New West Partnership
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Brad Wall misrepresents "consultation" on TILMA 2.0 - New West Partnership Agreement
See (slow) video clip:
http://www.globalregina.com/video/index ... 1482220886
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Brad Wall breaks promise, signs TILMA
http://larryhubich.blogspot.com/2010/04/
brad-wall-breaks-promise-signs-tilma.html
For Immediate Release April 30. 2010
New West Partnership is almost identical to trade deal he pledged not to sign
Regina – Saskatchewan Premier Brad Wall has broken his promise to not sign TILMA, today putting his signature on the New West Partnership trade agreement that is almost identical in every respect to the agreement rejected by the people of Saskatchewan in 2007.
“For Premier Wall to claim that he has not signed TILMA is simply not true,” said Larry Hubich, the President of the Saskatchewan Federation of Labour. “The New West Partnership is lifted almost word for word from TILMA and offers no meaningful protections for municipalities or Crown Corporations, the two issues Wall said just this week were the reason he would not sign TILMA. This agreement isn’t TILMA-like, it is TILMA.”
Like TILMA, the New West Partnership has a “no obstacles” clause (Article 3) which commits Saskatchewan to ensure that its measures do not operate to “restrict or impair trade,” a mutual recognition clause (Article 5) which will harmonize provincial standards and regulations to the lowest common denominator, and an investor-state dispute resolution process (Part IV), which gives trade panels the power to force governments to pay up to $5 million for any measure that violates the agreement. Procurement for all provincial government entities, Crown Corporations, municipal governments, school boards, and publicly-funded academic, health and social services are included in the agreement, with identical thresholds as those found in TILMA.
“Practically the only difference between the two trade agreements is the cover,” added Scott Harris, Prairie Regional Organizer with the Council of Canadians. “Besides adding the word “Saskatchewan” and changing “party” to “parties”, there isn’t a different word between the two until page 7 and only a handful of paragraphs that are different through the whole agreement. I don’t know how Brad Wall can keep a straight face when he says he hasn’t signed TILMA.”
The New West Partnership’s schedules 2, 3, and 4, which cover International Cooperation, Innovation and Procurement, respectively, expressly state that they are not legally binding on any of the three provinces and create no financial obligations.
“It’s clear that the only reason the other three agreements were stapled to the back of TILMA was so that Brad Wall could claim he was signing a new agreement,” said Hubich. “But I don’t think the people of Saskatchewan are going to be fooled by this smokescreen. The only part of the New West Partnership that means anything is the trade agreement, and it’s TILMA.” -30-
Contacts:
Larry Hubich, SFL President (306) 537-7330
Scott Harris, Prairie Regional Organizer, Council of Canadians (780) 233-2528
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SASKATCHEWAN, ALBERTA AND BC LAUNCH NEW WEST PARTNERSHIP
http://www.gov.sk.ca/
news?newsId=7d25a475-e276-4f3d-a551-d639317fb652
News Release - April 30, 2010
Alberta, British Columbia and Saskatchewan launched the New West Partnership today, creating an economic powerhouse of nine million people with a combined GDP of more than $550 billion.
The New West Partnership is an ambitious agreement that will create Canada's largest interprovincial barrier-free trade and investment market and see the three westernmost provinces work together in unprecedented ways to the benefit of workers, businesses and investors in all three provinces.
"This represents an historic step forward for western provinces, as they work together to provide economic leadership," Saskatchewan Premier Brad Wall said. "We are combining the strength of our three vibrant economies and working together to create lasting prosperity. Our three provinces have created a model that cements the West as the economic powerhouse of Canada."
The three provinces signed the New West Partnership at the third joint British Columbia-Alberta-Saskatchewan Cabinet meeting in Regina. Building on shared strengths, the New West Partnership contains four components:
A comprehensive economic agreement, which will remove remaining barriers to trade, investment and labour mobility, further enhancing the competitiveness of Canada's western provinces;
An international co-operation agreement, that will see the three provinces co-operate on trade and investment missions to international markets, and share foreign market intelligence to advance joint interests and increase business competitiveness;
An innovation agreement, which will enable provincial innovation efforts to be co-ordinated to better attract investment and talent, helping build critical mass of innovation activities in the West; and
A procurement agreement that will enable the provinces to capitalize on their combined buying power through the joint procurement of goods and services.
"To compete in the 21st century global economy, governments must work together to break down barriers and create opportunity," Alberta Premier Ed Stelmach said. "The New West Partnership creates more choice for businesses, workers and consumers. It allows the West to market itself as one region to bolster export development and attract investment."
"In today's global economy we need to break down barriers and open trade within our borders to build a stronger Canada," British Columbia Premier Gordon Campbell said. "The New West Partnership creates a strong economic alliance in Western Canada that will build stronger connections between our provinces and improve our competitiveness."
The first major undertaking of the New West Partnership will be a joint mission to China and Japan in May. Together, the three provinces will promote trade and commerce opportunities with Canada's newest free trade region and draw attention to the New West's global leadership in clean technology, natural resources, and agri-food and agriculture.
The Premiers will also highlight Western Canada's many geographic and infrastructure advantages, including the region's multi-modal Pacific Gateway and Corridor transportation system, and their unwavering support for open skies and open trade with the Asia Pacific region.
The New West Partnership Agreement can be viewed at
www.gov.sk.ca/nwp. -30-
For more information, contact:
Ian Hanna, Executive Council Regina Phone: 306-787-2127
Rebecca Rogoschewsky, Executive Council Regina Phone: 306-787-0980
Cam Hantiuk, Office of the Premier Edmonton, AB Phone: 780-422-4924
Bridgitte Anderson, Office of the Premier Victoria, BC Phone: 604-307-7177
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9287-NWP Backgrounder.pdf (21.1 KB)
http://www.gov.sk.ca/adx/
aspx/adxGetMedia.aspx?mediaId=1118&PN=Shared
New West Partnership - Agreement.pdf (443.4 KB)
http://www.gov.sk.ca/adx/
aspx/adxGetMedia.aspx?mediaId=1119&PN=Shared
Joint Decision Gov't Entities.pdf (13.3 KB)
http://www.gov.sk.ca/adx/
aspx/adxGetMedia.aspx?mediaId=1120&PN=Shared
Joint Decision BCIMC and AIMCo.pdf (13.4 KB)
http://www.gov.sk.ca/adx/aspx/
adxGetMedia.aspx?mediaId=1121&PN=Shared
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Wall ill-advised to keep details of deal a secret
http://www.thestarphoenix.com/opinion/
Wall+advised+keep+details+deal+secret/2969099/story.html
The StarPhoenix April 30, 2010
By all accounts, Opposition Leader Dwain Lingenfelter was doing little more than fear-mongering this week when he raised questions about the trade deal Premier Brad Wall is signing today in Regina with Alberta and British Columbia.
After all, economists and trade experts have called for years for the same sort of free-trade arrangements among the provinces that Canada has been able to negotiate with foreign markets. And this agreement, expected to be signed at Government House this morning by premiers Wall, Ed Stelmach and Gordon Campbell, seems well designed to further the common interests of their three provinces.
MORE:
http://www.thestarphoenix.com/opinion/
Wall+advised+keep+details+deal+secret/2969099/story.html
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Despite the fact they criticize Wall for being secretive and keeping the details of the so-called New West Partnership Agreement (TILMA 2.0) away from the citizens, the StarPhoenix endorses the deal sight unseen.
Democracy, transparency, accountability, and previous commitments appear to mean nothing to our anti-democratic Premier. - Larry Hubich, Saskatchewan Federation of Labour.
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New West Partnership – Erin Weir – May 2, 2010
From: Larry Hubich
Sent: Monday, May 03, 2010 7:31 AM
Subject: Saskatchewan gets taken to the cleaners in New West Partnership (TILMA 2.0)
Saskatchewan got taken to the cleaners in this TILMA 2.0 trade deal that Brad Wall just signed. Read Erin Weir's analysis for a critical look at how.
Wall has just tied the hands of Crown Corporations, municipal governments, school boards, and health districts. And he's also put a nail in the coffin of a host of Saskatchewan small businesses who rely on the business that our Crowns do with them.
Get ready for reduced labour standards, reduced worker rights, reduced minimum wage, reduced health and safety protections, reduced autonomy, reduced environmental protections, reduced ability to make decisions and bring in legislation and regulations designed in the public interest. - Larry Hubich, SFL
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New West Partnership
http://www.progressive-economics.ca/201 ... rtnership/
Posted by Erin Weir May 2nd, 2010
On Friday evening, I was in Kingston listening to a speech by western Canada’s best Premier. The following morning, I awoke to discover a far less coherent op-ed by the other three western Premiers on The Globe and Mail’s website.
They were trumpeting Friday’s unveiling of the New West Partnership. As the Saskatchewan Federation of Labour and the Jurist have already pointed out, this arrangement is a backdoor for Saskatchewan to join Alberta and BC in the Trade, Investment and Labour Mobility Agreement (TILMA).
Saskatchewan rejected TILMA because it empowers business to directly challenge a broad range of public policy, without identifying or solving actual problems. In addition to implementing that flawed model, the New West Partnership also hoses Saskatchewan in several specific respects.
The Window Dressing
One has to love the term “New West.” Social democrats live in fear of being accused of advocating 1970s-style policies. However, conservatives have no shame about reviving slogans of the same vintage.
The New West Partnership includes some apparently positive elements: combining procurement orders to lower costs through increased buying power, collaboration on research and development, and joint international trade missions. But there is no obligation to coordinate in these areas. Certainly, the three westernmost provinces did not need a “New West Partnership” to work together on procurement, research or international trade, as they have frequently done in the past.
Indeed, it presumably makes sense for Saskatchewan, Alberta and BC to also cooperate in these and other areas with the seven provinces that have not signed the New West Partnership. In promoting international trade, the greatest economies of scale could presumably be achieved by Canadians combining our efforts through the federal government.
Where’s the Beef?
The New West Partnership’s core is the “New West Partnership Trade Agreement” (NWPTA). If you do not want to read the whole thing, check out the five-page backgrounder.
The first page describes it as “a comprehensive agreement to remove barriers to trade, investment and labour mobility [that] covers all public sector entities, including government ministries and their agencies, boards and commissions, Crown corporations, municipalities, school boards, and publicly-funded academic, health and social service organizations.”
The second page provides for “financial penalties of up to $5 million if a government is found to be non-compliant with its obligations.” In case the reader still doubts that NWPTA replicates TILMA, page four helpfully notes that “British Columbia and Alberta fully comply with the agreement” already and then lists a series of “Saskatchewan-Specific Transition Measures.”
There is no quid pro quo: only Saskatchewan has to change its tendering system, regulations and standards. There is no compromise: Saskatchewan must harmonize to the existing Alberta-BC model.
Where are the Barriers?
The Globe op-ed commits to “break down unnecessary barriers between our provinces,” “interprovincial barrier-free trade,” “removing barriers to trade” and not “allow internal borders to stifle opportunity.” As usual, it does not bother to identify any specific trade barriers.
Since Alberta and BC are already in compliance with NWPTA, these unidentified trade barriers must be in Saskatchewan. However, they have had no apparent effect on actual trade flows. Between 1999 and 2008 (the most recent data available), Saskatchewan’s interprovincial imports rose 70%. Meanwhile, its international imports rose only 56%.
The most recent figures on bilateral trade between particular provinces are for 2006. That year, Saskatchewan bought $1.8 billion more goods and services from Alberta than it sold to Alberta. Also, Saskatchewan bought $419 million more from BC than it sold to BC.
So, Saskatchewan’s market is wide open to goods and services from its western neighbours. NWPTA will not affect those trade flows since there are currently no real trade barriers. However, if NWPTA somehow did increase these two-way flows, the result would be a larger interprovincial trade deficit for Saskatchewan.
Crown Corporations
NWPTA’s inclusion of Crown corporations is notable for at least four reasons. First, the Saskatchewan Party cited its intention to continue using Crown procurement to support Saskatchewan industry as a major reason for rejecting TILMA. The Saskatchewan government should at least acknowledge changing its mind on this matter and explain why.
Second, other interprovincial “free trade” agreements, such as the longstanding Agreement on Internal Trade and the recent Canada-US Agreement on Government Procurement, do not cover Crown corporations. As far as I know, NWPTA will be the first trade deal to restrict their procurement in Saskatchewan.
Third, since Saskatchewan has a much wider array of Crown corporations than Alberta and BC, it is committing much more. For example, Alberta and BC businesses will gain a legally-enforceable right to access SaskTel’s procurement. But Saskatchewan businesses will have no parallel right to access procurement by Telus, the main telephone company in Alberta and BC.
Fourth, a document unveiled Friday indicates, “NWPTA does not apply to any corporation, partnership, trust or other entity or organization established, owned or controlled by either the Alberta Investment Management Corporation or the British Columbia Investment Management Corporation.” There is no similar exemption for the Crown Investments Corporation of Saskatchewan (or any part of it).
Procurement Thresholds
The usual objection to “free trade” in procurement is that governments may legitimately want to use procurement to pursue social goals other than minimizing cost. However, even if monetary savings are the only goal, one must weigh the potential of more competition to lower prices against the cost of administering an open tendering process.
For large purchases, tendering costs are trivial. But for small purchases, these costs could easily outweigh any savings from competitive pricing. Therefore, procurement deals generally only cover purchases worth more than a specified dollar value.
TILMA and NWPTA set these thresholds extremely low. For goods purchased by government ministries, the threshold is just $10,000. If it costs $500 to run an open tendering process, that would add 5% to the cost of a $10,000 purchase.
Complying with such requirements is also a bureaucratic nightmare. On a recent trip to Edmonton, I met up with a couple of friends who are lawyers and Conservative Party supporters. Both were cursing TILMA. Apparently, complying with it has made public procurement extremely cumbersome and created a huge volume of paperwork for even routine purchases.
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NEW WEST PARTNERSHIP BACKGROUNDER
http://www.gov.sk.ca/adx/aspx/
adxGetMedia.aspx?mediaId=1118&PN=Shared
· The New West Partnership is a new and far-reaching economic partnership between the Governments of British Columbia, Alberta and Saskatchewan. The three provinces commit to ongoing collaboration on innovative ways to strengthen the economy of the West.
· Through the New West Partnership, the three provinces will foster strong, vibrant and lasting prosperity for the region and our people. Innovative and competitive businesses will be even more attracted to the region.
· The New West Partnership focuses on four areas key to economic growth in the West: - trade; - international cooperation; - innovation; and - procurement.
TRADE
· The New West Partnership Trade Agreement is a comprehensive agreement to remove barriers to trade, investment and labour mobility between British Columbia, Alberta and Saskatchewan.
· The agreement covers all public sector entities, including government ministries and their agencies, boards and commissions, Crown Corporations, municipalities, school boards and publicly-funded academic, health and social service organizations.
· The New West Partnership Trade Agreement comes into effect on July 1, 2010.
Saskatchewan will fully implement the agreement by July 1, 2013. An
implementation schedule is attached as Appendix A.
· The New West Partnership Trade Agreement satisfies Saskatchewan's concerns regarding public ownership of Crown corporations and the ability of municipalities to support economic development.
· The key elements of the New West Partnership Trade Agreement are:
- non-discrimination: workers and businesses from the three provinces will be treated equally;
- transparency: provinces will notify each other to ensure that new measures, including standards and regulations, are not unnecessarily different or result in new impediments to trade, investment or labour mobility;
- legitimate objectives: provinces continue to have the flexibility to protect important public interests, such as public security and safety, human, animal or plant life or health, the environment, the health and safety of workers and the provision of social services and health services;
- streamlined regulations: unnecessary differences in provinces’ business and occupation-related regulations and standards will be eliminated;
- procurement: public procurements will be conducted openly and transparently, ensuring equal opportunity for suppliers in all three provinces. Information on the procurements covered by the agreement is attached as Appendix B; and
- dispute resolution: the three governments demonstrate their serious commitment to the New West Partnership Trade Agreement by including the possibility of financial penalties up to $5 million if a government is found to be non-compliant with its obligations, and that government subsequently fails to bring itself into compliance.
INTERNATIONAL COOPERATION
· Under the New West Partnership International Cooperation Agreement, Saskatchewan, Alberta and British Columbia will collaborate on high-quality, cost-effective joint international initiatives, including:
- undertaking joint missions or marketing visits;
- sharing resources in international markets, such as co-locating marketing offices or personnel; and sharing market intelligence in areas of common interest.
· The first major outcome of the New West Partnership will be a joint mission led by the three Premiers to China and Japan from May 14-22, 2010.
INNOVATION
· Under the New West Partnership Innovation Agreement, the provinces will work together to coordinate provincial activities in research and development (R&D), including:
- maintaining and sharing information on R&D activities in each of the provinces; and
- undertaking joint innovation projects or activities.
· Initial joint activities the provinces will undertake include:
- advancing carbon capture and storage technology;
- exploring opportunities in value-added forestry to support diversification of this sector; and - sharing information on R&D activities for the purpose of identifying further opportunities for collaboration.
PROCUREMENT
· Under the New West Partnership Procurement Agreement, the provinces will work together to jointly purchase goods and services in order to achieve efficiencies and cost-savings.
· This could include joint purchasing of health supplies or common government supplies (e.g., paper or office supplies) and the standardization of procurement templates and contracts.
APPENDIX A - NEW WEST PARTNERSHIP TRADE AGREEMENT
IMPLEMENTATION SCHEDULE
New West Partnership Trade Agreement comes into effect
British Columbia and Alberta fully comply with the agreement
Saskatchewan fully complies, subject to the transition measures listed below, which will come into effect by the date specified - July 1, 2010
Saskatchewan-Specific Transition Measures
Ministries to post all tendering on a common electronic tendering system
Reconcile differences in commercial vehicle registration rules
One Year Later (by July 1, 2011)
Mutually recognize or otherwise reconcile differences in regulations and standards that restrict or impair trade, investment or labour mobility
Mutually recognize or otherwise reconcile differences in business registration and reporting requirements
Non-discriminatory procurement rules to apply to Crown corporations, municipalities, health regions, school boards, and publicly-funded universities and colleges
All tenders to be posted on a common electronic tendering system - Two Years Later
(by July 1, 2012)
Mutually recognize or otherwise reconcile differences in measures related to financial services that restrict or impair trade, investment or labour mobility - Three Years Later
(by July 1, 2013)
APPENDIX B - NEW WEST PARTNERSHIP TRADE AGREEMENT PROCUREMENT
Procurements at or above these thresholds must be conducted openly and transparently and ensure equal opportunity for suppliers in all three provinces.
Goods Services Construction
Ministries and Departments
Government Agencies, Boards
and Commissions $10,000 $75,000 $100,000
Crown Corporations* $25,000 $100,000 $100,000
Municipalities*
Health Regions*
School Boards*
Publicly-Funded Universities
and Colleges* $75,000 $75,000 $200,000
NOTE: These thresholds are not automatic triggers for joint purchasing agreements under the New West Partnership Procurement Agreement.
* Applies to Saskatchewan after July 1, 2012.
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Secret trade talks? Take to the streets!
http://www2.macleans.ca/2010/04/30/
secret-trade-talks-take-to-the-streets/
Peter Van Loan says negotiations with the EU are going well. Opponents are trying to mobilize.
by Paul Wells on Friday, April 30, 2010 9:00am
The work of government goes on even when we’re distracted by shiny things. Two weeks ago, Parliament Hill was transfixed by the escapades of Rahim Jaffer and Helena Guergis, and I couldn’t resist writing about the former MP and his ex-minister wife either. But on the Monday of that same week, a bunch of nationalist groups gathered to ring the alarm bell as hard as they could about secret trade talks between Canada and the European Union.
Secret talks! Just like old times. Talks “based on commitments to place corporate rights before social and economic justice, democratic control, and ecological sustainability,” the groups said. (They included the Canadian Labour Congress, Canadian Auto Workers, and the Council of Canadians.) “Negotiations are progressing quickly and with little public scrutiny until now.”
Well, it was time for that to stop. The organizations leaked the entire 366-page draft negotiating text for a proposed Canada-EU Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement. They put the whole thing up on a website,
www.tradejustice.ca. They ornamented the text with dark warnings about how a Canada-EU deal would “go beyond NAFTA in ways that threaten public services and local democracy in Canada.”
I’ve been writing about these negotiations for three years now. But what happened two weeks ago was new, because for the first time we could peek under the hood and see the details of what’s being discussed. Advocates of a deal have become less reticent. Opponents have become more vocal. The same thing drives the new chattiness on both sides: the talks are going well.
“Progress has been ahead of schedule,” Peter Van Loan, the international trade minister, told me. “They’ve made more progress than anybody expected.” A veteran European official told me this was “the most pleasant negotiation I’ve ever been involved in.”
Barely a half-dozen of the 40 European negotiators made it through the ash clouds to Ottawa for this third round of negotiations. Everyone made do with video conferencing as best they could. A fourth round will be in Brussels in May. During the months of separation between the week-long chat sessions, each side figures out how to get closer to agreement on the outstanding issues.
Nearly 120 Canadians fly to Europe each time for the talks on that side of the ocean, startling their hosts. “They come in droves,” the European official said. The reason, of course, is that the provinces are directly involved in this negotiation, which is how a country of 35 million can send three times as many bureaucrats to a bargaining table as a union of 27 countries containing half a billion people.
The groups opposing a deal are sure all of it is awful. Take government procurement, the notion that European and Canadian firms should be able to bid for government contracts in each other’s market, on the same basis as local firms.
MORE:
http://www2.macleans.ca/2010/04/30/
secret-trade-talks-take-to-the-streets/
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Botting earning $15,000 per month plus expenses as consultant to Enterprise Saskatchewan, contract suggests direct line to Premier Brad Wall
http://owlsandroosters.blogspot.com/2010/05/
botting-earning-15000-per-month-plus.html
May 2, 2010
The Wall government’s announcement on March 15, 2010, that Dale Botting was stepping down as CEO of Enterprise Saskatchewan (ES) caused barely a ripple in the news media. A 400-word story in the Leader-Post the next day was pretty much it as far as coverage goes.
NDP Enterprise and Innovation critic Len Taylor told the newspaper he was “surprised” to learn Botting would be leaving and wondered whether there was something wrong at ES.
Taylor said that ES “has no focus, no real vision,” and appears to be “going nowhere with this government.”
“This big idea of Enterprise Saskatchewan ... is not turning out to be what anybody thought it would be.” [Botting to step down in April as CEO (Leader-Post, March 16, 2010)]
Botting may be gone but he’s not far away.
Starting April 1, 2010, under a six-month, renewable contract to ES, Botting will oversee the completion of several investment attraction projects and will continue to advise the provincial government on issues ranging from innovative partnerships to competitive intelligence, a government press release said.
- - - - SNIP - - - -
According to the contract between ES and Botting Leadership & Development Corporation, dated March 12, 2010, Botting will be paid a sum of $15,000 per month for each month of the agreement. As the consultant, Botting “must submit a report to the Minister and CEO of ES on the activities undertaken during that calendar month and an invoice stating the number of hours of service provided during that calendar month and the allowable expenses, with copies of receipts, incurred in providing the services.”
Travel, sustenance and accommodation expenses will be reimbursed at Public Service Commission approved rates.
Botting’s contract does not “preclude the possibility of separate and different contract opportunities to serve the added needs of Enterprise Saskatchewan, or to assist with other contracts and projects in other Ministries or Crown Corporations.”
In other words, Botting’s new arrangement could allow him to make a lot more money than if he were still employed by the agency.
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Starting April 1, 2010, to September 30, 2010, Botting’s company “will focus, as an independent contractor, on major investment attraction efforts and the successful completion of project development as a dedicated and accelerated effort to help the Government move toward more visible culmination of its successful business climate.”
Some of the 14 “major projects poised for final investment decisions” in 2010-11 are:
▪ Accelerate the final head office decision of Mosaic Corporation and other major corporate office decisions in to Saskatoon and Regina;
▪ Move key research and development jobs of Dow Agro Sciences from Indiana to Saskatoon;
▪ Finalize development of Clear Vistas and other major new property developments;
▪ Needed support to add on and secure CN/Loblaws developments and assist the Global Transportation Hub Authority (GTHA) in its added marketing and investment attraction efforts;
▪ Secure financing and final supports fort the CCRL Aquistore Project in Regina;
▪ Complete the Bioxx Expansion in Saskatoon; and
▪ Secure added markets for Whitemud Resources in Saskatchewan.
“As further project challenges arise from the Cabinet Committee on Economic Development, or directly from the Minister or the Premier, [the consultant’s] retainer will provide added executive level capacity as further required on as needed basis,” the agreement states.
So Botting might have a direct pipeline to Premier Brad Wall. How many consultants can boast that?
One nagging question, though, is why can’t Botting oversee this work and still be the CEO of ES? Maybe NDP MLA Len Taylor is right and there is something wrong at ES.
MORE:
http://owlsandroosters.blogspot.com/2010/05/
botting-earning-15000-per-month-plus.html
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2) SCN TO CONTINUE BROADCAST WHILE EXPRESSIONS OF INTEREST ARE REVIEWED
http://www.gov.sk.ca/news?newsId=35341e ... 77b8e5b0fb
News Release - April 30, 2010
Broadcast of SCN will continue into the month of May, while Expressions of Interest (EOIs) are being considered.
Twelve Expressions of Interest were received prior to today's deadline.
The consulting group receiving the EOIs, McNair Business Development Inc., indicated that some proponents requested, in their EOIs, that SCN remain on the air while the EOI review process takes place.
"We are pleased that there has been such a high level of interest expressed and look forward to the results of the Expression of Interest review process," Tourism, Parks, Culture and Sport Minister Dustin Duncan said. -30-
For more information, contact:
Rebecca Rogoschewsky
Executive Council
Regina
Phone: 306-787-0980
Email:
rebecca.rogoschewsky@gov.sk.ca
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April 30, 2010
OPEN LETTER TO THE PREMIER (Hand Delivered)
Honourable Brad Wall
Premier of Saskatchewan
226 Legislative Building
Regina, Saskatchewan
S4S 0B3
Re: Purchase of the Saskatchewan Communications Network (SCN)
It has only recently come to our attention that today is the deadline for bids for the purchase of SCN. We are amazed that this process is being so rushed.
While we believe that your decision to eliminate SCN is short sighted and not in the interests of Saskatchewan citizens – it appears your government is not interested in listening to what the people are saying on this matter.
We write to request that more time be given for interested parties to examine the assets, liabilities, licence and feasibility of putting forward an offer for the purchase of SCN.
We are serious – but need time to examine our options and possible partnerships.
We have great talent in Saskatchewan and need to retain these artists and their incredible skills.
If given time – 90 days – we would immediately contact our 37 union affiliates, our Venture Capital Funds, Saskatchewan Teacher Federation, National Unions, the Saskatchewan Credit Union system and current employees of SCN to see how we could fashion a proposal for the purchase of SCN. We have to assess the value and the risk and we need some time. Perhaps a co-operative?
As well we will immediately continue to look for further financial support for this network, we have many resources. What is a reasonable offer to keep SCN in our community hands? This must be evaluated before you sell off SCN’s assets. Has this information been available to others?
Please don’t wipe SCN off the map until we can develop a plan to retain vital cultural human resources in Saskatchewan.
Give us time to put in a proposal.
Sincerely,
Larry Hubich,
SFL President
LH:ds
CUPE 4828
c.c. SCN Supporters
Saskatchewan Media
McNair Business Development Inc.
Dustin Duncan, Minister of Tourism, Parks, Culture and Sports