Year: 2021

  • Questions on inflation, jobs and housing reveal U.S. concerns on Canadian recovery

    Tiff Macklem faced some tough questioning yesterday, as members of the U.S. Council on Foreign Relations grilled the Bank of Canada governor on whether their northern neighbour would have a trouble-free exit from the downturn of the COVID-19 pandemic.
    Led by financier and former Democratic politician Roger Altman, members of the U.S. think-tank asked probing questions on whether Canada’s housing bubble would have any spillover effects on the global economy, as well as on jobs, inflation, commodity pricing and the difficulty of moving from a low interest rate regime to one without monetary stimulus.
    To Canadians who have heard Macklem’s views in the past, the answers were in some ways less revealing than the questions. But among the new things he did pass on were fears that inflation could well turn out to be more long-lasting than expected and jobs recovery could be slower.

    Inflation: blip or trend?

    On the topic of inflation, Macklem responded to a question that conveyed a growing concern in the financial community that inflation was not a blip, but rather a trend.
    A lot of people in finance are learning that the most important word in the English language is ‘transitory,’ quipped Altman, referring to the term repeatedly used by central bankers to imply that inflation would go away on its own.
    How confident are you that it really is transitory, because if you took a poll of smart people in finance … you’d probably get 50 per cent saying it probably is and 50 per cent saying it probably isn’t, said Altman.
    It’s the job of central banks to say it is, responded Macklem in a similarly humorous tone.
    But both in the council session and at a later news conference, the bank governor conceded that inflation was running hotter and could last longer than initially expected.
    And as gasoline pump prices smash records, cars and appliances are unavailable  due to a shortage of component chips and ships back up at North American ports, Macklem said the inflationary path was not as simple as many had expected when signs of rising prices first emerged.
    We do expect that we will work through these supply disruptions, but I will say, they are proving to be more complicated and they could last a little longer than we previously thought.

    Slower jobs recovery

    Macklem was, of course, speaking before Friday’s latest jobs numbers in both Canada and the U.S. had been released. But he said the labour market was turning out to be more complicated as well.
    Still, there were increasing signs that jobs for lower-wage workers, who often include recent immigrants, visible minorities and women, were coming back, he said. But the process had turned out to be slower than he hoped.
    I think what we’re seeing here is it’s more complicated to open an economy than to close an economy, said Macklem, using a similar line for both audiences.
    “This process of companies finding workers and workers finding the right jobs, it’s taking some time.
    What that means is that … we do expect to see a good recovery in the second half of this year, but it could be a little slower, it could take a little longer than we expected.

    One thing commentators in the U.S. have noted is that a continued rise in jobs, if shown in Friday’s employment numbers, will almost certainly force Macklem’s American counterpart to begin the process of raising rates — and that may be disruptive to an economy that has grown accustomed to bargain-basement lending.
    In another question, Altman alluded to the huge amounts of money sloshing through the system.
    In the U.S., Europe and China, M2 — one measure of money supply — was up about 10 per cent, he said, because of government action. And the holding of bonds by the Bank of Canada, used to stimulate the economy, is up about 300 per cent, he said.

    Exit pains

    One is tempted to think that the exit for central banks from this phase of extraordinary measures is going to be challenging, is going to be difficult, said Altman to Macklem. Tell us how you see that being managed and how you think it can avoid being bumpy.
    Macklem conceded there would likely be some bumps in the process. But one of the ways central banks could help, he said, was to be as transparent as possible and minimize surprises.
    That is what the Bank of Canada has done by signalling its plans to slow bond purchases in advance and warning it will begin raising rates before selling off its stock of stimulus bonds.
    The same applied to the U.S. Federal Reserve in September when chair Jerome Powell revealed the Fed was preparing to begin slowing bond purchases as soon as November.
    Two more questions from think-tank members addressed questions of great importance to Canadians: housing and swings in commodity prices. But they indicated those subjects are also important to our southern neighbours.
    One question asked whether the effects of an unwinding of the Canadian housing market currently being used as a retirement asset was likely to spill across the border and do damage there. Macklem was reassuring.
    On the other question of commodity prices, he made an oblique reference to the potential distortions of the current rise in oil prices, alluding to the fact he could only set one interest rate for all of Canada — which, in the past, has led to “Dutch disease” when oil prices surge.
    In each of the cases addressed — and in many others — what may seem like abstruse subjects of interest only to economists and market traders actually has important effects on each of our lives, as Macklem succinctly noted.
    What happens in financial markets doesn’t stay in financial markets — it has real impacts, it affects jobs and growth.
    Don Pittis · CBC News

  • Halton Releases Guidelines for Thanksgiving

    By: Laura Steiner, Local Journalism Initiative
    The Region of Halton is out with its guidelines for a safe Thanksgiving.  They are recommending that residents keep gatherings small, or virtual.
    When gathering outside residents who are fully vaccinated do not have wear masks or socially distance themselves, unless they are celebrating with other households.
    When gathering inside the Region of Halton recommends residents keep the gatherings small, or virtual.  Masks may be removed if all are comfortable.  Those from multiple households or whose vaccination status remains unknown should wear a mask, and socially distance as well.
    The current regulations allow for 25 people indoors, and 100 people outdoors.
    Halton Updates on COVID-19 Vaccine Progress:
    The Region has also released an update on the progress of the vaccine. To-date, 87% of Halton’s eligible population or 433,136 have received a first dose.  83% or 443,958 have received a second dose.
    “The greatest risk of transmission is in unvaccinated people,” Medical Officer of Health Dr. Hamidah Meghani said in her latest update.  66% of Halton’s COVID cases are in those who are unvaccinated.  Vaccinated people spread the virus at a lower rate than unvaccinated people.  “COVID-19 vaccines save lives,” Meghani added.
    Halton has reported 26 cases of COVID-19 as of October 8, 2021.  10 cases have been reported in Milton.   The Region will not be reporting cases on Monday, which, may lead to higher numbers on Tuesday October 12.
    Watch Dr. Meghani’s update below:

  • 157,000 new jobs in September gets Canada’s economy back above pre-pandemic level

    Canada’s economy added 157,000 new jobs last month, Statistics Canada says, enough to put employment numbers back above where they were before the pandemic started.
    The jobs surge was more than twice as big as the 60,000 new jobs that economists were expecting.
    It was also enough to push the jobless rate down two ticks to 6.9 per cent. That’s the lowest unemployment rate since the pandemic started.
    Before the pandemic, Canada’s jobless rate was 5.6 per cent. It jumped up sharply in March, April and May of 2020, peaking at 13.7 per cent in May of last year, and has trended downward ever since.
    While there are now the same number of jobs as there were before COVID-19 arrived in Canada, that doesn’t necessarily mean people are working as much as they were before.
    The number of people working less than half the hours they would normally do is still 218,000 people higher than were doing so in February 2020. And the total number of hours worked by all employees is still 1.5 per cent below the pre-pandemic level, despite there being more jobs now.
  • Ontario Records another lowest growth in Business Investment

    By: Shazia Nazir, Local Journalism Initiative
    For the last two decades Ontario has experienced weak business investment with one of the lowest growth rates in the country according a recent study  released recently by the Fraser Institute.
    “The decline of Ontario’s manufacturing sector in the 2000s, the 2008/09 recession, and a tepid recovery have combined to create an extended period of economic weakness for the province,” said Ben Eisen, senior fellow at the Fraser Institute and co-author of An Assessment of Recent Economic Performance and Business Investment Growth in Ontario.
    The study finds that Ontario’s average rate of per person business investment (adjusted for inflation) from 2000 to 2019 (excluding 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic) was weaker than it was in the other large Canadian provinces. Specifically, Ontario’s per person business investment grew, on average, by just 0.3 percent between 2000 and 2019 compared to 2.7 percent in British Columbia, 1.5 percent in Alberta, and 0.9 percent in neighboring Quebec.
    “Business investment lies at the heart of improving our standard of living and job creation, and the province’s weak performance should be of great concern,” commented Eisen. The province’s rate of average business investment growth (population and inflation-adjusted) from 2000 to 2019 was the third lowest in Canada, just ahead of New Brunswick and Nova Scotia.
    The study finds that dismal growth in business investment has had effects on the larger economy. Economic growth in the province was substantially higher in the 1980s and 1990s than in the 2000s and 2010s.
    “Business investment contributes to economic growth, job creation, and wage increases,” Eisen said. read more about the report here

  • Migrant Workers Await Justice as Charges laid against Scotlynn Farms

    By: Shazia Nazir
    Ontario’s Ministry of Labour has laid 20 charges against Scotlynn SweetPac and owner Scott Biddle.  The actions follow COVID-19 outbreak where 199 workers tested positive, and the death migrant farmworker Juan Lopez Chaparro.
    Gabriel Flores worked at Scotlynn Farms was among those who tested positive for COVID-19.  He spoke to the Toronto Star regarding substandard housing, and working conditions.  He was fired after speaking to the media. “These charges are not enough.  There need to be systemic changes to the laws to make sure the workers can safely defend themselves against bad employers.  That change begins with permanent status on arrival so that migrants can access the same rights, protections and essential services as anyone else,” Flores said of the charges.  Flores brought a complaint against his former employer to the Labour Relations board, and won in November, 2020.
    “Migrant workers deserve more attention, to not be forgotten, to work in decent conditions and know they will be reunited with their families,” Chaparro’s widow Agustina Galindo Segundo said.
    Migrant workers Alliance for Change protested in August through a march on Ottawa fighting for permanent residency for workers.  “In his last government, Prime Minister Trudeau promised to ‘do better by migrant workers.  It is time for this new government to act,  once and for all and do the only thing that will prevent these tragedies- and that is ensure full and permanent immigration status for all immediately,” group spokeswoman Karen Cocque said.  The group fears the inequality will deny up to 1.6 million (or 1 in 23 residents) people their rights to services such as healthcare.

  • Brock Township adopting vote by mail election method

    By: Dan Cearns, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter, The Standard Newspaper
    The Township of Brock is once again adopting vote by mail as their voting method for the 2022 municipal election.
    The decision was made at a meeting on Monday, October 4th. Council also decided to have ballots counted by optical scan voting tabulators. Regional Councillor Ted Smith told council members this would be the seventh election where this method has been used in Township of Brock elections.
    “We’ve done six [vote by mail elections], and they’ve resulted in very good turnouts. [It’s] usually the best turnout in the Region of Durham,” Councillor Smith said. “Certainly, they’re not perfect. No method is. I think this way has proven to work well in Brock.”
    Ward 4 Councillor Cria Pettingill asked if the township has considered possibly allowing Internet voting in a future election.
    “Just as any other service, it comes at a cost, and it comes with additional administrative work. I do intend to continue to pursue investigations of online options for future elections in Brock,” clerk Fernando Lamanna stated. “Will internet voting increase [the voter turnout]? Maybe, maybe not. It’s not proven to increase voter turnout. But it does provide a matter of convenience, and enhanced service to some electors [who] wish to choose to vote remotely.”
    The clerk added he will consider the Internet option for the 2026 election and will hold a resident poll during the next term of council to see “if there’s a will or a wish to move to online voting.”
    However, Ward 3 Councillor Walter Schummer pointed out that the township has a population that “skews towards seniors.” Thus, he would be hesitant to “go exclusively with internet [voting].”
    Ward 2 Councillor Claire Doble said right now it makes sense for the municipality “to go forward with vote by mail.” CAO Ingrid Svelnis concluded “vote by mail works well.”

  • Ontario government making Indigenous education available for students in Grades 1 to 3

    By: Dan Cearns, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter, The Standard Newspaper
    DURHAM/KAWARTHA: The Ontario government is making changes to the elementary school curriculum to allow for more education about Indigenous peoples.
    “Already, the curriculum includes mandatory and detailed learning in the social studies, grade four to six courses, and in history in grade four, grades seven, and eight and ten. [This] includes mandatory learning on residential schools in grades eight and ten. Building on this, we are working on completing the full spectrum of Indigenous-focused learning across the elementary social studies curriculum. This includes mandatory Indigenous-focused learning added to the social studies curriculum for grades one to three,” Ontario education minister Stephen Lecce announced, on Wednesday, September 29th.
    These changes, to the grades one to three curriculum, are expected to be made by September 2023. According to a provincial press release, this curriculum is expected to include information on ‘the role of family and resilience in First Nations, Métis and Inuit communities and nations’, ‘First Nations, Métis and Inuit historical and contemporary realities’, ‘Indigenous peoples’ interrelationship and connection with the land’, and the residential school system.
    “Today, as we approach the National Day for Truth and Reconciliation, we continue to work towards acknowledging and addressing past wrongs [which] are still felt across Indigenous communities in a present way. It is why we are working closely with Indigenous partners, elders and knowledge keepers,” Minister Lecce explained.
    The Ontario government also announced $23.96 million in funding towards Indigenous education. Minister Lecce said this funding would “allow Indigenous partners, school boards and other education stakeholders to provide supportive, culturally appropriate and safe education opportunities for Indigenous students.”

  • Free haircuts serve as a way to welcome Afghan refugees to their new life in Calgary

    As dozens of Afghan refugees start to get settled in Calgary, following a chaotic and heart-wrenching exit from their home, some began to feel the need for a new look to go along with their new life.
    Because they weren’t prepared when they left Kabul, it kind of happened last minute, so some of them were feeling quite unkempt, said Bindu Narula, director of settlement and integration services for the Calgary Catholic Immigration Society.
    The refugees also spent a two-week stint quarantining in Toronto before heading west.
    The society reached out to Goat Salon in southwest Calgary to see if they could provide their services for free to a few folks.
    That’s turned into 78 and counting.
    We just feel very honoured, said Amanda Weightman, manager of Goat Salon.
    A lot of us have immigrant backgrounds, and so I think it’s an issue close to our hearts as well, added Weightman.
    Despite the impact of COVID-19 on this industry, Weightman says 20 stylists from several Calgary salons — including Notorious Hair Group, Ça Va Bien Hair Studio, Johnny’s Barber + Shop, Social Cut & Shave and Red Bloom — have stepped forward to provide their services for free on their days off.
    In order to provide a culturally safe service, men and women were serviced separately, with a team of female stylists for the female clients.
    Each group of clients had an interpreter with them, and the clients had pictures of their desired hairstyles on their phones.
    Richard De Los Reyes, the owner of Goat Salon, notes everyone knows someone who has lost their job, or their home, or been uprooted as in the case of a refugee, so he says it’s important to give back when you can.
    “We could do more in making sure that all of us are taking care of each other. We could do so much more.
    This is one thing that we have done. We need to make sure that it’s not the last,” he said.
    Ajmal Rasikh recalls the harrowing experience at the Kabul airport prior to getting on a plane bound for Canada with his wife and two children, ages seven and five. He left his parents behind but hopes to bring them to Calgary soon.
    Let’s see what we can do for our families left behind there [while] their case is under process, if hopefully they come here … it will be a very good, like happy situation for us again to start living, said Rasikh.
    Rasikh says getting a haircut in Kabul is no different than in Calgary.
    But he says he’s been trimming his own hair lately so he appreciates having a professional clean it up.
    De Los Reyes says he doesn’t expect to see Raskih or other refugees in his chair again.
    But he hopes the salon will serve as a reminder of the feelings they had when they first arrived in Calgary.
    If they ended up staying in the city and they drove by this area, walked by this area, and they realize ‘that’s the place where I had my first haircut here in the city and that place welcomed us, they made this experience as living here so much greater’ — then we’ve done our job, said De Los Reyes.
    Colleen Underwood · CBC News
  • Provincial education blitz in Halton this Week

    By: Laura Steiner
    For the next two days Provincial inspectors will be visiting Halton businesses.  The visits are part of a province-wide effort to monitor compliance with the proof of COVID-19 vaccination requirements.
    “I would like to thank the Halton business community for supporting Ontario’s proof of vaccination requirements and all that they have done over the past 18 months to keep employees and customers safe,” Halton Region Chair Gary Carr said.  The provincial officers will be focusing on education campaigns, but are empowered issue tickets to businesses and customers who are not in compliance with the measures under provincial reopening legislation.
    “I continue to encourage all patrons, business owners and employees to be patient and kind as we all take precautions available to stop the spread of COVID-19,” Halton Region Medical Officer of Health Dr. Hamidah Meghani.  Meghani issued new orders for businesses, as well as employers last month.
    Ontario has reported 429 new cases of COVID19.  Of those 301 are in those with an “unknown” vaccination status.  Halton Region has reported 50 new cases of COVID, with only 1 case coming from Milton.  “As we approach the colder weather and with the continued spread of the Delta variant, please get both doses of COVID-19 vaccine to prevent severe illness and hospitalization and prevent infecting those who are immunocompromised or not yet eligible for vaccination. We all must continue to do our part to bring an end to the pandemic,” Meghani added.  83% of eligible residents in Halton have had two doses of COVID-19 vaccine.
     

  • Facebook whistleblower to appear before U.S. Congress

    A former Facebook data scientist has stunned lawmakers and the public with revelations of the company’s awareness of apparent harm to some teens from Instagram and her accusations of dishonesty in its fight against hate and misinformation. Now she is coming before Congress.
    Frances Haugen has come forward with a wide-ranging condemnation of Facebook, buttressed with tens of thousands of pages of internal research documents she secretly copied before leaving her job in Facebook’s civic integrity unit. Haugen also has filed complaints with federal authorities alleging that Facebook’s own research shows that it amplifies hate, misinformation and political unrest, but the company hides what it knows.
    Separately Monday, a massive global outage plunged Facebook, Instagram and the company’s WhatsApp messaging platform into chaos, only gradually dissipating by late Monday Eastern time. For some users, WhatsApp was working for a time, then not. For others, Instagram was working but not Facebook, and so on.
    Facebook didn’t say what might have caused the outage, which began around 11:40 a.m. ET and was still not fixed more than six hours later.

    Facebook ‘chooses profit over safety’

    After recent reports in The Wall Street Journal based on documents she leaked to the newspaper raised a public outcry, Haugen revealed her identity in a CBS 60 Minutes interview that aired Sunday night. She insisted that Facebook, over and over again, has shown it chooses profit over safety.
    The ex-employee challenging the social network giant with 2.8 billion users worldwide and nearly $1 trillion US in market value is a 37-year-old data expert from Iowa with a degree in computer engineering and a master’s degree in business from Harvard. She worked for 15 years at companies including Google and Pinterest prior to being recruited by Facebook in 2019.
    Haugen is set to testify to the Senate Commerce subcommittee on consumer protection at a hearing Tuesday.
    The panel is examining Facebook’s use of information from its own researchers on Instagram that could indicate potential harm for some of its young users, especially girls, while it publicly downplayed the negative impacts. For some of the teens devoted to Facebook’s popular photo-sharing platform, the peer pressure generated by the visually focused Instagram led to mental health and body-image problems, and in some cases, eating disorders and suicidal thoughts, the research leaked by Haugen showed.

    Internal study says Instagram increases suicidal thoughts

    One internal study cited 13.5 per cent of teen girls saying Instagram makes thoughts of suicide worse and 17 per cent of teen girls saying it makes eating disorders worse.
    And what’s super tragic is Facebook’s own research says, as these young women begin to consume this eating disorder content, they get more and more depressed, Haugen said in the televised interview. And it actually makes them use the app more. And so, they end up in this feedback cycle where they hate their bodies more and more.
    As the public relations debacle over the Instagram research grew last week, Facebook put on hold its work on a kids’ version of Instagram, which the company says is meant mainly for tweens aged 10 to 12.
    The senators are eager to hear from Haugen.
    I look forward to asking her follow-up questions about why Facebook hasn’t taken action to fix problems on its platforms, even when its own internal research reflects massive problems, Sen. Amy Klobuchar, a Democrat from Minnesota and a member of the subcommittee, told The Associated Press on Monday. I want to discuss how Facebook’s algorithms promote harmful and divisive content, and how much Facebook really profits off of our children.

    Facebook played role in Capitol assault, Haugen said

    At issue are algorithms that govern what shows up on users’ news feeds, and how they favour hateful content. Haugen said a 2018 change to the content flow contributed to more divisiveness and ill will in a network ostensibly created to bring people closer together. Despite the enmity that the new algorithms were feeding, Facebook found that they helped keep people coming back — a pattern that helped the social media giant sell more of the digital ads that generate most of its revenue.
    Haugen’s criticisms range beyond the Instagram situation. She said in the interview that Facebook prematurely turned off safeguards designed to thwart misinformation and incitement to violence after Joe Biden defeated Donald Trump last year, alleging that contributed to the deadly Jan. 6 assault on the U.S. Capitol.
    After the November election, Facebook dissolved the civic integrity union where Haugen had been working. That, she said, was the moment she realized, I don’t trust that they’re willing to actually invest what needs to be invested to keep Facebook from being dangerous.
    Haugen says she told Facebook executives when they recruited her that she had asked to work in an area of the company that fights misinformation, because she had lost a friend to online conspiracy theories.

    Facebook calls allegations misleading

    Antigone Davis, Facebook’s head of global safety, faced a barrage of criticism from senators on the Commerce panel at a hearing last Thursday. They accused Facebook of concealing the negative findings about Instagram and demanded a commitment from the company to make changes.
    Davis defended Instagram’s efforts to protect young people using its platform. She disputed the way The Wall Street Journal story describes what the research shows.
    Facebook maintains that Haugen’s allegations are misleading and insists there is no evidence to support the premise that it is the primary cause of social polarization.
    Even with the most sophisticated technology, which I believe we deploy, even with the tens of thousands of people that we employ to try and maintain safety and integrity on our platform, we’re never going to be absolutely on top of this 100 per cent of the time, Nick Clegg, Facebook’s vice-president of policy and public affairs, said Sunday on CNN’s Reliable Sources.
    That’s because of the instantaneous and spontaneous form of communication on Facebook, Clegg said, adding, I think we do more than any reasonable person can expect to.
    By coming forward, Haugen says she hopes it will help spur the government to put regulations in place for Facebook’s activities. Like fellow tech giants Google, Amazon and Apple, Facebook has for years enjoyed minimal regulation in Washington.
    The Associated Press