Rabu, 27 November 2019

Metro Vancouver bus service shutdown averted, tentative deal reached - CBC.ca

A tentative deal was reached between the union representing thousands of transit workers and Coast Mountain Bus Company, narrowly averting a complete suspension of bus service in Metro Vancouver.

The deal was reached just before 12:30 a.m. PT after the deadline was extended by the union.

"This has been one heck of a day," said Jerry Dias, Unifor's national president. "But I'm here to announce that we have a tentative agreement with TransLink." Coast Mountain Bus is a subsidiary of TransLink, the company responsible for public transit in Metro Vancouver.

Unifor said details of the agreement will be made available following ratification votes happening in the coming days.

TransLink bus drivers have not been wearing their Coast Mountain Bus Company uniforms as part of their job action. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

Unionized workers had pledged to walk off the job on Wednesday, Thursday and Friday if a deal was not reached by midnight. The strike would have shut down the bus system across the region, leaving about 350,000 passengers and commuters scrambling for other forms of transportation.

"As a result of this agreement, our employees will benefit from a competitive package which features improved wages, benefits, and working conditions," said Michael McDaniel, the president of Coast Mountain Bus Company, in a statement. 

Transit staff first launched job action on Nov. 1. The key issues at the heart of the dispute with the bus company were wages and working conditions. 

Unifor had said the salaries of their employees weren't comparable to salaries in other major cities.

Although a system-wide shutdown has been averted, TransLink is still warning customers to expect delays as staff work to resume regular service. In a tweet the transit corporation asked commuters to prepare for longer than usual wait times. 



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November 27, 2019 at 03:31PM

B.C. budget surplus projection continues to shrink - Vancouver Sun

B.C.'s projected budget surplus has shrunk again as the province grapples with a collapsing forestry sector, a retail sales drop and losses at ICBC

B.C. Finance Minister Carole James delivers the province's second quarter financial update on Tuesday in Victoria. Don Craig / Province of British Columbia

VICTORIA — B.C.’s finance minister continues to hang to a shrinking budgetary surplus amid slumping retail sales, a collapsing forestry sector and worsening losses at the Insurance Corporation of B.C.

Carole James lowered the projected budget surplus to $148 million during her second-quarter financial update Tuesday. That’s a $31-million drop from September’s first-quarter figures, and a larger correction from the $274-million surplus projected in February’s 2019-20 budget.

Nonetheless, James promised to hold course on her plans to balance the books by looking for more savings within ICBC and continuing cutbacks to discretionary spending within government.

James still has a $550-million contingency fund and a $500-million forecast allowance, according to Tuesday’s figures. That gives her roughly $1 billion in emergency financial wiggle room for the last half of the fiscal year, ending March 31, 2020.

“People can look at our budget and see those levels of prudence built in, and they can see those funds there for the risks that are there,” said James.

Opposition Liberal critic Shirley Bond said the NDP continues to be reliant on taxes to keep its budget balanced while economic growth slows.

“John Horgan’s government has no more money to pay for the billions of dollars of promises they made like $10-a-day child care, the $400 renter’s rebate and the elimination of school portables, these are all broken NDP promises,” Bond said in a statement.

The largest risk to the budget remains ICBC, which lost a court case to limit the use of medical experts last month and Attorney General David Eby has said will need to take a $400 to $500 million hit this fiscal year.

B.C. Attorney General David Eby. Chad Hipolito / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES

The negative impact is not reflected in the thinner $148-million surplus because James said ICBC is still trying to figure out its exact losses.

“ICBC is looking at options to be able to mitigate the court decision,” said James.

“So until we get that information in, until we take a look at what savings they may project from a different direction or another direction, we won’t be able to account for how much that’s going to take out of the budget.”

Emptying the contingency or forecast allowance to cover a half-billion dollar loss would be “the worst-case scenario,” admitted James.

ICBC has lost almost $2.5 billion over the past two years due to rising claims costs and legal fees. The corporation was projected to lose $50 million this year, but James said Tuesday that historic claims have escalated losses to $91 million.

Premier John Horgan has brushed off any suggestion his government would run a deficit budget if financial pressures continue to mount, thereby giving him fiscal room to fund some of his election promises.

James acknowledged Tuesday she’s heard some calls for change to her balanced-budget approach, but has rejected them entirely.

“The job is to manage the economy well for the people of British Columbia, to make sure you are spending within your means, that you are balancing the budget, that you are providing that support,” she said.

James said she’s “very pleased” with savings found from discretionary cutbacks to travel, contract staff and other discretionary spending within ministries, and expects those cuts to continue.

A slight bump in income tax revenues and refundable tax credits offset some of the losses.

But several months of forestry mill closures, and almost 4,000 jobs lost in the sector, have hit the budget in the form of an 11-per-cent drop in forestry revenue worth $133 million. James said she’s “concerned” at the downturn.

Tuesday’s financial documents also showed provincial sales tax revenue is down $49 million due to slow retail sales on building supplies, new appliances and vehicles.

B.C.’s cannabis sales targets have also missed their mark in the first year of legal sales, with $18 million less revenue than projections due to the slow rate of stores opening and fewer sales.

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November 27, 2019 at 05:29AM

Surprise Crude Build Disappoints Oil Bulls - OilPrice.com

The American Petroleum Institute (API) has estimated a crude oil inventory build of 3.639 million barrels for the week ending November 21, compared to analyst expectations of a 418,000-barrel draw in inventory.

Last week saw a build in crude oil inventories of 5.954 million barrels, according to API data. The EIA’s estimates, however, reported a build of 1.4-million barrels for that week.

After today’s inventory move, the net draw has swung into build territory for the year, standing at 830,000 barrels for the 48-week reporting period so far, using API data.

Oil prices were trading up on Tuesday prior to the data release on trade talk hopes for China and the United States surfaced again on Tuesday, with negotiators for both sides conversing today by phone. Still, no tangible progress has been made.

At 2:48pm EST, WTI was trading up $0.24 (+0.41%) at $58.28—roughly $2.50 per barrel above last week’s prices. Brent was trading up $0.36 (+0.57%) at $62.98, up almost $2 a barrel from last week.  

The API this week reported a build of 4.378 million barrels of gasoline for week ending November 21, compared to analyst expectations of a smaller build in gasoline inventories of 1.222-million barrels for the week.

Distillate inventories saw a draw of 665,000 barrels for the week, while Cushing inventories fell by 516,000 barrels.

US crude oil production as estimated by the Energy Information Administration showed that production for the week ending November 15 stayed at the most recent high of 12.8 million bpd for a second week in a row.

At 4:42pm EDT, WTI was trading at $58.36, while Brent was trading at $63.14.

By Julianne Geiger for Oilprice.com

More Top Reads from Oilprice.com:



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November 27, 2019 at 04:50AM

Selasa, 26 November 2019

CN strike is over, but experts warn supply chain could be off-track for weeks - Global News

The strike at Canada’s largest rail network may be over, but it will take days or weeks before the supply chain gets back on track, industry leaders say.

CN Rail and the union representing workers reached a tentative agreement on Tuesday, one week after failed negotiations sent more than 3,000 employees to picket lines across the country.

Normal operations at CN Rail are set to resume Wednesday morning, but for industries impacted by the week-long halt, it’s not that easy.

Marc Garneau speaks on rail strike: ‘CN is very aware of their customers needs’
Marc Garneau speaks on rail strike: ‘CN is very aware of their customers needs’

“It’s not like when your lights go out and then all of a sudden power is restored and things in your house go back to normal,” Chemical Industry Association CEO Bob Masterson told Global News.

“When you think of this large, national railway system and all the companies involved, the process to get everyone restored to where they were before the strike happened, that’ll be weeks of work.”

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CN Rail and workers’ union reach tentative deal after week-long strike
CN Rail and workers’ union reach tentative deal after week-long strike

READ MORE: 5 things to know about Canada’s rail industry

The Nov. 19 strike action brought trains across the country to a standstill, disrupting a key export and import artery for goods and commodities.

As the days dragged on, pressure mounted on industries that rely predominately on rail shipping.

Agriculture official says they’re ‘extremely pleased’ CN strike over
Agriculture official says they’re ‘extremely pleased’ CN strike over

Propane was one of the first supplies to wane. At one point, Quebec signalled it was on the brink of a propane shortage “emergency.”

And it’s not over yet, according to Canadian Propane Association CEO Nathalie St-Pierre. She said it could be a couple of more weeks, “if not a month,” before things get back to normal.

“Supply [of propane] is almost non-existent. We’re still under a lot of pressure to provide,” she said.

The shortage dealt another blow to grain farmers still recovering from a difficult growing season who have been unable to dry crops, let alone heat rural homes, barns and greenhouses.

Once rail service resumes, the commodities CN chooses to prioritize will determine how quickly farmers get back on their feet, said Keith Currie, president of the Ontario Federation of Agriculture.

Peterborough farmers feel the pinch of CN Rail strike
Peterborough farmers feel the pinch of CN Rail strike

“I’m assuming they’re going to take a look at where the essential needs are right away and make sure that’s moving, such as remote areas that may need propane,” he said.

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“Certainly, human health and safety are going to be first and foremost in this.”

Even then, the backup of shipments triggered by the strike will make getting back to the status quo tricky.

In the lead up to the strike, cars and containers have were moved to industrial sites across the country.

“Those are now all full,” said Masterson.

“We’ve got to get them to the customers. They’ve got to be emptied, and then we’ve got to get some empty cars back and only then would we be back to a normal state of affairs.”

READ MORE: Union releases recording of tired CN Rail conductor

The forest industry did not go unscathed. There are days to go before normal processes resume, but the loss is already being felt, said Joel Neuheimer, vice-president of transportation for Forest Products Association of Canada.

“Tens of millions have been lost across our sector, and that’s just the forest sector in Canada, that’s just pulp and paper and solid wood manufacturers,” he told Global News.

“On top of that, you’ve got all the harm it does to our reputation for not being able to get our markets to the global marketplace in a timely fashion.”

Agriculture official says CN strike did ‘inflict pain’ on farmers, will take time to address backlog
Agriculture official says CN strike did ‘inflict pain’ on farmers, will take time to address backlog

Neuheimer said the industry is bracing for several more days of operating at reduced capacities before backlogs can be cleared. An ongoing truck driver shortage further compounded issues for forestry during the strike and won’t be able to supplement the industry in the meantime.

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“This is a good example of how fragile the supply chain is in Canada.

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“In a number of cases, there are rural or remote parts of Canada that are only served by one railway and the next closest railway is hundreds of kilometres away. It shows the vulnerability of when one of them goes down. We’re about to see how resilient the system is after being off for a week.”

Masterson echoed those concerns. He said 80 per cent of chemical shipping in Canada is done by rail.

CN Rail and union reach tentative agreement after week-long strike
CN Rail and union reach tentative agreement after week-long strike

As the world pushes for greener and efficient transportation, he said, “more goods are moving by rail than they used to.”

“One of the questions I think we have to ask ourselves is, do we want this to happen again?” Masterson said.

“This is such an important, essential service to public safety and the economy. Is this really how we want to operate in the future? I think that’s something the government is going to have to look at.”

© 2019 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.



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November 27, 2019 at 03:45AM

Transit strike talks continue with looming midnight deadline - CityNews Vancouver

VANCOUVER (NEWS 1130) – Last minute contract talks continue as transit workers across Metro Vancouver prepare to walk out for three days, starting early Wednesday morning. And with a full shutdown of bus service looming, both sides are still far apart on key issues, including working conditions and wages.

National Unifor President Jerry Dias has been at the bargaining table in a Vancouver hotel.


“[The] whole objective for me being here and our complete leadership team being here is we want a settlement,” he said on Tuesday afternoon. “There’s no other group of workers in any other sector that don’t have proper bathroom breaks, that will make $2.85 an hour less than a person doing the same job as them in Toronto. That just doesn’t make any sense.”

He says Coast Mountain Bus Company negotiators are falsely claiming workers now have guaranteed breaks.

“The time that they’re using to check the bus to see if people have left any items on the bus — that, somehow, that’s considered a break time. Ridership has gone up 18 per cent in the last two years, so people have less opportunities for breaks and, respectfully, if I’m driving a bus all day long, I want well-rested drivers that have had proper breaks.”

Earlier in the day, Dias met briefly with TransLink CEO Kevin Desmond, who is refusing to bargain in public.

“All I have to say is I appreciated meeting Mr. Dias. We had a good initial conversation,” Desmond said after the meeting.

It’s not clear if the system-wide shutdown of bus and SeaBus service will go ahead, even if progress is made before the midnight deadline.



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November 27, 2019 at 05:34AM

B.C.'s $830M in fossil fuel subsidies undermines efforts to fight climate crisis, report says - CBC.ca

The British Columbia government gives hundreds of millions of dollars annually in subsidies for fossil fuels, including an estimated $830 million in the 2017-18 fiscal year, a new report says.

Most of the money goes to fossil fuel producers rather than consumers, says the report released Monday by the International Institute for Sustainable Development, an environmental think-tank.

The subsidies include royalty reductions, provincial tax exemptions and direct investments, undermining B.C.'s action on climate change including its long-standing carbon tax, says co-author Vanessa Corkal.

"If you have a boat and you're trying to use the carbon price to bail water out of the boat, fossil fuel subsidies are kind of like the leak in that boat," she said in an interview.

"As long as you're funnelling money to an industry that is going to increase use and production of fossil fuels, a carbon price is only going to do so much."

Major portion of subsidies come from royalty reductions

The report says oil and gas companies are required to pay royalties meant to provide benefits to B.C. residents, including helping fund health care and education.

But every year, it says companies claim credits to reduce the royalties they pay. The report estimates B.C. has amassed at least $2.6 to $3.1 billion in outstanding royalty credits.

While a large portion of tax exemptions go to fossil fuel consumers, that doesn't just mean average residents trying to heat their homes. Airlines, cruise ship companies and the agriculture sector also benefit.

B.C. Energy Minister Michelle Mungall said in a statement that a number of provincial initiatives have been "inaccurately characterized" in the report, though she didn't specify which ones.

B.C. Energy Minister Michelle Mungall. (Mike McArthur/CBC)

She says the CleanBC plan to fight climate change includes a program for industry that will reduce emissions by 2.5 million tonnes of CO2 equivalent per year by 2030.

"We regularly review royalty programs. Our government will keep working hard to keep B.C. on the path to a cleaner, better future that creates opportunities for all," she said.

The report notes the B.C. NDP government has committed to progressive hikes of the carbon tax, but at the same time has introduced or entrenched fossil fuel subsidies in recent years.

The mining exploration tax credit, which helps to subsidize coal, was made permanent in 2019, the report says. Coal exploration increased by 58 per cent the previous year, it says.

B.C. also still exempts emissions from the carbon tax for controlled venting, or the releasing of gases into the air from natural gas operations, according to the report. 

LNG subsidies at odds with climate goals, report says

The government has also established new subsidies and increased access to existing ones for the liquefied natural gas sector, the report says. This year the province signed an agreement with LNG Canada, a joint-venture group formed to build a major liquefied natural gas project in northern B.C.

In the agreement, the province committed to provide electricity at the standard industrial rate, eliminate the LNG income tax, allow LNG Canada to claim a natural gas income tax credit and defer provincial sales tax on construction costs.

This year the province signed an agreement with LNG Canada to build a major liquefied natural gas project in northern B.C., in which it agrees to eliminate the LNG income tax, allow LNG Canada to claim a natural gas income tax credit and defer provincial sales tax on construction costs. (The Associated Press)

The report prompted environmental group Stand.earth to call for the province to end subsidies to the oil and gas industry before the next election.

International program director Tzeporah Berman notes B.C. committed $902 million over the next three years to CleanBC, only a little more than the $830 million the report says it gave fossil fuel polluters in 2017-2018.

"We cannot be getting off fossil fuels by handing taxpayer dollars to the biggest polluters to help them pollute," Berman says.



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November 26, 2019 at 09:36PM

Oil Rises on Signs of Trade-Talks Optimism, Key Hub Drop - Bloomberg

[unable to retrieve full-text content]Oil Rises on Signs of Trade-Talks Optimism, Key Hub Drop  BloombergView full coverage on Google News

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November 26, 2019 at 07:00AM