Podcasts about competition bureau

Canadian government agency

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Best podcasts about competition bureau

Latest podcast episodes about competition bureau

The Food Professor
Brisket, Buc-ee's & Big Ideas plus Spilling the Tea Tariff & guest Tonia Jahshan of Sipology Steeps Up Global Growth

The Food Professor

Play Episode Listen Later May 29, 2025 54:11


This episode of The Food Professor Podcast is steeped in insights, storytelling, and smoky Texas flavour. Hosts Michael LeBlanc and Dr. Sylvain Charlebois kick off with a deep dive into the state of Canadian agri-food policy, tariffs, and food inflation before welcoming a very special guest: Tonia Jahshan, Founder and CEO of Sipology.Broadcasting remotely from Texas, Sylvain shares updates from his new role as head of the prestigious Masters in Agribusiness program at Texas A&M University—ranked #1 in the U.S. and #3 globally. He offers behind-the-scenes insights into the world of American ag education, donor-funded infrastructure, and his leadership plans. Amidst meetings with deans and exploring campus, Sylvain visits a Texas institution of another kind—Buc-ee's, the legendary convenience store-meets-theme-park known for its brisket, wall of jerky, and award-winning bathrooms. The hosts revel in Buc-ee's cult status and then Michael highlights the newly released Texas Monthly Top 50 BBQ list, the Michelin Guide of Texas barbecue. Sylvain, a BBQ enthusiast, is already planning future brisket pilgrimages.  Congrats to our guest on the #pod from earlier this year Chuck Charnichart from Barb's BQ for making the list!!From Texas to Toronto, the episode pivots to policy with an analysis of Prime Minister Mark Carney's new mandate letter. Sylvain critiques its lack of clarity for the agri-food sector, calling for a shift from farm-gate thinking to value-chain strategy. The hosts then turn to the thorny issue of tea tariffs, which are hitting Canadian importers hard despite recent government reprieves. With tea being a $1.3 billion market in Canada—and nearly all of it imported—these tariffs are creating real cost pressures. The duo also revisits the long-running bread price-fixing investigation, discussing Loblaw's recent $500 million class action settlement and why the Competition Bureau's probe remains unresolved.In the second half of the episode, Tonia Jahshan joins the pod live from the SIAL Canada show floor. The inspirational founder of Sipology (formerly Steeped Tea) shares her origin story: how a single sip of loose-leaf Earl Grey in Nova Scotia after a miscarriage led to a wellness-focused tea empire. From launching a side hustle to pitching on Dragons' Den, growing to 8,000 consultants, and creating Health Canada-approved products like menopause relief teas and fizzy matchas, Tonia's entrepreneurial journey is one of resilience, reinvention, and remarkable growth. Now expanding globally and embracing an omni-channel model, she's brewing up a bold new future for Sipology.With a rich mix of policy insights, business strategy, entrepreneurial inspiration—and a side of Texas BBQ—this episode is a flavourful must-listen. The Food Professor #podcast is presented by Caddle. About UsDr. Sylvain Charlebois is a Professor in food distribution and policy in the Faculties of Management and Agriculture at Dalhousie University in Halifax. He is also the Senior Director of the Agri-food Analytics Lab, also located at Dalhousie University. Before joining Dalhousie, he was affiliated with the University of Guelph's Arrell Food Institute, which he co-founded. Known as “The Food Professor”, his current research interest lies in the broad area of food distribution, security and safety. Google Scholar ranks him as one of the world's most cited scholars in food supply chain management, food value chains and traceability.He has authored five books on global food systems, his most recent one published in 2017 by Wiley-Blackwell entitled “Food Safety, Risk Intelligence and Benchmarking”. He has also published over 500 peer-reviewed journal articles in several academic publications. Furthermore, his research has been featured in several newspapers and media groups, including The Lancet, The Economist, the New York Times, the Boston Globe, the Wall Street Journal, Washington Post, BBC, NBC, ABC, Fox News, Foreign Affairs, the Globe & Mail, the National Post and the Toronto Star.Dr. Charlebois sits on a few company boards, and supports many organizations as a special advisor, including some publicly traded companies. Charlebois is also a member of the Scientific Council of the Business Scientific Institute, based in Luxemburg. Dr. Charlebois is a member of the Global Food Traceability Centre's Advisory Board based in Washington DC, and a member of the National Scientific Committee of the Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) in Ottawa. Michael LeBlanc is the president and founder of M.E. LeBlanc & Company Inc, a senior retail advisor, keynote speaker and now, media entrepreneur. He has been on the front lines of retail industry change for his entire career. Michael has delivered keynotes, hosted fire-side discussions and participated worldwide in thought leadership panels, most recently on the main stage in Toronto at Retail Council of Canada's Retail Marketing conference with leaders from Walmart & Google. He brings 25+ years of brand/retail/marketing & eCommerce leadership experience with Levi's, Black & Decker, Hudson's Bay, CanWest Media, Pandora Jewellery, The Shopping Channel and Retail Council of Canada to his advisory, speaking and media practice.Michael produces and hosts a network of leading retail trade podcasts, including the award-winning No.1 independent retail industry podcast in America, Remarkable Retail with his partner, Dallas-based best-selling author Steve Dennis; Canada's top retail industry podcast The Voice of Retail and Canada's top food industry and one of the top Canadian-produced management independent podcasts in the country, The Food Professor with Dr. Sylvain Charlebois from Dalhousie University in Halifax.Rethink Retail has recognized Michael as one of the top global retail experts for the fourth year in a row, Thinkers 360 has named him on of the Top 50 global thought leaders in retail, RTIH has named him a top 100 global though leader in retail technology and Coresight Research has named Michael a Retail AI Influencer. If you are a BBQ fan, you can tune into Michael's cooking show, Last Request BBQ, on YouTube, Instagram, X and yes, TikTok.Michael is available for keynote presentations helping retailers, brands and retail industry insiders explaining the current state and future of the retail industry in North America and around the world.

The Podcaster's Guide to a Visible Voice
Get Serious About Being a Podcast Guest with Julie Fry - EP 93

The Podcaster's Guide to a Visible Voice

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 24, 2025 37:06 Transcription Available


What's the right way to go about being a guest on other podcasts? When's the last time you went on another show as a guest? As a podcast host, it's easy to get bogged down in the day-to-day requirements of running a podcast. After all, you're expected to find guests, record episodes, edit episodes, post everything online, and find fresh ways to get the word out. Here's the good news: being a guest on other podcasts is an excellent way to market your own show. Need more convincing? In this episode, we spell out the benefits with Julie Fry, the CEO of Your Expert Guest. Julie and her team are dedicated to finding their clients opportunities to be podcast guests. Turns out, there are plenty of reasons for podcast hosts to moonlight as guests, from positive impacts on your mission and messaging to growing your mailing list. Julie is brimming with tips for streamlining your pitch and plan, highlighting your call to action, and building lasting relationships with hosts and audiences alike. Guest better (or better yet, start guesting) with Julie's practical, insightful suggestions: Why you need to nail down your guest goals before you dive in What really works to get your target host's attention Why you need to purge your pitch of “I” statements Key steps for the post-interview follow-up. Links worth mentioning from the episode: The Podcast Host, “Podcast Guests are Secretly Paying $50,000 to Go on Shows”: https://www.thepodcasthost.com/business-of-podcasting/podcast-advertorial-secrets/ The Canadian Code of Advertising Standards, “Influencer Marketing”: https://adstandards.ca/resources/influencer-marketing/ Competition Bureau of Canada, “Deceptive Marketing Practices”: https://competition-bureau.canada.ca/en/deceptive-marketing-practices Rephonic - https://rephonic.com/ Listen Notes - https://www.listennotes.com Episode 69, Intangible Values of a Podcast, “What It Means For Stats, Metrics, and Monetization”: https://www.organizedsound.ca/intangible-values-of-a-podcast-what-it-means-for-stats-metrics-and-monetization-episode-69/ Connect with Mary! Leave a voice note with your feedback at https://www.speakpipe.com/VisibleVoice or email visiblevoicepodcast@gmail.com Get the full transcript of the episode at http://www.visiblevoicepodcast.com Read up on more secrets with the Visible Voice Insights Newsletter https://www.organizedsound.ca/newsletter To learn more or work with Mary, check out https://www.organizedsound.ca Link up on LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/in/marychan-organizedsound/ Engage on Instagram @OrganizedSoundProductions https://www.instagram.com/organizedsoundproductions Show Credits: Podcast audio design, engineering, and edited by Mary Chan of Organized Sound Productions Show notes written by Shannon Kirk of Right Words Studio Post-production support by Kristalee Forre of Forre You VA Podcast cover art by Emily Johnston of Artio Design Co. Transcript with Audio Description: [MUSIC IN - GHOSTHOOD FEATURING SARA AZRIEL “LET'S GO” BEGINS] MARY: How do you figure out what success looks like when you're a guest on another podcast? What is that return on investment of your time? You know, a lot of people might think, is it really worth it, or is it something I can really do? Is that possible? Spoiler alert. Yes. In this episode, we're going to talk all about that, but we're also going to focus on what's changing today in the podcast guesting landscape that can really affect you and your podcast. So in this episode, you're going to hear from Julie Frey, the Founder of Your Expert Guest, a podcast visibility agency for women making an impact who want to be heard by their ideal client without spending hours on social media. We're talking effortless visibility by using strategic podcast guesting to grow your own podcast.  This is episode number 93 with Julie Fry on the Podcaster's Guide to a Visible Voice.  > MARY: Thank you so much for listening to the Podcaster's Guide to a Visible Voice. If you enjoyed this episode, I'd love it if you share it with a podcasting friend. And to reveal more voicing and podcasting tips, click on over to VisibleVoicePodcast.com. Until next time.

CP Newswatch: Canada's Top Stories
Competition Bureau sues Rogers, Ontario measles outbreak, Fraser River derailment.

CP Newswatch: Canada's Top Stories

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 23, 2024 4:13


For the latest and most important news of the day | https://www.thecanadianpressnews.ca To watch daily news videos, follow us on YouTube | https://www.youtube.com/@CdnPress The Canadian Press on X (formerly Twitter) | https://twitter.com/CdnPressNews The Canadian Press on LinkedIn | https://linkedin.com/showcase/98791543

Daily Tech News Show
Canada's Competition Bureau Sues Google For Anti-Competitive Online Advertising - DTH

Daily Tech News Show

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 29, 2024 4:23


Canada's Competition Bureau sues Google for anti-competitive online advertising, the European Commission ends an investigation into Amazon over taxes, and Meta plans to build a $10 billion, 40,000+ kilometer fiber-optic subsea cable.Link to Show Notes

Daily Tech Headlines
Canada's Competition Bureau Sues Google For Anti-Competitive Online Advertising – DTH

Daily Tech Headlines

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 29, 2024


Canada's Competition Bureau sues Google for anti-competitive online advertising, the European Commission ends an investigation into Amazon over taxes, and Meta plans to build a $10 billion, 40,000+ kilometer fiber-optic subsea cable. MP3 Please SUBSCRIBE HERE. You can get an ad-free feed of Daily Tech Headlines for $3 a month here. A special thanks toContinue reading "Canada's Competition Bureau Sues Google For Anti-Competitive Online Advertising – DTH"

EZ News
EZ News 11/29/24

EZ News

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 29, 2024 6:21


Good afternoon, I'm _____ with today's episode of EZ News. Tai-Ex opening The Tai-Ex opened down 96-points this morning from yesterday's close, at 22,202 on turnover of 4.9-billion N-T. The market closed lower on Thursday, following losses for big tech stocks on Wall Street overnight. Cabinet Proposes Ban on Corporal Punishment by Parents The Cabinet has approved draft legal amendments aimed at rescinding the right of parents to use physical force to punish their children. The draft amendments were proposed by the Ministry of Justice. They seek to change Article 1085 of the Civil Code, which currently states that parents "may, within the limit of necessity, inflict punishment upon their children." The revised version of the article will instead state that parents should "give consideration to (充分考慮) their children's age and level of development, respect their personalities, and not engage in mentally or physically violent behavior against them." Court Bans Kaohsiung City Councilor from Leaving Country The Kaohsiung District Court has banned city councilor Huang Shao-ting from leaving the country for eight months as he remain under investigation in a corruption case. The ruling came after the Kaohsiung District Prosecutors' Office charged Huang with violating the Criminal Code and Anti-Corruption Act. Prosecutors also charged 13 other individuals, including Huang's wife with embezzlement (貪污) related offenses. The prosecutors' office says Huang is believed to have embezzled some 14-million N-T during his three-terms as a Kaohsiung City councilor. Mexico President Clarifies Immigration Stance Mexico's President Claudia Shienbaum is clarifying (澄清) her country's stance on immigration - after Donald Trump claimed she "had agreed to stop migration through Mexico - into the United States." Toni Waterman has more. Russia Sentences Human Rights Lawyer A Russian human rights group says a court in Russia convicted a prominent (著名的) lawyer and sentenced him to seven years in prison for speaking out against the war in Ukraine on social media. The verdict in the case of Dmitry Talantov, who once chaired a regional association of lawyers in Russia's central Udmurtia republic, is the latest in the Kremlin crackdown on dissent after sending troops into Ukraine in February 2022. Talantov is one of dozens of Russians arrested under a law adopted just over a week after the invasion that essentially bans any public expression about the war that deviates from the official narrative. According to the rights group OVD-Info, some 1,100 people have been implicated in criminal cases over their anti-war stance since February 2022. A total of 340 of them are currently behind bars or have been involuntarily committed to medical institutions. Canada Antitrust Watchdog Suing Google Canada's antitrust watchdog is suing Google over alleged anticompetitive conduct in the tech giant's online advertising business and wants the company to sell off two of its services and pay a penalty. The Competition Bureau says that such action is necessary because an investigation it conducted into Google found that the company “unlawfully” tied together its ad tech tools to maintain its market dominance (主導地位). The matter is headed for the Competition Tribunal, a quasi-judicial body that hears cases brought forward by the competition commissioner about non-compliance (不合規) with the Competition Act. The bureau is asking the tribunal to order Google to sell its publisher ad server, and its ad exchange. That was the I.C.R.T. EZ News, I'm _____. ----以下訊息由 SoundOn 動態廣告贊助商提供---- 高雄美術特區2-4房全新落成,《惟美術》輕軌C22站散步即到家,近鄰青海商圈,卡位明星學區,徜徉萬坪綠海。 住近美術館,擁抱優雅日常,盡現驕傲風範!美術東四路X青海路 07-553-3838 --

Taking Stock with Amanda Lang
Small business will bear the burden of Fed's tax holiday plan: CFIB

Taking Stock with Amanda Lang

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 29, 2024 23:51


After catching you up on the news of the week in The Briefs, Amanda checks in with Dan Kelly, head of the Canadian Federation of Independent Business, for a pulse check on how small businesses are feeling about having to bear the cost of implementing Ottawa's holiday on GST this holiday season. Canada's Competition Bureau has been using new weapons in its fight to level the playing field for consumers, so Amanda Lang speaks with Vass Bednar, Executive Director of the Master of Public Policy Program at McMaster University and James Musgrove, a competition lawyer with McMillan for their take on the state of Canada's competitive landscape

The 360 on Energy and Carbon
Understanding Bill C 59 with Sarah Keyes | Episode 138

The 360 on Energy and Carbon

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 14, 2024 24:45


Join hosts Dave, Lysandra and John in this timely episode as they dive into Bill C 59 and its implications for Canadian businesses making environmental claims, together with industry expert Sarah Keyes. She breaks down the often-misunderstood concept of "greenwashing" and explores how Bill C 59 aims to establish clearer standards for marketing claims related to climate and sustainability. Sarah shares insights on recent high-profile cases, like the Competition Bureau's investigation into Lululemon, and the response from major Canadian oil and gas companies. Learn about the serious financial penalties tied to deceptive green marketing and how companies can avoid these pitfalls by fostering transparency and accountability. Don't miss this in-depth discussion on how Bill C-59 is set to impact brand reputation, consumer trust, and the future of sustainable business in Canada.

COVID Era - THE NEXT NORMAL with Dave Trafford
Winner of Car Full Of Cash Revealed !

COVID Era - THE NEXT NORMAL with Dave Trafford

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 1, 2024 35:58


GUEST: Dr. Clifford Redford - Owner and operator of Wellington Veterinary Hospital, host of the podcast VetLife with Dr. Cliff  - Pharmacists unfairly blocked from stocking drugs for pets, Competition Bureau says  Is there a driving rule you know and follow that no one else does?  Who did we meet, what did we see, who won, what was the experience like 

Metro Morning from CBC Radio Toronto (Highlights)
Is Toronto's infrastructure ready for half a million Swifties?

Metro Morning from CBC Radio Toronto (Highlights)

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 1, 2024 18:48


Deputy mayor Ausma Malik explains how the city is preparing for T-day(s) in Toronto. Plus, the Competition Bureau says pharmacies are unfairly blocked from stocking drugs for pets. Wendy Chui, the pharmacist who made the initial complaint to the agency, spoke to David Common about the choked-off supply chain.

Afternoons with Rob Breakenridge
Why Peace in Ukraine requires Russia's Defeat; Call for Competition Bureau to investigate e-transfer fees; The need for new safeguards around medical assistance in dying

Afternoons with Rob Breakenridge

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 1, 2024 38:41


Today's guests: Aurel Braun - Professor of Political Science, and International Relations, University of Toronto; Associate, Davis Center, Harvard University Michele Rempel-Garner - Member of Parliament. Calgary - Nose Hill / Committee Member -Standing Committee on Industry and Technology Shawn Whatley – Physician / Munk Senior Fellow with the Macdonald-Laurier Institute / author - “When Politics Comes Before Patients: Why and How Canadian Medicare is Failing.” Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

AlbertaBETTER
Episode #131: The Brief: C-59 Blows an Icy Wind on Canadian Ambition

AlbertaBETTER

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 15, 2024 23:56


Understand the frustrations behind Bill C-59's controversial greenwashing amendments with insights from Adam Legge, President of the Business Council of Alberta. Can these changes to the Competition Act redefine the landscape for Canadian companies making environmental claims? Discover how the lack of clarity and rushed legislation might stifle innovation and corporate communication, leaving the Competition Bureau in a tough spot. Explore the broader implications of discouraging future-oriented environmental claims and the potential chilling effect on Canadian entrepreneurship. As Adam sheds light on the disconnect between policymakers and business leaders, you'll gain a deeper understanding of how these provisions could impact investment, growth, and ultimately, the country's economic competitiveness. This episode challenges the cautionary stance taken by the government and its ripple effect on individual livelihoods and Canada's standard of living. We also delve into the complex layers of existing regulations that companies must navigate and how the proposed amendments could lead to frivolous claims that overwhelm the system. From small soap manufacturers to oil giants, businesses are at risk of becoming overly cautious. Tune in to hear our proposal for clear guidance from the Competition Bureau, creating a safe harbour for forward-looking statements that foster a thriving environment for innovation and entrepreneurship.

The Real News Podcast
Nora Loreto's news headlines for Friday, October 4, 2024

The Real News Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 4, 2024 9:25


Canadian journalist Nora Loreto reads the latest headlines for Friday, October 4, 2024.TRNN has partnered with Loreto to syndicate and share her daily news digest with our audience. Tune in every morning to the TRNN podcast feed to hear the latest important news stories from Canada and worldwide.Find more headlines from Nora at Sandy & Nora Talk Politics podcast feed.Help us continue producing radically independent news and in-depth analysis by following us and becoming a monthly sustainer.Sign up for our newsletterLike us on FacebookFollow us on TwitterDonate to support this podcastReferenced articles:Story 1 - Clarence Woodhouse is exonerated. The Innocence project calls for a review of all murder convictions in AB, SK and ON where the guilty was Indigenous.Story 2 - Ontario child from rabies acquired from a bat.Story 3 - The Canadian Real Estate Agency is being probed by the Competition Bureau.Story 4 - At least 78 dead after boat capsizes on Kivu Lake in the DRC.Story 5 - The US is "discussing" bombing Iranian oil fields in retaliation but has ruled out bombing their nuclear energy facilities.

The Andrew Lawton Show
Trudeau's ban on independent journalists comes back to bite him

The Andrew Lawton Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 24, 2024 38:23


Justin Trudeau and his office routinely bar and block independent journalists from attending their press conferences and otherwise having any opportunities to ask him questions. And yet, when Keean Bexte of the Counter Signal tracked Trudeau down to a Tofino beach, many of Trudeau's defenders said it was in poor form to hassle a man on a vacation with his family. True North's Andrew Lawton says he would agree if Trudeau didn't shield himself from journalists he didn't like during the rest of the year. Also, the Competition Bureau is looking at what it suspects might be "anticompetitive" practices guiding gas prices. Dan McTeague from Canadians for Affordable Energy joins to weigh in. Plus, despite how much politicians love to talk about free trade with other countries, there isn't even free trade within Canada. Interprovincial trade barriers are costing the economy $200 billion a year, a new report from the Canadian Federation of Independent Business says. CFIB interprovincial affairs director Keyli Loeppky joins the show to discuss. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

ARC ENERGY IDEAS
Canada's New Greenwashing Regulations: What You Need to Know

ARC ENERGY IDEAS

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 2, 2024 37:33


On June 20, 2024, Bill C-59 received Royal Assent and officially became law, implementing its provisions into Canadian legislation. The Bill, along with Bill C-69, which was passed on the same day, introduced new subsidies to encourage investment in clean energy in Canada. Bill C-59 established the Clean Technology Investment Tax Credit and Carbon Capture, Utilization, and Storage Tax Credit. Bill C-69 created the Federal Indigenous Loan Guarantee, the Clean Technology Manufacturing Investment Tax Credit, and the Clean Hydrogen Investment Tax Credit. However, the positive impact of these new subsidies was overshadowed by the greenwashing regulations added late in the process for Bill C-59. The new greenwashing rules amend the Competition Act to require that claims made by companies about environmental, ecological, or climate change benefits can be verified. Because of the ambiguity of what is needed to comply with the rules, many energy companies have deleted all GHG emissions and other sustainability content from their websites, including annual sustainability reports and commitments to improve environmental performance in the future. This week on the podcast, our guest, Kaeleigh Kuzma, a Partner at Osler in the Competition, Trade, and Foreign Investment Group, explained the new greenwashing rules. Here are some of the questions Peter and Jackie asked Kaeleigh: Why is greenwashing included in the Competition Act? Can you explain the provisions? What does “proper substantiation in accordance with internationally recognized methodology” mean? Why are the rules so vague, and what is the process for clarity? Do these rules only affect oil and gas and other heavy-emitting companies, or do they also apply to clean energy companies? What is the process for filing a complaint against a company to the Competition Bureau? What are the methods of enforcement? Other content referenced in this podcast:   Osler's detailed multi-part guide on the Competition Act amendments, with a specific section on deceptive marketing practices and greenwashing, here. Text of Bill C-59, see 74.01 (1), including (b.1) and (b.2) Form to provide feedback to the Competition Bureau on the amendments to the Act Kevin  Krausert opinion “Ottawa's anti-greenwashing bill will cripple cleantech innovation” (June 20, 2024)Please review our disclaimer at: https://www.arcenergyinstitute.com/disclaimer/  Check us out on social media:  X (Twitter): @arcenergyinstLinkedIn: @ARC Energy Research Institute  Subscribe to ARC Energy Ideas Podcast Apple Podcasts Google Podcasts Amazon Music Spotify 

The Current
Drip pricing is banned, but Canadians are still paying out

The Current

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 12, 2024 9:43


Drip pricing involves extra fees that show up at checkout, hiking the advertised cost of things such as movie tickets. It's been banned by the Competition Bureau, but it's still happening. 

Ontario Today Phone-Ins from CBC Radio
What do you want the competition bureau to know about flying with a disability?

Ontario Today Phone-Ins from CBC Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 4, 2024 51:47


The Competition Bureau is studying domestic air travel in Canada and wants to hear from you. Joining the conversation is Jeff Preston, associate professor of Disability Studies at the University of King's College. Jeff also has cerebral palsy and uses a wheelchair.

The Current
Tackling air travel problems in Canada

The Current

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2024 20:09


The Competition Bureau wants to hear from Canadians about issues like lost luggage, long delays and rising fares ahead of a study into air travel in this country. Matt Galloway asks the bureau's Anthony Durocher what can be done to get a better deal for passengers.

Cross Country Checkup from CBC Radio
Does Canada's airline industry need an overhaul?

Cross Country Checkup from CBC Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 2, 2024 111:56


Canada's Competition Bureau is going to study the country's domestic airline industry. Many of us rely on airlines to stay in touch with family to conduct business and to explore this vast country but it can be expensive. How can we make it better? Does Canada's airline industry need an overhaul? Are there enough travel options in your part of the country?

COVID Era - THE NEXT NORMAL with Dave Trafford
Friday May 31 Hour 2 - What is the Competition Bureau Investigating?

COVID Era - THE NEXT NORMAL with Dave Trafford

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2024 39:01


We learn why the courts are turning down injunctions, Richard Crouse gives us his take on Tarintino's comments about modern movies and Play Attention!

The Big Story
Explaining the competition bureau's investigation of Loblaws and Sobeys

The Big Story

Play Episode Listen Later May 30, 2024 25:11


Welcome to a fascinating little corner of contract and competition law that could leave a lasting impact on Canada's grocery industry. Last week, the competition bureau revealed it was investigating the parent companies of two of the country's largest grocers in relation to controls they have applied to their lease agreements.These sorts of controls are common in all sorts of agreements—but the bureau alleges that Loblaws and Sobeys are using them in an unfair and anticompetitive manner, so it's begun a process that could ultimately see them taken to court. Exactly what is the bureau looking at? How much power does it have in this situation? And how much might Canadians learn about the inner workings of our grocery giants?GUEST: Jennifer Quaid, Associate Professor at the University of Ottawa's Faculty of Law, specializing in corporate accountability, competition and business regulation We love feedback at The Big Story, as well as suggestions for future episodes. You can find us:Through email at hello@thebigstorypodcast.ca Or by calling 416-935-5935 and leaving us a voicemailOr @thebigstoryfpn on Twitter

CTV News Toronto at Six Podcast
CTV News Toronto at Six for May 27, 2024

CTV News Toronto at Six Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 28, 2024 46:20


A 16-year-old Scarborough teen has died following a late-night shooting inside a housing complex that has shaken neighbours; the 13-year-old sister of a man killed in an attack on Mississauga's Chicken Land restaurant describes the moment she came under gunfire; and, Canada's Competition Bureau has launched an investigation into the airline industry and its impact on fare prices.

The Morning Show
Big corporations would jack up prices without rules

The Morning Show

Play Episode Listen Later May 23, 2024 10:53


Greg (@gregbradyTO) spoke with Jagmeet Singh (@theJagmeetSingh), Leader of the NDP about Mr. Singh cracking down on high grocery prices as the Liberals have barely done anything and he's also sent a letter to the Competition Bureau on the new allegations of Loblaws colluding with the big telecoms. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

This is VANCOLOUR
#231 - Eric Wickham / Liz McDowell / J.J. McCullough

This is VANCOLOUR

Play Episode Listen Later May 17, 2024 21:50


Loblaw & Lululemon; Boycotts & GreenwashingThis is VANCOLOUR host Mo Amir chats with The Hoser's Eric Wickham to understand why some Canadians are specifically boycotting Loblaw Companies Ltd in May and whether or not the boycott is effective. Plus, as Canada's Competition Bureau launches an investigation into Lululemon, Stand.earth's Liz McDowell explains how the Vancouver-based apparel company has been "greenwashing" its consumers. And, lastly, is consumerism evil? J.J. McCullough defends consumerism!Recorded: May 13, 2024

Agripod
Canadian Federation of Agriculture reacts to the budget

Agripod

Play Episode Listen Later May 2, 2024 14:31


The Canadian Federation of Agriculture (CFA) was disappointed to see insufficient investment in agriculture in the 2024 budget. President Keith Currie said farmers continue to struggle under the weight of high-interest rates, a price on carbon for essential farming activities, and an increased risk of extreme weather events.He said these challenges are testing the limits and effectiveness of risk management programs.But he said there were also some positives in the budget. The Competition Bureau has stated the proposed acquisition of Viterra by Bunge would have ‘substantial anti–competitive effects in agricultural markets in Canada. The Bureau's concerns are outlined in a report submitted to the Transport Minister Pablo Rodriguez.The Bureau determined that the transaction is likely to harm competition in markets for grain purchasing in Western Canada, as well as for the sale of canola oil in Eastern Canada. Saskatchewan Wheat development commission chair Jake Leguee said its a concern of many farm groups. Leguee will also responds to the appointment of the new Chief Commissioner of the Canadian Grain Commission.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Saskatchewan Agriculture Today
Sask Ag Today (CKRM) with Ryan Young, presented by Gowan Canada, for Friday, April 26, 2024

Saskatchewan Agriculture Today

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 26, 2024 30:05


On Friday's edition of SaskAgToday with Ryan Young: -It was a good week for canola and wheat futures. We'll have more from P.I.Financial's Adam Pukalo. -Some farmers in Saskatchewan and Alberta have either started seeding or are still waiting. -Doug Falconer in the Agriview segment will have an update on the Competition Bureau report from the side of the companies involved - Bunge and Viterra.

Saskatchewan Agriculture Today
SaskAgToday (CKRM) with Ryan Young, presented by Gowan Canada, for Thursday, April 25, 2024

Saskatchewan Agriculture Today

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 25, 2024 27:14


On Thursday's edition of SaskAgToday with Ryan Young: -The Chair of SaskWheat shared his thoughts on the Competition Bureau's concerns with the Bunge-Viterra merger as well as the appointment of a new chief commissioner of the Canadian Grain Commission. -The two major railways are both working to get a deal done with the union representing its workers to avoid any disruptions. -We'll hear from Kevin Hursh with SaskAgToday.com as he commented on a number of topics during the latest Roundtable.

Saskatchewan Agriculture Today
Sask Ag Today (CKRM) with Ryan Young, presented by Gowan Canada, for Wednesday, April 24, 2024

Saskatchewan Agriculture Today

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 24, 2024 31:03


On Wednesday's edition of SaskAgToday with Ryan Young: -APAS reacts to the Competition Bureau's concerns over the proposed Bunge-Viterra merger. -The Prime Minister and Governor General were in Saskatchewan. Prime Minister Trudeau was asked about the changes to the capital gains tax in last week's federal budget. Mary Simon, meanwhile, visited a farm outside of Saskatoon. -Construction on a renewable diesel production facility outside of Edmonton is well underway.

The Big Story
Why is competition so hard to find in Canada?

The Big Story

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 8, 2024 19:19


In response to sky-high grocery costs, Canada's Competition Bureau recently issued a report calling for more competition in the sector. That call was echoed by the federal government, who had hoped to lure a foreign chain, such as Germany's Aldi, to Canada to give consumers options. But Aldi won't be coming, and neither will anyone else, at least not anytime soon.Why is it so hard for companies to enter the Canadian market and compete against homegrown companies like Loblaw, especially in the grocery sector? How could Canada make it easier for competitors to set up shop? And should we be encouraging foreign-owned businesses over ones owned and operated by Canadians in the first place?GUEST: Vass Bednar, Executive Director of McMaster University's  Master of Public Policy in Digital Society Program; author of regs2riches.com We love feedback at The Big Story, as well as suggestions for future episodes. You can find us:Through email at hello@thebigstorypodcast.ca Or by calling 416-935-5935 and leaving us a voicemailOr @thebigstoryfpn on Twitter

The Agenda with Steve Paikin (Audio)
Is Canada Doing Enough to Tackle Greenwashing?

The Agenda with Steve Paikin (Audio)

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 3, 2024 30:36


As the Competition Bureau is stepping in to crackdown on greenwashing, companies could be forced to back up their environmental claims with adequate and proper tests, and not just on their products but also on their business operations. After a Canadian coffee company was fined $3 million for being dishonest about its single-use cups as recyclable, accusations of misleading environmental claims are rising with some of the biggest corporations across the country still being investigated.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Mornings with Simi
Should there be an investigation into the price of oil and gas?

Mornings with Simi

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 2, 2024 10:01


A letter has been sent to the Liberals calling for them to get the Competition Bureau to launch an investigation into oil and gas profits. They will also summon oil/gas CEOs to parliament to testify on gas prices. Guest: Peter Julian, NDP MP for Burnaby – New Westminster and NDP House Leader Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Mornings with Simi
Full Show: How close is mind reading technology?, Investigating Oil and Gas prices & Vancouver's 'Brick Cross Walk"

Mornings with Simi

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 2, 2024 71:36


Seg 1: How mind-reading technology is helping the paralyzed walk As researchers continue to explore the frontiers of neuroscience and artificial intelligence, profound ethical questions arise regarding the implications of mind-reading technology. Guest: Dr. Paul Bentley, Professor of Computer Science at University College London Seg 2: Where are the germiest places in your office? Are you a germaphobe? If you are, there are a few places at your place of work that you may want to avoid! Guest: Scott Shantz, Contributor for Mornings with Simi Seg 3: View From Victoria: A frustrated government doing what? From gunfire in downtown Vancouver, to repeated ER closures and open drug use and overdose deaths, the NDP government is frustrated, shocked and disgusted, but will they change the way they have been governing for the last 7 years? Guest: Vaughn Palmer, Vancouver Sun Columnist Seg 4: Do protests still impact the decisions of our leaders? From gas prices, to carbon taxes to the ‘free palestine' movements that are being seen across Canada, how much do politicians actually listen to protests in this country? Guest: Scott Shantz, CKNW Contributor Seg 5: Should there be an investigation into the price of oil and gas? A letter has been sent to the Liberals calling for them to get the Competition Bureau to launch an investigation into oil and gas profits. They will also summon oil/gas CEOs to parliament to testify on gas prices. Guest: Peter Julian, NDP MP for Burnaby – New Westminster and NDP House Leader Seg 6: Why does Vancouver have a "Pedestrian Brick Crossing" system? The "Pedestrian Brick Crossing System" was introduced due to ongoing safety concerns at the Granville Island crosswalk in Vancouver. Despite being a bustling area, pedestrians often face danger due to drivers failing to yield. Guest: Lucy Maloney, Traffic Safety Advocate at Vision Zero Vancouver Seg 7: Are eclipses cosmic accidents? While eclipses are relatively common in the universe, the specific type of solar eclipse that captivates observers, characterized by the emergence of a blood-red ring and shimmering corona surrounding a blackened sun, is considered an extraordinary occurrence. Guest: Dr. Adam Frank, Professor of Astrophysics at the University of Rochester Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Stories and Strategies
The Legal Implications of Employee Reviews

Stories and Strategies

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 10, 2024 23:12 Transcription Available


In this episode we're cross-examining a recent warning from Canada's Competition Bureau that has businesses buzzing and reevaluating their online review strategies. The Bureau has put the spotlight on the potential bias of employee-generated reviews and testimonials, signaling a need for companies to monitor these contributions closely. Yet, in the realm of internal communications, encouraging employees to be brand champions is considered foundational. So, where does the line between advocacy and bias lie? And it isn't just Canada moving in this direction. There are signs the United States, UK, and Australia may be too. How can organizations navigate this complex landscape?Listen For4:32 Is it Still Legal for Your Employees to Leave Reviews Without Declaring They are Employees?10:37 This is Happening in the US, UK, Canada, and Australia15:43 The Role of Disclosure in Employee Reviews18:38 Influencers and Native Advertising Ethics Guests: Gavin Tighe and Stephen Thiele Website | Gavin email | Stephen email Listen to Gavin and Stephen's podcast Beneath the LawRate this podcast with just one click Leave us a voice message we can share on the podcast  https://www.speakpipe.com/StoriesandStrategiesStories and Strategies WebsiteDo you want to podcast? Book a meeting with Doug Downs to talk about it.Apply to be a guest on the podcastConnect with usLinkedIn | X | Instagram | You Tube | Facebook | ThreadsRequest a transcript of this episodeSupport the show

The Current
Lululemon accused of greenwashing

The Current

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 15, 2024 19:38


Vancouver non-profit Stand.earth is accusing Lululemon of greenwashing, saying the clothing retailer's environmental claims and marketing don't line up with its own sustainability reports. We look at Stand.earth's call for the Competition Bureau to investigate, and ask how consumers can spot greenwashing if they want to make environmentally friendly choices.

Mornings with Simi
Full Show: BC's first dog breed, Posting reviews about your own business & Meta failing with child exploitation

Mornings with Simi

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 19, 2024 48:38


Seg 1: What are the origins of BC's first dog breed? Dogs were domesticated over 10,000 years ago as they accompanied the first people to reach North America from Eurasia. Before the arrival of Europeans, the Coast Salish people in the Pacific Northwest bred a unique type of dog known as “Woolly Dogs.” Guest: Dr. Audrey Lin, Paleogeneticist and Peter Buck Postdoctoral Fellow at the Smithsonian's National Museum of Natural History Seg 2: View From Victoria:  The Premier of the province is acknowledging the shortage of fibre in the forest industry and is taking action. We get a local look at the top political stories with the help of Vancouver Sun columnist Vaughn Palmer. Seg 3: The Weekly Cecchini Check-in The US Justice Department's official report on the Uvalde elementary school shooting reveals "cascading failures". Guest: Reggie Cecchini, Washington Correspondent for Global News Seg 4: Should businesses be fined for employees posting online reviews? Canada's Competition Bureau has issued a warning to businesses regarding the use of employee-posted reviews without proper disclosure. Guest: Ian Tostenson, President of the BC Restaurant and Foodservices Association Seg 5: How Meta is failing to prevent child sexploitation on its platforms Internal documents from Meta have been revealed in an unsealed legal filing, raising alarming allegations that approximately 100,000 children using these platforms experience online sexual harassment daily. Guest: Katie McQue, Investigative Journalist at The Guardian Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Mornings with Simi
Should businesses be fined for employees posting online reviews?

Mornings with Simi

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 19, 2024 9:13


Canada's Competition Bureau has issued a warning to businesses regarding the use of employee-posted reviews without proper disclosure. Guest: Ian Tostenson, President of the BC Restaurant and Foodservices Association Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Canada's Podcast
It's the end of an era for News - The Industry can either adapt or die. - Newscast, Canada's Podcast

Canada's Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 9, 2024 15:54


In this interview, Peter Menzies, Senior Fellow with the Macdonald-Laurier Institute, former newspaper executive and past vice chair of the CRTC, discusses the state of the media in Canada. Menzies talks about how the industry is at a point where it needs to adapt or die, how it got to this point, who is to blame, the federal government online legislation, the CBC, and the growth of alternative news publications. Below is a column Menzies wrote for The Hub. By Peter Menzies, November 22, 2023 Twenty years ago, it should have been obvious to all that the jig was up for newspapers and journalism was going to need a new ride. Print had a good run—almost 600 years—but the invention by Tim Berners-Lee of the World Wide Web meant the era of massive presses and the power they bestowed on their owners was coming to an end. The only question, once Craigslist and Kijiji began boring holes in classified advertising, the economic foundation of newspapers, was whether there would even be time to save the furniture. Since the turn of the century, there have only been two alternatives for legacy news organizations: adapt or die. While there has been some evidence of success in terms of the former, public policy support has ignored new ideas in favour of propping up the ones everyone knows won't make it. The results have ranged from inconsequential to catastrophic. In Canada, as author and academic Marc Edge has detailed in his most recent book, The Postmedia Effect, the possibilities for newspapers to adapt have been severely limited by the nation's largest and dominant chain's business and ownership structures. Thousands of jobs have been cut to ensure high-interest debt payments can be made to its U.S. hedge fund owners. Easy to blame management, one supposes, but hedge funds gotta hedge and the primary fault for the mess that is Canada's news industry belongs squarely at the door of the nation's public policymakers. Sadly, outdated foreign ownership regulations restricted the supply of qualified buyers for media organizations, which depressed the cost of acquiring newspapers to a level that facilitated their acquisition en masse by Southam, then Hollinger, then Canwest, then Postmedia. With every step, competition was suppressed through increasingly consolidated ownership only to find the nation's largest newspaper chain owned by Americans. You can't make that up. Piling on, the Competition Bureau in 2015 inexplicably approved Postmedia's acquisition of Quebecor (Sun) Media's newspapers based on the “lack of close rivalry” between newspapers such as the Calgary Herald and the Calgary Sun and “the incentive for the merged entity to retain readership and maintain editorial quality in order to continue to attract advertisers.” All said with a straight face. Anyone who had actually worked in the business—I put in shifts at both the Calgary Sun and the Calgary Herald in their halcyon days—would know that this is sheer nonsense justified only by the extreme narrowness of the analysis the Bureau undertook. Today, the only distinguishable difference in content between the Herald and the Sun is that Don Braid writes a column for the Herald, and Rick Bell writes one for the Sun—a pretense of competition that appears to have allowed both to extend their careers well beyond those of thousands of their colleagues. “No solutions can be found until the issue of the CBC is dealt with.” Thirty years ago, Bell and Braid shared more than 250 newsroom colleagues covering events in a city of fewer than 800,000 people. Today, reflective of their business's demise, a couple of dozen survivors cling to the Herald/Sun lifeboat in a city approaching 1.5 million. Their presses and even their buildings have been sold to feed the hedge fund. Implementation of policies designed to sustain business models that produce results such as these in the hope of “saving journalism” is self-evidently unwise. We live at a time when innovation and entrepreneurship—virtues that are fuelled by competition and suppressed by consolidation—are desperately needed. While those are clearly lacking in the newspaper industry (laudable exceptions apply at the Globe and Mail, Le Devoir, and a plethora of digital startups) it's just as unlikely journalism can find salvation in the arms of Canada's heavily regulated broadcasting industry. For it, with exceptions acknowledged, the provision of news has always been primarily a regulatory obligation and not a core business proposition. Broadcasters are in the business of entertaining people with music, drama, chat, and related programming and have long acknowledged there is little or no money in them for news. All too often, it's just regulatory rent. For those who may believe, though, the ponderous regulatory processes in place at the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) make the entrepreneurship and innovation needed to adapt in an era of massive technological change almost impossible. But all that is now as may be. Rear view mirrors may help protect from encroaching harms but they are not at all useful in terms of actually going places. And journalism clearly needs a new car and new drivers if it is to thrive as a public good. Any doubt that societies require trustworthy and shared sources of information to maintain a peaceful social compact should have been erased by the events of the past few weeks. It is clear from the protests and virulent antisemitism that erupted in the wake of the Hamas attack on Israel that large numbers of Canadians are forming their opinions based not on differing interpretations of the facts but on very incompatible understandings of current reality. In these circumstances, and in this instance at least, the common ground necessary to establish a healthy public square of ideas simply doesn't exist. Without such a venue, societies collapse into warring tribes. But before we can even begin to explore the complexity of THAT problem, there needs to be a sustainable path forward for fair, balanced, and accurate news gathering and delivery. The federal government's best efforts to make that happen have been disastrous. The Online News Act has done more harm than good, with news providers losing access to audiences through Facebook and Instagram while an even more disastrous Google news boycott hovers menacingly over the industry. The five-year-old journalism labour tax credit hasn't stopped newsrooms from continuing to shrink. And while the Local Journalism Initiative has created temporary employment opportunities in news “deserts”, it didn't stop the Alaska Highway News, as just one example, from folding last month. Worse, there is increasing evidence to suggest that the more the public becomes aware of direct government funding to journalism organizations, the less likely it is to trust those organizations and label reporters as toadies with labels such as “#JustinJournos.” Should the government change, they would no doubt be #Pierre'sPravda. None of this ends well. What Canada desperately needs instead is a multi-pronged, coordinated national strategy based on current economic and market realities that will allow journalism to flourish again. A few months ago, Konrad von Finckenstein and I tried to get the ideas rolling with our policy paper for the Macdonald Laurier Institute, “And Now, The News”. Its two flashiest recommendations called for the establishment of a truly independent journalism sustainability fund supported by contributions from web giants such as Meta, Google, and others and, vitally, the de-commercialization of the CBC. The CBC, already government-funded, would not be eligible to draw from this fund, which we proposed should be supported by reasonable levies on tech companies and would only be available to companies whose primary business is the production of news. I have some sympathy for those who would argue that such a fund would best be used to support entrepreneurship as opposed to simply propping up what commentator Jen Gerson has labelled “zombie” newspapers that refuse to either adapt or die. But our proposal would nevertheless eschew such distinctions and make the fund accessible to all industry-verified news organizations solely on a per capita/journalist basis. News providers would still be free to make deals with social media to build readership and make other commercial deals with digital platforms as both parties see fit. But that, on its own, doesn't solve the problem. In fact, no solutions can be found until the issue of the CBC is dealt with. It is one thing to have a public broadcaster. But today's CBC is not that. It has evolved into a publicly funded commercial broadcaster and online content provider. Even its radio content, while broadcast free of advertising over the air, is repurposed to build online audiences and revenue in direct competition with news startups and legacy media attempting to transition into vibrant digital platforms. No industry can survive, let alone prosper, when the government subsidizes one commercial entity—in this case with $1.2 billion annually—to the detriment of all others. There certainly can be an important role for a national, truly public news provider. But CBC must be de-commercialized everywhere it operates, its mandate sharply re-focused, and its content made available at no charge through a Creative Commons license to other domestic news organizations. The removal of the CBC's ability to sell advertising would immediately free up $400 million in revenue for which news organizations could compete. As an added benefit, Canada would get a re-focused public broadcaster, and free access to its news content would allow all journalism providers to benefit from, instead of being punished by, government funding of the CBC. Our other proposals include making subscriptions to news organizations 100 percent tax deductible—a move that would subsidize the consumption of credible news with a market-based incentive for those providing it. We also proposed that: All expenditures by Eligible News Businesses that involve investment in digital transformation technology are eligible to be claimed in their first year as capital cost allowances. Phasing out of the current labour tax credit over a period of five years, declining in value by 20 percent annually in order to wean news organizations from it gradually while they adapt to a more permanent policy framework. Phasing out of the Local Journalism Initiative over a period of five years, declining in value by $4 million per year and with adjustments that would make it available only to news organizations serving market areas of less than 100,000 people and limited to easily defined core coverage beats such as public safety, courts, school boards, and municipal councils. Phasing out of the Canada Periodical Fund, which is no longer relevant in the digital age, over the course of three years. Ensure that the CRTC is engaged in the development of national news policies so that it considers the entire scope of the news industry when contemplating conditions of license for broadcasters. To those, I would add maximizing the value of tax credits for contributions to news organizations structured as not-for-profit businesses. Neither I nor my policy paper co-author, who these days is occupied as interim federal ethics commissioner, pretended to have all the solutions. As we wrote when our paper was published, building a national news industry policy is a tricky business. What we believed was that the pattern of ad hoc subsidies, willful ignorance of the impact of a commercial CBC, fear of failure, and the ill-conceived Online News Act were nothing but trouble and that a thoughtful, multi-pronged national news industry policy was called for. It still is. When it's done—when all the ideas are out there and the best of them are implemented—news organizations will still only survive through the quality of their work. Not all companies will, or should, survive and, frankly, some need to get on with their dying and get out of the way of those building a future for journalism. Fretting over and attempting to preserve the past and its icons is emotionally tempting. But it will not give news organizations the fighting chance they need to transition from unstable business models to those capable of sustaining quality journalism in the years ahead. We are at the end of the end of an era. It's time to embrace a new genesis. Peter Menzies is a Senior Fellow with the Macdonald-Laurier Institute, a former newspaper executive, and past vice chair of the CRTC. Mario Toneguzzi is Managing Editor of Canada's Podcast. He has more than 40 years of experience as a daily newspaper writer, columnist, and editor. He was named in 2021 as one of the Top 10 Business Journalists in the World by PR News – the only Canadian to make the list About Us Canada's Podcast is the number one podcast in Canada for entrepreneurs and business owners. Established in 2016, the podcast network has interviewed over 600 Canadian entrepreneurs from coast-to-coast. With hosts in each province, entrepreneurs have a local and national format to tell their stories, talk about their journey and provide inspiration for anyone starting their entrepreneurial journey and well- established founders. The commitment to a grass roots approach has built a loyal audience on all our social channels and YouTube – 500,000+ lifetime YouTube views, 200,000 + audio downloads, 35,000 + average monthly social impressions, 10,000 + engaged social followers and 35,000 newsletter subscribers. Canada's Podcast is proud to provide a local, national and international presence for Canadian entrepreneurs to build their brand and tell their story. #business #CanadasNumberOnePodcastforEntrepreneurs   #entrepreneurs #entrepreneurship #Media #news #Newspapers #smallbusiness

CANADALAND
(Short Cuts) What's-a Meta with Canadian News?

CANADALAND

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 10, 2023 37:14


With Meta making good on its threat to expunge news from Facebook and Instagram, Canada's publishers and broadcasters pin their hopes on the Competition Bureau to set things right. (We're doomed?)And when the Liberals promised to plant 2 billion trees, they probably weren't betting that anyone would actually try to keep count.The Narwhal's Mike De Souza joins Jonathan on Short Cuts.Host: Jonathan GoldsbieCredits: Aviva Lessard (Producer), Caleb Thompson (Audio Editor and Technical Producer), Annette Ejiofor (Managing Editor), Karyn Pugliese (Editor-in-Chief)Guest: Mike De Souza Further reading: CBC, media groups ask Competition Bureau to investigate Meta's move to block news in Canada - CBCDo It, F*ckers! - How Things WorkWas Elon Musk's banning of rival social-media links on Twitter illegal? - The Globe and Mail (2022)Opinion: What's B.C.'s next move on Fairy Creek logging? - The NarwhalOilsands giants lobbied to weaken emissions cap - The NarwhalOttawa modifie discrètement son calcul des deux milliards d'arbres - Le DevoirTurns out that wasn't the tweet - Paul Wells Sponsors: Douglas,Athletic Greens, If you value this podcast, Support us! You'll get premium access to all our shows ad free, including early releases and bonus content. You'll also get our exclusive newsletter, discounts on merch at our store, tickets to our live and virtual events, and more than anything, you'll be a part of the solution to Canada's journalism crisis, you'll be keeping our work free and accessible to everybody. You can listen ad-free on Amazon Music—included with Prime. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Rebel News +
DAILY Roundup | Antifa trial update, Man playing women's rugby, Media groups want Meta investigation

Rebel News +

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 9, 2023 80:14


Today, we've got an update on independent journalist Andy Ngo's lawsuit against Antifa in Portland, Oregon, after he was attacked while covering a protest. Plus, David Menzies is back — and he's got more details about the biological male/"trans" female who has been playing women's rugby. And finally, media groups are calling on the Competition Bureau to investigate Meta's decision to block news in Canada.

The Current
News organizations ask Competition Bureau to investigate Meta's move to block news in Canada

The Current

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 9, 2023 19:24


Canadian news media organizations — including CBC — have filed a complaint with the Competition Bureau, accusing the social media giant Meta of abusing its dominant market position. To unpack what this means for the regulation of technology companies, guest host Anthony Germain speaks with journalist Cory Doctorow, a special advisor to the Electronic Frontier Foundation and Jennifer Quaid, an associate professor at the University of Ottawa specializing in competition law.

The Andrew Lawton Show
Is Justin Trudeau trolling us with Barbie photo op?

The Andrew Lawton Show

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 8, 2023 43:18


Days after asking for privacy for his family following his separation from Sophie Gregoire Trudeau, Justin Trudeau posted a pink-clad photo of him and his son at a Barbie screening, with the captain that they are “Team Barbie.” Is this Trudeau letting his inner Barbie shine or an elaborate trolling to invite criticism from the right? True North's Andrew Lawton weighs in on this, as well as the Conservatives' new ad promoting Pierre Poilievre as a family man. Also, the same news publishers who demanded compensation from Facebook for “stealing” their content have now filed a complaint with the Competition Bureau over Facebook's decision to block news content. Plus, former finance minister Joe Oliver joins the show to discuss the “climate catastrophism” dominating the political and media discourse about the environment and energy sector. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Canada's Podcast
Competition Bureau – June 22, 2023, new legal provisions come into force

Canada's Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 20, 2023 24:22


The Competition Bureau is an independent law enforcement agency that protects and promotes competition for the benefit of Canadian consumers and businesses. Competition drives lower prices and innovation while fueling economic growth. The Competition Bureau works to support and protect Canadians by fostering a competitive and innovative marketplace. They do this using various methods, including advocacy, outreach, consultations, partnerships, and enforcement. In June 2022, the Government of Canada made changes to the Competition Act, including adding subsection 45(1.1) to the existing criminal conspiracy provisions. This new subsection protects competition in labour markets by prohibiting agreements between employers to fix wages and restrict job mobility. Like agreements between competitors related to price-fixing, market allocation and output restrictions, wage-fixing and no-poaching agreements undermine competition and the efficient allocation of resources. Maintaining and encouraging competition among employers results in higher wages and salaries, as well as better benefits and employment opportunities for employees. Today we're meeting with Majid Charania, Director of Compliance. The unit is responsible for promoting compliance with the Competition Act and today we're going to discuss a new section of the law that prohibits wage fixing and no poaching agreements. Wage fixing and no poaching guidance: https://ised-isde.canada.ca/site/competition-bureau-canada/en/how-we-foster- competition/education-and-outreach/enforcement-guidelines-wage-fixing-and- no-poaching-agreements Competition Bureau complaint form: https://www.competitionbureau.gc.ca/eic/site/cb-bc.nsf/frm-eng/GH%C3%89T-7TDNA5 Competition Bureau info centre – request information : https://www.competitionbureau.gc.ca/eic/site/cb-bc.nsf/frm-eng/GH%C3%89T-7SEN3J Bureau resources and social media: https://twitter.com/CompBureau https://www.facebook.com/competitionbureaucanada https://linktr.ee/BureauResources

CanCon Podcast
Canada's Commissioner of Competition needs more than a badge and a gun

CanCon Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 7, 2023 56:29


"People in Canada are at their wits' end about areas of our economy having a lack of competition and how it impacts their pocketbook." The Competition Bureau is the last line of defence for enforcing competition law in Canada. But our system is designed so that the line keeps moving. Commissioner of Competition Matthew Boswell joins to discuss the tools and powers that would help his Bureau prevent Canada's economy from becoming an endless series of three companies in a trench coat. Sponsored by Palette Skills.

The Decibel
A $50-million fine in Canada's bread price-fixing scandal

The Decibel

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 27, 2023 17:35


Over 20 years later, someone has finally paid the price for Canada's bread-fixing scandal – other than shoppers that is. Last week, baked-goods producer Canada Bread was fined $50-million for its role in coordinating the price hikes on bread.Susan Krashinsky Robertson is The Globe and Mail's retail reporter. She explains why it has taken so long for the Competition Bureau to hold a company accountable and whether Canadians will be compensated for years of inflated bread prices.Questions? Comments? Ideas? Email us at thedecibel@globeandmail.com

High on Home Grown, The Stoners Podcast
Terrible News from Vera Twomey | Louisiana Approves Expungements Bill | $23 Million Worth of Cannabis Seized by Police in AUS | Competition Bureau calls for more THC for Edibles | Cannabis News 68

High on Home Grown, The Stoners Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 29, 2023 71:38


In This Weeks Cannabis News and Events we Cover the Following Stories | Monkey: Louisiana House Approves Marijuana Expungements Bill, Sending It To Senate | Macky: Ava Barry, the daughter of medicinal cannabis campaigner Vera Twomey, has died aged 13 | Bubble: More than $23 million worth of cannabis seized by police from Coominya property in Queensland's Somerset region | Marge: Competition Bureau calls for more THC for edibles |  Come and join in the discussion about any of these news articles on our cannabis growing forum, Discord server, or any of your favourite social networks. Visit our website for links.  Website: https://highonhomegrown.com Discord: https://discord.gg/sqYGkF4xyQ Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/highonhomegrown Thank you for downloading and listening to our cannabis podcast! I hope you enjoy this episode.

Disturbingly Pragmatic with Dave and Paul
Horrifying Ways to Wake Up at a Hotel, Woman's Loud Symphonic Orgasm, and "I Wish I Didn't Know" Friday Night Trivia Time!

Disturbingly Pragmatic with Dave and Paul

Play Episode Listen Later May 20, 2023 53:44


This Episode has EVERYTHING!It's got:Dancing hamsters!Grandpappy issues!Happy 51st Birthday, Dave!Expensive Mentos!The United States snack attacks!Plastic bottles suuuucccccckkkkkk!Sand!Getting smokes for yer mom!Coke!Happy Belated Birthday, CIA Amy!Chris Pratt's nasty toenail!Toe sucking alarm clock!Leonard! Nude man alarm clock!Orgasmic music!George Santos finally arrested!Dave doesn't know legal definitions!Screw you, Cineplex!Constipation cures!Definition of Cheese: The Manosphere World Summit!Pandas - cute but useless!Paul's math skills!Nose picking fun!Road kill!Episode Links (In Order):The Hamster Dance!Chris Pratt's nasty toenail!Hotel guest awoken by night manager sucking his toes!Hotel guest awoken by a naked man in his room!Kelly Clarkson - "Favourite Kind of High"!Ronnie Vino - It's Friday Night! Woman has full body orgasm during symphony!Woman's classical music orgasm Tweet!Competition Bureau sues Cineplex!Tacky "Manosphere World Summit" coming to Orlando!Corky and the Juice Pigs - "Pandas"!Music Credit!Opening music graciously supplied by: https://audionautix.com/  Visit Our Patreon! Email Us Here: Disturbinglypragmatic@gmail.comWhere To Find Us!: Disturbingly Pragmatic Link Tree!

The Decibel
What the Rogers-Shaw deal could mean for your phone bill

The Decibel

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2023 18:32


On Monday, Rogers Communications Inc., Shaw Communications Inc. and Quebecor Inc. extended a deadline to mid-February that would finalize the largest telecommunications takeover in Canadian history. The deal would see Rogers buy Shaw for $20-billion. In an already concentrated industry, Canada's Competition Bureau has argued that the deal would be bad for consumers who already pay some of the highest cell phone bills in the world.Telecom reporter, Alexandra Posadzki explains the implications of this deal and why, even though it has cleared significant legal hurdles, Canada's Federal Industry Minister Francois-Philippe Champagne won't rush his signoff.Questions? Comments? Ideas? Email us at thedecibel@globeandmail.com

Tech Won't Save Us
Competition Won't Fix Canada's Telecom Woes w/ Fenwick McKelvey

Tech Won't Save Us

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 4, 2022 53:45


Paris Marx is joined by Fenwick McKelvey to discuss the massive outage at Rogers, why it's challenging the narrative that more competition will fix Canada's telecom sector, and the need for better regulation and even public ownership.Fenwick McKelvey is the author of Internet Daemons: Digital Communications Possessed. He's also an associate professor in the Department of Communication Studies at Concordia University and a director of Machine Agencies at the Milieu Institute. Follow Fenwick on Twitter at @mckelveyf.Tech Won't Save Us offers a critical perspective on tech, its worldview, and wider society with the goal of inspiring people to demand better tech and a better world. Follow the podcast (@techwontsaveus) and host Paris Marx (@parismarx) on Twitter, support the show on Patreon, and sign up for the weekly newsletter.Find out more about Harbinger Media Network at harbingermedianetwork.com.Also mentioned in this episode:Fenwick spoke to CBC about the Rogers outage and previously spoke to Daniel Joseph about changing the way we think about media platforms in Canada.Paris has previously argued for telecom nationalization in Canada and has written about the history of Canadian telecom.After the outage, Canadian innovation minister François-Philippe Champagne forced telcos to come up with a new agreement on several key areas of emergency cooperation.The Competition Bureau is objecting to a proposed merger between Rogers and Shaw.Last year, the Rogers family was engaged in a protracted feud that affected management of the company.Support the show