Source Feed: The Globe and Mail
Author: Wendy Cox
Publication Date: March 4, 2025 - 21:02
Some highlights from B.C.’s 2025 budget
March 4, 2025
British Columbia’s Finance Minister Brenda Bailey delivered the fiscal plan for the coming year just hours after U.S. President Donald Trump made good on his threat from months ago to impose 25-per-cent tariffs on almost all Canadian exports. It meant that many of the assumptions included in hundreds of pages of documents bolstering B.C.’s economic plan, numbers from months ago, were already out of date.In February, the Finance Ministry crunched the numbers anew, assuming 25-per-cent tariffs on most Canadian exports, except for energy and critical minerals with a 10-per-cent tariff. The ministry also assumed economic support from Ottawa and lower interest rates from the Bank of Canada.
The three staff members left at the museum, who have been putting in their own money to keep things up and running, say it is now too late.
March 5, 2025 - 21:55 | Amy Judd | Global News - Canada
The Canadian Trucking Alliance reports that about 25 to 30 per cent of B.C. trucking companies move goods across the Canada-U.S. border every day.
March 5, 2025 - 21:50 | Amy Judd | Global News - Canada
Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault is moving to curb a broad class of “forever chemicals,” so named by critics for their persistence in the environment long after use in everyday consumer products.Mr. Guilbeault said during a press conference Wednesday the government will designate the compounds as toxic under the Canadian Environmental Protection Act.
March 5, 2025 - 21:17 | Patrick White | The Globe and Mail
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