with our shared threats in the most efficient way possible.
Provincial Politics Take Center Stage.  The Globe and Mail offers an excellent province-by-province political round-up piece.  (Note to self:  copy G&M.).  In short:  Alberta—character politics are beating out attempts for Alberta’s Conservatives to push a national energy policy; British Columbia—the NDP seems on course to capture to provincial parliament; Quebec—between the Charbonneau corruption commission and the PQ’s PR blunders (they tired to remove the Maple Leaf from Quebec’s parliamentary building!), the great fear a of a resurgent PQ and separation anxiety has been allayed.    

Generic Drugs Crashes Canada-U.S. Border Policy Competing Economic, Security, and Public Health Demands.   Prescription Drugs + Border Security + Generics + Health Advocates = Border Policy Nightmare.  From WSJ: 
The White House has alerted police and border agents to prepare for a possible influx of addictive pain drugs from Canada, where cheaper, generic versions of OxyContin will soon become available. U.S. drug czar Gil Kerlikowske also called Canada's health minister last week to discuss the issue and offer assistance to address the wave of prescription-drug abuse sweeping both countries, Mr. Kerlikowske's office said. In an alert to law-enforcement agencies sent Tuesday, the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy warned law enforcement to be on the lookout for cheap copies of OxyContin, which it said could hit the market as soon as next month.
Will Toronto’s Mayor Be Out Next Week, Or Live to Appeal in Office?  Globe and Mail offers real-time court updates.  Update:  Rob Ford won a temporary stay, and will stay in office while his conflict-of-interest case is appealed.

America Given Deadline to Comply With WTO Country-of-Origin Meat-Labeling Rules.  The ever-fast wheels of international trade justice!  Having lost on an meat-labeling case to Canada and Mexico in June, the United States has been given a May 2013 compliance deadline.  The Kansas City Star reports on progressive unease with the WTO tinkering with U.S. labeling requirements: 
“Consumers in the U.S. have been clear: They want dolphin-safe tuna, and if we’re not able to label tuna in the way we want to label it, I think U.S. consumers are going to be pretty angry,” said Democratic Rep. Rick Larsen of Washington state, who likened the situation to having replacement referees decide the outcome of games in the National Football League.In the most recent development, Larsen and 21 other members of Congress sent a letter last month to U.S. Trade Representative Ron Kirk, complaining that the WTO is threatening to turn back the clock to the days when tens of thousands of dolphins were killed each year "in a tuna fishing free-for-all." Critics say the WTO is running roughshod over U.S. laws that govern everything from the environment to food safety and public health.
Joan Crockatt Gets the Hill Times Treatment.  And in a nice ‘slice of life’ piece at The Hill Times, Bea Vongdouangchanh writes on one of Parliament's newest members:  Joan Crockatt.

Prior to getting elected, Ms. Crockatt was an outspoken pundit who appeared on several political TV panels. Mr. Martin said he hopes the PMO, known for its tight message control, will allow her to continue to be a spokesperson on several issue.  “She’ll be as scripted as any of them [Conservative MPs], I’m sure, but Joan sometimes does freelance a little bit in her commentaries and that’s always a good thing. I hope they make her into a bit of a media presence because she does do good television. But if she takes one misstep, they’ll take her off the tube and never put her back on,” he said, adding that Ms. Crockatt does give a good first impression as an MP. “She’s always walked to her own beat type of thing and suddenly becoming shoe-horned into a borg-like group think is something that’s going to be a new experience for her.” Meanwhile, both the Liberal and Green parties increased their vote share in the byelection in Calgary Centre. The Liberals increased by 15.4 percentage points and Green candidate, Chris Turner, by 14.7 percentage points from 2011 election results. That increase came at the NDP’s expense, with Dan Meades losing 11 percentages points from 2011.
The Toronto Star tells Canada to look to the United States on climate policy.  From the op-ed: 
In other words, nearly three-quarters of U.S. gains will come from tougher regulation to curb emissions, “green” government procurement, grants and loans to promote renewable electricity, and fuel conservation in vehicles and buildings. Pollution taxes, higher oil pricing and emission trading systems will also have an impact. The implications for Canada, and Ontario, are obvious. The Canadian Council of Chief Executives has called for a coherent federal climate policy, including “a clear, nationally consistent carbon price” across the economy. And the National Round Table on the Environment and the Economy has urged more investment in low-carbon innovation, a major growth sector.
Until now the Harper government has adopted a wait-and-see-what-the-U.S.-does attitude, repudiated the Kyoto Protocol as too costly, and failed to come up with a credible plan to make the painful adjustments that will be necessary to develop the oil and gas sector in a more balanced and sustainable fashion, mitigating emissions. As things stand there’s no federal constraint on oilsands pollution, Pembina argues. Now Ontario, too, is falling short. The Americans don’t have all the answers. They remain huge polluters. But they are bending the curve in a better direction. We should aim to do no less.

Friday, September 21, 2012

News Round-Up



Some attention-grabbing Canadian headlines.

Why Canada’s Start-Ups Run South.  In a thoughtful piece, Canadian Business explores one Canadian start-up online billing start-up that has resisted relocating to the United States.  The piece also explores why Canada is losing its home-grown success stories to the States:
Roger Martin, dean of the Rotman School of Management at the University of Toronto, has been studying this phenomenon in frustration for years. He’s concerned that policy-makers mistakenly continue to cultivate scientific and technical expertise at the expense of managerial skills: “Companies are going to continue to move to the U.S. to access the managerial talent they need to grow their technology businesses. We’ve been showing this data since 2005, and little or nothing is being done in Canada to help it out.”

For his part, McDerment has been able to capitalize on Canadian talent that’s gone abroad and now wants to return home, often for reasons—they want to be near family, or they don’t want to raise their kids in the U.S.—that are as personal as McDerment’s are. He also maintains that FreshBooks’ corporate culture has been key to attracting, and retaining, that talent. “You’re not just building some technology in the bowels of some mega-corporation that may or may not see the light of day. And if you’re working in a high-performing team with a bunch of top performers, why budge?”

Harper Government Shows Support for Nunavut’s International Airport’s Getting a Big P-3 Styled Facelift.  Showing the Canadian government’s continued commitment to develop Canada’s North, the Canada News Centre reports on a $70 million + investment in the Iqaluit International Airport Improvement Project.  The one missing link: finding a private partner to build the various improvements to meet the increased demands of Nunavut’s business gateway.  To learn more about the airport, check out the check the Nunavut Department of Economic Development & Transportation and skim over this 4-pager on Iqaluit’s history and future.  Interesting fact: while doubling passengers served since 1985 to 125,000 in 2011, Dulles International Airport in Virginia had, in 2011, 23.2 million annual passengers.

Quebec’s Corruption Probe Continues to Expose Canada’s Mafia Ties.  Macleans reports on York Regional Police officer Mike Amato’s 2-hour discussion on Canada’s ties to the Mafia to the Charbonneau Commission—the Quebec government’s corruption probe into the province’s construction industry (named after the inquiry’s head, Justice France Charbonneau).  Learn more about the commission, which is now in its second phase, in Sept. 17 articles published by Montreal’s Gazette and Ontario’s Toronto Star.  One interesting note: while the Commission has its own lawyers (Commission attorney Sonia Lebel has been speaking for the prosecution, but Sylvain Lussier is chief prosecutor), Quebec’s governing party—formerly the Liberals and now the PQ—have official representation on the Commission, meaning the party has government paid for lawyers who can participate in the hearings (other parties can applied and be granted participant or intervener status).  A fascinating topic, and a interesting legal-political set-up to tackle a sensitive subject.

Government Approval for Cnooc's Nexen Bid Will Being Starting Soon.  With Canadian energy producer Nexen shareholder approving a take-over by Chinese-owned Cnooc by a hefty margin, the Canadian government will now have to review the bid.  Speaking to Bloomberg, Peter Harder, senior policy advisor at Fraser Milner Casgrain LLP and president of the Canada China Business Council, says the Cnooc offer is “well constructed” to meet Canada’s net-benefit test for big foreign investment in Canadian industries.