Monthly Archive for June, 2010

G20 Protests

Today was an event­ful day in Canada. Canada hosted the G20 sum­mit in Toronto. Unfor­tu­nately, some pro­tes­tors were unhappy and that led them to com­mit chaos on our streets. These chaos resulted in mil­lions in repairable and non-repairable dam­age to our gov­ern­ment, small busi­nesses and corporations!

Con­tinue read­ing ‘G20 Protests’

The HST and You!

In around two weeks, the tax­a­tion sys­tem of British Colum­bia and Ontario will be changed. The cur­rent GST (Goods and Ser­vices Tax) and the PST (Provin­cial Sales Tax) will be merged into the HST (Har­mo­nized Sales Tax). The HST is not a new tax. The per­cent­age of tax­a­tion will still remain 12%, the low­est HST per­cent­age in Canada!

This sales tax is imple­mented by the Provin­cial gov­ern­ment of British Colum­bia and the Fed­eral gov­ern­ment of Canada. This form of tax­a­tion will begin on July 1, 2010 – the 143rd birth­day of Canada.

The Har­mo­nized Sales Tax is a more trans­par­ent form of tax­a­tion. Under the PST/GST sys­tem, PST is paid at every trans­ac­tion. The cost of PST paid in those trans­ac­tions are car­ried to the price of the final prod­uct. When you buy the final prod­uct, you will have paid more than one level of PST on top of the GST and PST that you pay at the store. The HST elim­i­nates embed­ded PST and you will only pay one sales tax – when you buy it at the con­sumer level. Please feel free to see this chart for more explanation.

The BC gov­ern­ment esti­mates that intro­duc­ing the HST to replace the PST and GST will remove over $2 bil­lion in costs for BC busi­nesses. Instead of doing two tax forms, busi­nesses will only have to fill out one tax form. This sav­ing to BC Busi­nesses will most likely be passed on to the employ­ees (more jobs, higher wages and salaries) and con­sumers (lower prices due to competition).

The HST will com­pletely elim­i­nate the 10% liquor con­sump­tion tax and the 7% to 10% lux­ury tax on auto­mo­biles. This means that you will save money when you buy your next batch of alco­hol at the liquor store, bar or pubs. It will also mean that you will save money when you buy your next BMW, Mercedes-Benz and other lux­ury cars.

Stud­ies have shown that coun­tries that have not embraced a VAT tax­a­tion sys­tem have higher prices at the domes­tic con­sumer level and higher prices at the export level mak­ing indus­tries less com­pet­i­tive. British Colum­bia is the gate­way of Canada to Asia. We need to make our goods and ser­vices more com­pet­i­tive to attract invest­ments from other countries.

Com­par­i­son of Sales Tax in Canada

In Canada, you pay 5% GST regard­less of which province you are in.

  • British Colum­bia has 7% PST, 10% liquor con­sump­tion tax, and a 7% to 10% lux­ury tax based on pur­chase price.
  • Alberta has no provin­cial sales tax but has a 4% PST on lodging.
  • Saskatchewan has 5% PST and a 10% liquor con­sump­tion tax.
  • Man­i­toba has a 7% PST.
  • Ontario has a 8% PST, 10% enter­tain­ment and alco­hol tax at restau­rants, 12% on alco­hol at retail stores. It has a 5% PST on lodg­ing. Que­bec will also intro­duce the HST on July 1, 2010 but with 13% as opposed to 12.
  • Que­bec has a 7.5% PST applied to the price of the prod­uct and/or ser­vice and the GST. The PST will be increased to 8.5% on Jan­u­ary 1, 2011 and will increase again to 9.5% on Jan­u­ary 1, 2012.
  • Prince Edward Island has a 10% PST applied on top of the price of the prod­uct and/or ser­vice and the GST.
  • New Brunswick has a 13% HST.
  • Nova Sco­tia has a 13% HST but will be increased to 15% on July 1, 2010.
  • New­found­land and Labrador has a 13% HST.

Prior to the Stephen Harper Con­ser­v­a­tive gov­ern­ment, the GST and HST were 2% higher than the current.

Rebates and HST Credits

In British Colum­bia, low income fam­i­lies (under $25,000) and indi­vid­u­als (under $20,000) will receive a $230 credit. This is a sig­nif­i­cant increase from the cur­rent GST rebate, paid the fifth day of Jan­u­ary, April, July and October.

Used homes are not sub­ject to the HST. new homes over $525,000 will receive a max­i­mum rebate of $26,250. New home buy­ers will not pay more in taxes than they would have under the old embed­ded PST system.

Exemp­tions

All goods and ser­vices exempted from the GST will be exempted from the HST:

  • basic gro­ceries
  • pre­scrip­tion drugs
  • res­i­den­tial rent

In addi­tion, the BC provin­cial por­tion of the sales tax that are exempt are:

  • Gaso­line, Ethanol, Diesel, Bio-diesel when used in motor vehi­cles as well as loco­mo­tive fuel used for trains, marine diesel used for boats, and avi­a­tion fuel and jet fuel used for aircrafts.
  • Books
  • Children-sized cloth­ing and footwear
  • Children’s car seats and car booster seats
  • Dia­pers
  • Fem­i­nine Hygiene Products

Zero-Rated Goods and Ser­vices (you pay 0% HST)

  • basic gro­ceries such as milk, bread, and vegetables.
  • agri­cul­tural prod­ucts such as grain, raw wool, and dried tobacco leaves.
  • most farm livestock.
  • most fish­ery prod­ucts such as fish for human consumption.
  • pre­scrip­tion drugs and drug-dispensing fees.
  • med­ical devices such as hear­ing aids; heart-monitoring devices; hos­pi­tal beds; breath­ing appa­ra­tus; asth­matic devices; pre­scrip­tion eyeglasses/contact lenses; arti­fi­cial eyes; arti­fi­cial teeth such as den­tures, crowns and bridges, ortho­don­tic appli­ances; aids to loco­mo­tion such as a chair, com­mode chair, walker, wheel­chair lift or other aid to loco­mo­tion for use by an indi­vid­ual with a dis­abil­ity; patient lifters; wheel­chair ramp; portable wheel­chair ramp; mod­i­fy­ing motor vehi­cles to adapt the vehi­cle for the trans­porta­tion of an indi­vid­ual using a wheel­chair; pre­scrip­tion orthotic and orthopaedic devices; prosthesis/devices; canes or crutches; arti­cles for blind indi­vid­u­als; guide dogs for blind indi­vid­u­als and hear­ing ear dogs; sup­plies and ser­vices related to med­ical and assis­tive devices.
  • exports

Exempt Goods and Ser­vices (you pay 7% HST)

  • imports of zero-rated goods (goods that are specif­i­cally taxed at zero per cent in Canada, such as pre­scrip­tion drugs)
  • goods imported by a char­ity or pub­lic insti­tu­tion that have been donated to the char­ity or institution
  • used res­i­den­tial housing
  • long-term res­i­den­tial accom­mo­da­tion (of one month or more), and res­i­den­tial con­do­minium fees
  • some sales of vacant land or farmland
  • most health, med­ical, and den­tal ser­vices per­formed by licensed physi­cians or den­tists for med­ical reasons
  • child-care ser­vices (day-care ser­vices for less than 24 hours a day) for chil­dren 14 years old and younger
  • personal-care ser­vices for chil­dren, under­priv­i­leged indi­vid­u­als, or indi­vid­u­als with dis­abil­i­ties, when pro­vided by a per­son oper­at­ing an estab­lish­ment for these indi­vid­u­als, in either insti­tu­tional or non-institutional settings
  • bridge, road, and ferry tolls (ferry tolls are taxed at zero per cent if the ferry ser­vice is to or from a place out­side Canada)
  • legal aid services
  • many edu­ca­tional ser­vices, such as courses from a voca­tional school that lead to a cer­tifi­cate or a diploma to prac­tise a trade or a voca­tion; or tutor­ing ser­vices for an indi­vid­ual who takes a course approved for credit by a school author­ity or the edu­ca­tion ser­vice fol­lows a cur­ricu­lum des­ig­nated by a school authority
  • music lessons
  • most food or bev­er­ages sold in an ele­men­tary or sec­ondary school cafe­te­ria pri­mar­ily to stu­dents of the school and most meal plans pro­vided in a uni­ver­sity or pub­lic college
  • most ser­vices pro­vided by finan­cial insti­tu­tions such as arrange­ments for a loan or mortgage
  • arrang­ing for and issu­ing insur­ance poli­cies by insur­ance com­pa­nies, agents, and brokers
  • cer­tain goods and ser­vices pro­vided by non-profit orga­ni­za­tions, gov­ern­ments, and other pub­lic ser­vice bod­ies, such as munic­i­pal tran­sit ser­vices and stan­dard res­i­den­tial ser­vices such as water distribution
  • most goods and ser­vices pro­vided by charities.

NDP Cellphone Freedom Act

The Apple iPhone was orig­i­nally offered exclu­sively in Canada by Rogers. The rea­son behind it was because the iPhone is a GSM phone while Telus and Bell were on CDMA — a dif­fer­ent com­mu­ni­ca­tion tech­nol­ogy. After Telus and Bell switched over to GSM and offered HPSA wire­less, the iPhone came to Bell and Telus — as well as their chil­dren companies.

If you buy a phone from any cell­phone car­rier in Canada, your phone will be locked to that car­rier unless you unlock it. If you buy a Black­berry from Rogers, you can­not use it on Fido unless you hire a per­son, most likely a 15 to 25 year old Chi­nese per­son, to unlock it for you. This will usu­ally cost you any­where from $5 to $15.

The rea­son why car­ri­ers lock their phone are usu­ally to monop­o­lize you from going to another car­rier. It is a way of bring­ing the cost down, because they know they will most likely col­lect 3 years worth of bills from you.

NDP MP Bruce Hyer is tabling an act called “Cell Phone Free­dom Act.” The pur­pose of this act is to “empower con­sumers to move more eas­ily between com­pa­nies and would force wire­less providers to com­pete more aggres­sively on price and ser­vices to lure con­sumers, ben­e­fit­ing con­sumers and mak­ing the indus­try more competitive.”

If this bill passes, it will force car­ri­ers to sell the phone unlocked — allow­ing you to switch from com­pany to com­pany. It will most likely bring up the price of the phone, because the risk of you switch­ing will increase.

In Que­bec, a new law will be com­ing into effect that reduces the ter­mi­na­tion fees that providers charge for the con­sumer who wants to nul­lify the agree­ment. Rogers have pre­vi­ously announced that they will raise the price of phones in the province, to off­set the risk.

I have been with Rogers for sev­eral years. I get a new phone at least once every year, if not every two years. I do not switch from car­ri­ers to car­ri­ers due to price, as my bill is already the low­est that it can be. The only effect that it would have on me is that the price that I pay for phones will increase.

Adden­dum:

Car­ri­ers offer carrier-specific phones. Bell and Telus offers the Tour while Rogers does not. If this bill passes, you will be able to use the Tour on Rogers just by plug­ging in your Rogers SIM card at the store!

Canada Day 2010!

Canada Day is just half a month away! July 1st marks the 143rd anniver­sary of the found­ing of Canada.

There are many adven­tures on the day for indi­vid­u­als and fam­i­lies! Below is a list of what you can do!

Con­tinue read­ing ‘Canada Day 2010!’

UPASS for BC Colleges/Universities

The Upass pro­gram was started by VanCity and Translink in part­ner­ship with the UBC AMS and the Simon Fraser Stu­dent Soci­ety at SFU. The Upass pro­gram was later expanded to Capi­lano Uni­ver­sity and Lan­gara Col­lege. UBC stu­dents cur­rently pay $23.75 per month for the Upass. SFU stu­dents cur­rently pay $26.09 per month for the Upass. Capi­lano Uni­ver­sity stu­dents cur­rently pay $32.00 per month and Lan­gara Col­lege stu­dents pay $38.00 per month for the Upass. Stu­dents who attend other post sec­ondary insti­tu­tions pay $81.00 for a one-zone bus pass, which can be used in all zones with their stu­dent card.

In the 2009 provin­cial gen­eral elec­tion, the BCLib­eral Party promised to deliver the UPASS to all post-secondary stu­dents in British Colum­bia. The BCLib­eral Party will be deliv­er­ing their promise this September.

Gor­don Camp­bell made an impor­tant announce­ment at Van­cou­ver Com­mu­nity Col­lege (VCC) today — an announce­ment that pro­vides afford­able uni­ver­sal tran­sit to all post-secondary stu­dents in British Colum­bia. The pre­mier announced today that schools will be able to hold ref­er­en­dums to opt into the Upass program.

Your stu­dent union (ie, Dou­glas Stu­dent Union, Kwantlen Stu­dent Asso­ci­a­tion) will be able to hold ref­er­en­dums before Sep­tem­ber to opt into the upass pro­gram. Suc­cess­ful schools will be able to take advan­tage of the $30.00 per month Upass for all the students.

The Cana­dian Fed­er­a­tion of Stu­dents in BC have reacted to this announce­ment. This is likely the first time in years where the CFS-BC have praised the work­ing of Pre­mier Gor­don Camp­bell and his exec­u­tive min­is­ters. The CFS-BC chair­per­son Nimmi Takkar said“the province and TransLink are to be con­grat­u­lated for imple­ment­ing a com­mon U-Pass pro­gram at an attrac­tive price.”

This announce­ment affects stu­dents of SFU and UBC! The con­tract between UBC AMS and SFU SFSS will be expir­ing in Sep­tem­ber 2011. Instead of using the old pric­ing, stu­dents at both schools will be pay­ing $30.00 for the Upass as well. This means a total increase of $6.25 per month for stu­dents of UBC ($25 per term, $50 per semes­ter) and a total increase of $3.91 per month for SFU stu­dents ($15.64 per semes­ter). The prices will need to be passed through a ref­er­en­dum next Spring.

Your cur­rent UBC AMS and SFU SFSS rep­re­sen­ta­tives will most likely be nego­ti­at­ing with Translink and Translink is most likely going to offer stu­dents the $30 Upass. I encour­age stu­dents from SFU and UBC to email their exter­nal rep­re­sen­ta­tive (UBC AMS VP Exter­nal Jeremy McEl­roy and SFU SFSS Exter­nal Rela­tions Offi­cer Kyle Acerino) to tell them that you do not want a fare increase to hap­pen. I also rec­om­mend you to email your local MLA, the BC Min­is­ter of Trans­porta­tion Shirley Bond, and the BCNDP Trans­porta­tion Critic Harry Bains to tell them that you do not want your bus fares to increase!

World Cup 2010 Predictments

At the end of the week, the 2010 FIFA World Cup will take place in South Africa. There are 32 teams com­pet­ing from 6 con­ti­nent. It is the first time that the world cup is being hosted by an African nation.

Con­tinue read­ing ‘World Cup 2010 Predictments’

Rabbit Sales in Coquitlam

On May 17, 2010, Coun­cil­lor Reid and Coun­cil­lor Robin­son (Sec­on­der) pre­sented a motion “that staff be directed to draft an amend­ment to the City’s Busi­ness Licens­ing Bylaw to pro­hibit the sale of rab­bits in Coquitlam.”

We’ve got them every­where,” Reid told The Tri-City News. “Peo­ple buy the bun­nies and when they don’t want them any­more, they take them and let them go at the park. Loads of peo­ple are drop­ping them off at Mundy Park.”

Reid ref­er­ences to the Uni­ver­sity of Vic­to­ria where there is an explo­sion in the rab­bit population. “Right now, UVic is basi­cally hav­ing to kill hun­dreds and hun­dreds of rab­bits,” she said. “There is no need for this.”

What do you think of this motion in the City of Coquitam? How do you think coun­cil­lors should vote on this motion? Please leave your thoughts in the comments!

Celebration of Light

The Cel­e­bra­tion of Light will becom­ing back to Van­cou­ver for 2010. This will be the 20th year where we have had such an event.

The Van­cou­ver Fire­works Fes­ti­val Soci­ety con­firmed that the days will be on July 21, July 24, July 28 and July 31 at Eng­lish Bay. The nations par­tic­i­pat­ing in this event have not yet been released — but will most likely include Canada and the United States.

Van­cou­ver Mayor Robert­son said “the fire­works have become one of Vancouver’s most beloved sum­mer events, and some­thing that fam­i­lies really look for­ward to. I’d like to thank the com­mu­nity for its unwa­ver­ing sup­port and the spon­sors for their con­tin­ued commitment.”

Update: The coun­tries that will be par­tic­i­pat­ing in the events are:

  • July 21 — United States @ 10pm
  • July 24 — Spain @ 10pm
  • July 28 — Mex­ico @ 10pm
  • July 31 — People’s Repub­lic of China @ 10pm

Canada will not be par­tic­i­pat­ing this year. The main spon­sors are The Keg, Lon­don Drugs, HSBC, and Con­cord Pacific. Lis­ten to Shore 104FM for the music cor­re­spond­ing with the fireworks.

Tran­sit Information

Once again this year, the Cel­e­bra­tion of Lights will light up the sky over the city of Van­cou­ver on July 21, 24, 28 and 31. With lit­er­ally tens of thou­sands of peo­ple gath­er­ing for the spec­tac­u­lar on the shores of Eng­lish Bay and motor vehi­cle traf­fic severely restricted in the West End, pub­lic tran­sit is again the best option.

Coast Moun­tain Bus Com­pany will re-route its ser­vices away from the West End. As of 7:30pm, buses that nor­mally travel into the West End will go no fur­ther than Bur­rard and Davie; the #5 Rob­son will go as far as Rob­son and Den­man and then return via Den­man and Geor­gia. Note that there will be no east­bound ser­vice on Rob­son Street.

Start­ing at 9pm, #22 Macdonald/Knight will avoid Bur­rard Bridge and Corn­wall Avenue alto­gether, using 4th Avenue between Granville Bridge and Mac­don­ald in both directions.

Addi­tional buses will be staged at Bridge­port Sky­Train Sta­tion to han­dle crowds com­ing off the Canada Line: these will sup­ple­ment ser­vice as deemed nec­es­sary by tran­sit super­vi­sors on the scene.

West Van­cou­ver Tran­sit will stage approx­i­mately 15 addi­tional buses along Geor­gia near Den­man, to be used as required.

Sky­Train Expo and Mil­len­nium Lines ser­vice will oper­ate at rush hour lev­els from late after­noon through­out the evening on each date until crowds are cleared after the event. The last Expo Line train will leave Water­front at 1:16am, how­ever, we will run addi­tional trains if nec­es­sary to make sure that all cus­tomers already in the sta­tion at that time are able to get home.

Sky­Train Canada Line will oper­ate at rush-hour lev­els from late after­noon through­out the evening on each date of the fireworks.

To pre­vent “seat-camping”, there will be no pick­ups on inbound trains between Stadium-Chinatown and Water­front Sta­tions (Expo/Millennium Lines) and between Yaletown-Roundhouse and Water­front Sta­tions (Canada Line); inbound Canada Line pas­sen­gers will be required to get off at Yaletown-Roundhouse.

Cus­tomers who don’t already have a Fare­Card or Fare­Saver are encour­aged to pre-purchase their return fare prior to the event. This will avoid long line­ups at ticket vend­ing machines after­wards and facil­i­tate board­ing. Portable fare­boxes wil be set up at:

  • Granville
  • Bur­rard
  • Bridge­port (before the event only)
  • Yaletown-Roundhouse
  • Van­cou­ver City Centre
  • Water­front – Canada Line and Howe Street Entrance (after the event)

There will be no access to Water­front Sta­tion through the main entrance on Cor­dova Street except for per­sons with wheel­chairs or strollers and the only access to Granville Sta­tion after 10pm will be through the Dun­smuir Street entrance.

Cyclists rid­ing the train should arrive early, and bikes will not be allowed on any Sky­Train line leav­ing down­town Van­cou­ver from 10pm until the line­ups have cleared, which may be as late as 1am. Tran­sit staff and police may restrict bikes at any time in any direc­tion, depend­ing on crowd con­di­tions on the trains. This is for the safety and com­fort of all our passengers.

SeaBus will put all three ves­sels into oper­a­tion for the evening, pro­vid­ing 10-minute ser­vice from 6:30pm until 12:45am; then every 15 min­utes until the final depar­ture from Water­front sta­tion at 1:31am.

West Coast Express will run a spe­cial train for the finale, Sat­ur­day, July 31, leav­ing Mis­sion City at 7pm and return­ing from Water­front at 11:30pm.

Tran­sit police will be out in force to assist juris­dic­tional police in keep­ing order, pay­ing par­tic­u­lar atten­tion to tran­sit ser­vices, mak­ing sure that peo­ple of all ages are able to have a good time safely and securely. Tran­sit Police will enforce a zero-tolerance pol­icy for alco­hol and drugs on tran­sit vehi­cles.

The annual Cel­e­bra­tion of Lights is one of Metro Vancouver’s mar­quee attrac­tions, and TransLink is pleased to pro­vide cre­ative ser­vice lev­els to help keep it that way. It’s also most fun for the whole fam­ily when peo­ple enjoy them­selves respon­si­bly. Please remem­ber to “pack out what you pack in” so that the cleanup after­wards goes just as well as the event itself.

Source of tran­sit infor­ma­tion: http://www.translink.ca/

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SFU Senate By-Elections Info

Ear­lier this year, we had nom­i­na­tions and elec­tions for SFU Sen­ate Stu­dent Rep­re­sen­ta­tives. We are hav­ing a by-election for Fac­ulty of Applied Sci­ence, Fac­ulty of Sci­ence, and Fac­ulty of Envi­ron­ment. On June 7 to June 9, stu­dents of the fac­ul­ties of Applied Sci­ence and Sci­ence will be head­ing to the polls to vote for their rep­re­sen­ta­tive. No nom­i­na­tions were received for the Fac­ulty of Envi­ron­ment so they will remain vacant.

Con­tinue read­ing ‘SFU Sen­ate By-Elections Info’

Report: May 2010

This report shows the sta­tis­tics between May 1 and May 31. The infor­ma­tion have been col­lected to the best of my ability.

Fur­ther infor­ma­tion to track in the month of June:

  • Bus/Skytrain cars

Con­tinue read­ing ‘Report: May 2010′