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Davriellelouna@lemmy.worldOPto Canada@lemmy.ca•Canadian CEOs say new anti-greenwashing legislation has had the unintended effect of dissuading companies from taking climate action44·5 hours agoI’m not a Canadian citizen. I studied in Quebec before moving back to my country. I love Canada and I follow Canadian politics very closely.
Justin Trudeau has done some disappointing things. Bill C-59 is not one of them.
In fact, I believe Bill C-59 is perhaps the single greatest bill adopted under Justin Trudeau.
This bill gives enormous new powers to the Competition Bureau:
https://theconversation.com/canadas-competition-laws-just-changed-heres-what-you-need-to-know-220020
This bill also allows the Competition Bureau to punish companies that knowingly lie about their environmental record:
https://ccli.ubc.ca/bill-c-59-anti-greenwashing/
Here is a funny thing that happened. A few hours before Bill C-59 was set to pass, some oil companies started deleting content from their websites:
Pathways Alliance, a coalition of Canadian tar sands producers aiming to build a massive carbon capture project in Alberta, scrubbed their website of its content June 19.
In its place is a notice indicating the organization “removed content from our website, social media and other public communications” and that they had done so in response to anticipated changes coming with Bill C-59.
https://www.desmog.com/2024/06/20/pathways-alliance-website-scrubbed-ahead-of-new-greenwashing-law/
It’s just outrageous to see Danielle Smith and these CEOs whine like that about Bill-C59.
If you don’t break the law by knowingly lying, you have nothing to fear.
Davriellelouna@lemmy.worldOPto Canada@lemmy.ca•Alberta government to increase prescription costs for seniors for first time in 31 years10·2 days agoYou know the worst thing about this story ?
This was published recently 👇👇👇
Alberta paid more than 6 times usual price for pain medications in $70-million import deal
Alberta purchased children’s pain medication from Turkey at a price more than six times greater than what the provincial health authority normally pays for the same volume of product, according to documents obtained by The Globe and Mail.
The Alberta government explained in 2022 that the manufacturer required a minimum order of five million bottles - or $70-million worth of drugs - to get the deal done. But a briefing note, obtained by The Globe, indicates the health authority could have reduced its total bill by ordering less medicine, albeit at a higher price per bottle.
5 million bottles equated to roughly eight bottles for every child in the province.
https://www.theglobeandmail.com/canada/alberta/article-alberta-turkish-pain-medication-deal-prices/
Davriellelouna@lemmy.worldOPto Canada@lemmy.ca•B.C. municipality pushes for European-style elevators to cut costs, boost accessibility15·2 days agoThe United States and Canada have the most expensive elevators in the world. Prices charged in North America are at least three times those charged by the same manufacturers in comparable mid-rise buildings in high-income countries in Western Europe.
As a result, the U.S. and Canada have fewer elevators per capita than any other high-income country for which data could be found
Unique North American elevator standards have led to no discernible improvement in safety outcomes compared to those in Europe.
https://admin.centerforbuilding.org/wp-content/uploads/2024/12/Elevatorsexecutivesummary.pdf
Very short-sighted man.
Obesity costs the Canadian Healthcare system billions of dollars every year:
https://nbhc.ca/health-in-the-news/one-third-canadian-adults-will-be-obese-2025-costing-country-337b-annually
https://bmcpublichealth.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12889-025-21905-2
Currently, most Canadian politicians are treating people like little children.
It’s time to tell people the brutal truth:
“We can reduce traffic jams in the city. But we are going to increase parking fees. We are going to build a bike lane network. Many drivers will be unhappy and will have to change their habits. Do you think it’s worth it? Yes or no?”
“We can significantly reduce the number of car crashes. Less people will die. Less people will be injured. But the number of speed cameras will increase. A lot of speeding citizens are going to receive fines in the first years and will be furious. Getting a driver license will also become much harder for older people. Do you think it’s worth it?”
"We can make the healthcare system more financially sustainable. We can do that by increasing your income tax. Or we can increase the sales tax. Or we can do that by increasing alcohol tax and sugar tax. Which do you prefer? Otherwise, I will simply not invest more money into the healthcare system.
“We can reduce gun trafficking. We will do it by tripling the number of inspections of trucks and cars coming from the United States. But this means longer waiting times at border crossings. The number of american tourists will be reduced. The price of some imported things may also increase. Should we do it?”
"We can significantly reduce homelessness. But we are going to build very tall buildings like in Eastern Europe. We will ban cities from opposing housing projects that meet legal norms. In many neighborhoods, individual homeowners will be outraged. Should we do it?
No pain, no gain. It’s true at the gym. But it’s also true in politics.
There are some decisions that are easy wins (cracking down on tax evasion, using open source software, stronger ethics laws). But most decisions actually require some pain if you want some gains.
Time to start treating people like adults. Tell them the brutal truth.