Well, a Cabinet minister has resigned over it: https://www.thestar.com/politics/fe...cle_357f1bc3-1fb9-4abc-aee7-35409cf8c3a9.html
Well, a Cabinet minister has resigned over it: https://www.thestar.com/politics/fe...cle_357f1bc3-1fb9-4abc-aee7-35409cf8c3a9.html
I completely forgot about Catherine McKenna. I just chuckled as I thought of Climate Barbie.... terrible, my bad.One sign of just how low environment is in Carney's priorities is the invisibility of the Minister of Environment, Toronto MP Julie Dabrusin. Compared to Steven Guilbeault or Catherine McKenna, she has a very low profile (she's a solid MP, otherwise).
This will unlikely have any effect on the direction of Carney or his government. It’s my way or the highway with this cabinet, for right or wrong and for good or bad.Well, a Cabinet minister has resigned over it: https://www.thestar.com/politics/fe...cle_357f1bc3-1fb9-4abc-aee7-35409cf8c3a9.html
Mckenna has spent the past week throwing barbs at Resources minister Tim Hodgson on social media. The intra-Liberal dynamics here are facinating. She was married a longtime to Scott Gilmore, one of PM Carney's current senior advisors. Carney himself was at her book launch a few weeks ago.One sign of just how low environment is in Carney's priorities is the invisibility of the Minister of Environment, Toronto MP Julie Dabrusin. Compared to Steven Guilbeault or Catherine McKenna, she has a very low profile (she's a solid MP, otherwise).
How can journalists keep referring to Tim Hortons as a "Canadian coffee giant" in good conscience? They are anything but Canadian anymore. They are a Brazilian-owned profit-extraction operation masquerading as a cafe chain with a strong grip on the Canadian market.Not sure where to put this but here seems most apt.
Apparently Tim Hortons was seeking more temporary foreign workers and expedition with visa paperwork for their employees.
For me personally, it sours me on Tim's a bit. I feel like they are out of touch with reality and not grasping their situation.
See here: https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/tim-hortons-temporary-foreign-workers-9.7001008
I haven't been "sweet" on TH for ages, and it's nothing to do with who they hire at their stores. Ironically, the demographic that seems to frequent Tim's, in suburbia and small towns at least, appears to be a demographic that would be most opposed to foreign workers of any type, temporary or permanent.Not sure where to put this but here seems most apt.
Apparently Tim Hortons was seeking more temporary foreign workers and expedition with visa paperwork for their employees.
For me personally, it sours me on Tim's a bit. I feel like they are out of touch with reality and not grasping their situation.
See here: https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/tim-hortons-temporary-foreign-workers-9.7001008
They ride a very fine line. The people that work Tim's in rural areas are not the same as those who work in urban areas. I'm sure the franchise owners who were lobbying MPs on relaxing foreign worker rules were urban or suburban location franchisees.I haven't been "sweet" on TH for ages, and it's nothing to do with who they hire at their stores. Ironically, the demographic that seems to frequent Tim's, in suburbia and small towns at least, appears to be a demographic that would be most opposed to foreign workers of any type, temporary or permanent.
Don't be so sure. I've been in Tim's in small central and (near) northern Ontario communities and the staff demographics appear similar, perhaps not exclusively.They ride a very fine line. The people that work Tim's in rural areas are not the same as those who work in urban areas. I'm sure the franchise owners who were lobbying MPs on relaxing foreign worker rules were urban or suburban location franchisees.
I'm speaking mostly of non-Ontario rural communities. Maybe it's changed as @PinkLucy has alluded to, but throughout parts of Atlantic Canada it's still very easy to find TH locations that are the meeting-point for small towns staffed by the old girls who have been there for thirty+ years. I know it's changing in many areas but it contrasts a lot to some of the more urban TH locations you can find, or the suburban GTA locations you can find. A lot of the time it does come down to the franchise owner, but I know what Pink was alluding to was happening in Acadien communities in NB with French African speakers filling in those jobs as they lack new entrants into the workforce.Don't be so sure. I've been in Tim's in small central and (near) northern Ontario communities and the staff demographics appear similar, perhaps not exclusively.




