Decisive day for Macron’s pension gamble in tense France

Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 03:48:17 GMT

Decisive day for Macron’s pension gamble in tense France PARIS (AP) — France’s standoff over a bill raising the retirement age heads toward a climax Thursday, either via a parliamentary vote or through a special presidential move to force it through the legislature.Garbage workers are keeping up their strikes, and students plan to march to the lower house of parliament as opponents of the bill pressure the government to abandon it. Nearly 500,000 people protested around the country Wednesday.Thursday is a crucial day for President Emmanuel Macron, who is seeking to raise the retirement age from 62 to 64 so that workers can pay more money into the system. If he can’t get a parliamentary majority in voting, he could risk imposing the unpopular changes unilaterally.Macron has promoted the pension changes as central to his vision for making the French economy more competitive. Unions remained combative late Wednesday, calling on lawmakers to vote against the plan and denouncing the government’s legal shortcuts to move the bill forward a...

Legault to visit Quebec town reeling from vehicle attack : In The News for Mar. 16

Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 03:48:17 GMT

Legault to visit Quebec town reeling from vehicle attack : In The News for Mar. 16 In The News is a roundup of stories from The Canadian Press designed to kickstart your day. Here is what’s on the radar of our editors for the morning of Mar. 16 …What we are watching in Canada …Quebec Premier François Legault will today visit the eastern Quebec town where a pickup truck plowed into groups of pedestrians, killing two.Legault will be joined by opposition leaders and other politicians in Amqui, the small community in the lower St-Lawrence region, where he will meet with local residents and hold a news conference.Two men were killed and nine people were injured Monday when a man drove a truck down one of the eastern Quebec town’s main streets, allegedly hitting several different groups of pedestrians in what police have described as an intentional act.Thirty-eight-year-old Steeve Gagnon is facing two counts of dangerous driving causing death, and prosecutors have said more charges will follow.Legault said earlier this week that his visit to the ...

Legault, party leaders to visit Quebec town reeling after pedestrians killed by truck

Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 03:48:17 GMT

Legault, party leaders to visit Quebec town reeling after pedestrians killed by truck AMQUI, Que. — Quebec Premier François Legault will today visit the eastern Quebec town where a pickup truck plowed into groups of pedestrians, killing two.Legault will be joined by opposition leaders and other politicians in Amqui, the small community in the lower St-Lawrence region, where he will meet with local residents and hold a news conference.Two men were killed and nine people were injured Monday when a man drove a truck down one of the eastern Quebec town’s main streets, allegedly hitting several different groups of pedestrians in what police have described as an intentional act.Thirty-eight-year-old Steeve Gagnon is facing two counts of dangerous driving causing death, and prosecutors have said more charges will follow.Legault said earlier this week that his visit to the shaken community is meant as a comforting gesture.A candlelight vigil is also planned in front of the Saint-Benoît-Joseph-Labre church at 7 p.m.This report by The Canadian Press was first published M...

‘Worse than an animal’: Mother enraged as killer claims Amanda Zhao might be alive

Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 03:48:17 GMT

‘Worse than an animal’: Mother enraged as killer claims Amanda Zhao might be alive In 2002, Yang Baoying flew from China to Vancouver to identify her daughter Amanda Zhao’s body.The 21-year-old English student’s remains had been found stuffed in a suitcase in Mission, B.C., and Yang’s identification of her daughter was also confirmed by a police DNA test.Yang returned to Beijing with Zhao’s ashes. She had been “brought home,” her mother said.More than 20 years later, any sense of closure thatact offered has been torn apart by the claims of Zhao’s convicted killer, Ang Li, that he was framed by China’s government and Zhao might not be dead at all.Li said in an interview with New Zealand’s Herald on Sunday newspaper that Zhao could be “still alive and walking around somewhere,” as he described himself as a “political target.”Li, who served a prison sentence in China for killing Zhao, is now seeking refugee status in New Zealand, and posed for newspaper photographs draped in a Tibetan flag, his hands clasped in prayer.Yang told The Canadian Pr...

The rise and fall of Canada’s domestic PPE market

Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 03:48:17 GMT

The rise and fall of Canada’s domestic PPE market Most Canadian businesses that answered federal and provincial calls during the pandemic to build up a domestic sector for personal protective equipment have collapsed.The association that represents Canadian PPE companies says 90 per cent of those businesses have been forced to close or pivot to other industries because the federal government and Ontario have given contracts to a massive American company and a Quebec operation. “We’ve got an industry that is just running on fumes,” Barry Hunt, the president of the Canadian Association of PPE Manufacturers, said in an interview.“Most of them are out of business and the ones that aren’t out of business are going out of business quickly.”A major issue, Hunt said, is large PPE orders the federal and Ontario governments placed with American company 3M, which has a facility in Brockville, Ont., and Quebec-based Medicom. Hospitals – who buy as larger groups – have also shut out domestic PPE suppliers, he...

Temporary closure of Iqaluit centre highlights need to address food insecurity

Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 03:48:17 GMT

Temporary closure of Iqaluit centre highlights need to address food insecurity IQALUIT, Nunavut — The executive director of a Nunavut food charity says there’s a need to address the root causes of food insecurity after 500 people in the territorial capital went without a daily meal for a week. The Qajuqturvik Community Food Centre provides a hot lunch on weekdays in Iqaluit, home to nearly 8,000 people. It was forced to temporarily close after the building ran out of fuel in late February, resulting in burst frozen pipes and other damage. Executive director Rachel Blais said centre staff distributed food hampers twice that week, but the closure prevented them from serving about 2,500 meals.“It goes to show the vulnerabilities of the community when such a significant portion of the population is reliant on one single charity,” she said.“We can’t continue to rely on food banks and food charities like Qajuqturvik to provide something as basic as food for such a significant portion of the population.” Nunavut has some of the hig...

Some federal public servants get remote-work extension as others face deadline

Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 03:48:17 GMT

Some federal public servants get remote-work extension as others face deadline OTTAWA — Some federal government workers will be able to continue remote work for another year, as most face a March 31 deadline to return to the office at least two days a week. A spokesperson for Treasury Board President Mona Fortier says the government will take another year to “assess the benefits” of remote work for call centres at the Canada Revenue Agency and the departments of Immigration and Employment and Social Development.The Procurement Department’s pay centre will also work from home for another year, along with adjudicators for the Immigration and Refugee Board. In December, Fortier announced that all departments would be mandated back to the office at least two days a week to address inconsistencies across the public service. A union representing over 72,000 public servants says they have been told the extensions were needed because of retention and recruitment issues. The president of the Professional Institute of the Public Service of Canada says ...

Daily horoscope for March 16, 2023

Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 03:48:17 GMT

Daily horoscope for March 16, 2023 Moon Alert: There are no restrictions to shopping or important decisions today. The Moon is in Capricorn.Happy Birthday for Thursday, March 16, 2023:You are intelligent, curious, insightful and also psychic. It’s important to you to stay balanced in this life. This year is a wonderful year when you will get recognition for your efforts and your work. You will get a promotion, an award or some kind of acknowledgement or kudos.ARIES(March 21-April 19) ★★★“Hold the phone!” Think twice before you reply to anyone today, because people are quick to take offense and ready to throw back a zinger. This is because people are irritable and a tad grumpy today. Some are just looking for an excuse to fight. Tonight: Seek solitude.TAURUS(April 20-May 20) ★★★Be patient today so you will have no regrets. This is because it’s easy to suddenly squabble with a friend or a member of a group. If you get embroiled in an adversarial discussion, it might be hard to mend bridges later...

InvestEU supports sustainable transport in Italy: €3.4 billion to modernize the Palermo-Catania railway line

Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 03:48:17 GMT

InvestEU supports sustainable transport in Italy: €3.4 billion to modernize the Palermo-Catania railway line The European Investment Bank (EIB) has approved €2.1 billion to modernise 178 km of the Palermo-Catania railway line in Italy. This will reduce current travel times by a third, linking the two cities with a direct two-hour rail service for freight and passenger trains, with a significant positive impact on economic and social development and sustainable mobility in Sicily. The infrastructure is part of the Scandinavia-Mediterranean Corridor of the Trans-European Transport Network (TEN-T).The operation is divided into a direct €800 million loan by the EIB to the Italian Ministry of Economy and Finance and a €1.3bn counter-guarantee by the EIB, designed with Ferrovie dello Stato Italiane, in favour of the financial intermediaries Intesa Sanpaolo and Cassa Depositi e Prestiti. The €1.3bn counter-guarantee is backed by the InvestEU programme and enables the guarantees to be doubled to €2.6bn. When added to the financing granted to the Ministry of Economy and Finance, this brings the val...

Miss Manners: Was it improper how the bride announced the news?

Published Tue, 05 Nov 2024 03:48:17 GMT

Miss Manners: Was it improper how the bride announced the news? DEAR MISS MANNERS: My niece was recently married for the second time, and as she had a formal wedding the first time, she chose to have a small, intimate ceremony in her garden this time. She invited her parents and her brother, but no other family members.This seems reasonable for a second marriage. However, I found out about her wedding through a neighbor, who saw it online. I called her to congratulate her, and she said that she hoped to have a reception sometime in the future, to which extended family would be invited.I don’t know what to expect. Should I sign up for the social media platform on which my neighbor saw the news, just in case she announces the reception in the same way she announced the wedding? Is there a kinder way to announce a wedding to which very few were invited, and to extend an invitation to a future reception?GENTLE READER: The problem with your niece’s modest (and, as both you and Miss Manners agree, praiseworthy) approach to sharing her good...