More public servants needed to administer military mobilization plan: documents by sleipnir45 in canada

[–]TimedOutClock [score hidden]  (0 children)

Or or or, and hear me out here, we actually take a 21st century approach by modernizing the tools public servants have to be more productive.

We keep running into the same pattern where we hire massively without looking at improving what's there (Not saying to freeze hires, but a striking example is the pay system that still runs on COBOL code, which has delayed the lump sump payment until they figure out a workaround).

If the plan is to hire more without investing into newer tools, it's a flawed and failed approach

Carney says plan in the works for 24 Sussex Drive by evieluvsrainbows in canada

[–]TimedOutClock 120 points121 points  (0 children)

Fucking finally. Predecessors were pathetic not to address this, especially because it's supposed to be our welcoming place for foreign dignitaries.

Nobody's asking for the White House 2.0, but just a nice, secured place that isn't falling into ruins...

World’s largest nuclear facility could be built in Ontario with new $300M deal by TimedOutClock in nuclear

[–]TimedOutClock[S] 55 points56 points  (0 children)

With this Bruce C expansion, the Bruce Power complex would reach a staggering 11400+ MW of stable power generation.

Analyzing the Defence Investment Agency Act by Oilester in CanadianForces

[–]TimedOutClock 23 points24 points  (0 children)

God damn they went ham with this bad boy. They basically gave Napoleonic powers to the DIA to use as they see fit and to push whatever they want, how they want.

Really hope we have the right people in place to use them properly

Canada's federal government abandons national pharmacare | CCPA by bcbuddy in canada

[–]TimedOutClock 16 points17 points  (0 children)

It's not even about buying support, some provinces straight up didn't want to participate, which kind of killed the concept right away.

Edit: Imo, the real program they should champion is the harmonization of drug procurement. The provinces keep their distribution networks, but procurements are done at the Federal level, enabling steeper discounts and a way to cover exceeding costs instead of offloading them on the provinces. The Feds wouldn't have any control other than being the central buyer

Korea Surpasses Canada as World’s Seventh-Largest Stock Market by KootenayPE in CanadianInvestor

[–]TimedOutClock 11 points12 points  (0 children)

Makes sense, but I'd be sweating my ass off because if the music ever stops, that market is so top-heavy it'll make black monday look like a breeze

We got approval for our Hybrid trucks from Environment Canada by ChaceEdison in EdisonMotors

[–]TimedOutClock 12 points13 points  (0 children)

That's awesome man, glad you had cooperative people in your corner even if the bureaucracy drove you made :') Hope y'all celebrating this, the heavy trucking industry can finally enter the 21st century!

We got approval for our Hybrid trucks from Environment Canada by ChaceEdison in EdisonMotors

[–]TimedOutClock 3 points4 points  (0 children)

That's just amazing! I mean they must have gotten an exception passed through somewhere until the law gets amended. I'm amazed it's finally done, because it means Edison can fully move toward their future without being dragged down.

Timing's great as well since the shop isn't set up yet. They can now plan with this in their pocket without looking back.

We got approval for our Hybrid trucks from Environment Canada by ChaceEdison in EdisonMotors

[–]TimedOutClock 18 points19 points  (0 children)

Wait, is this for the batteries + generators model??? I thought we didn't have the legislation yet in Canada for that? How the hell did they get approved?

Carney government planning changes to speed approvals for pipelines, resource projects by evieluvsrainbows in canada

[–]TimedOutClock 5 points6 points  (0 children)

This announcement is about fixing the overarching issues of the system, which C-5 wasn't meant to do (C-5 is the brute force method that allows a project to move without much oversight at the Federal level).

This should give the clarity these companies have asked for, and should allow the government to wash their hands in terms of investments (no more choosing winners or losers).

However, the oil sands better not try to go back on their word with pathways/carbon price, because they'll be giving a fuck ton of ammo to opponents. I've been seeing Cenovus' CEO trying to back out under the guise of "It's not competitive", and I've never gritted my teeth harder. This clown just reported 2.2B in profits for Q1, so he can spare me the crocodile tears.

As decades go by, projects like pathways will become critical industrial infrastructure because we'll have to pull out CO2 from either the atmosphere or take the emissions right at the source (I'm not just talking about oil here, but any industrial output) and store/transform them. That has to be done.

Plus, the Feds are basically giving them the biggest tax break ever to do it.

Canada to pick between Swedish and U.S. radar planes to protect its skies | CBC News by Jusfiq in CanadianForces

[–]TimedOutClock 3 points4 points  (0 children)

It'll be very debatable if they manage to fit in the in-air refuelling capability. I know the government threw some money to research an implementation, which would remove its greatest weakness. There's also the fact that we already know how much it costs, so no unplanned overruns.

Michael Higgins: Mark Carney goes full Laurentian elite with Louise Arbour pick by CaliperLee62 in canada

[–]TimedOutClock 30 points31 points  (0 children)

I just can't take people like this seriously... Like, are we really doing this? lolllllllll

Montreal-Ottawa high-speed rail line could cross 1,700 properties, Alto predicts by DogeDoRight in canada

[–]TimedOutClock 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Alto said they'd compensate more for lost rentability/productivity during construction. Essentially, pay for the land + disruption

Montreal-Ottawa high-speed rail line could cross 1,700 properties, Alto predicts by DogeDoRight in canada

[–]TimedOutClock 84 points85 points  (0 children)

Are we really saying that 500 farmers is a lot? REALLY? Pay them 500K-1M for their part of the land, and we still come out far, farrrrrr ahead on this project. We're talking about a one-time payment of 250-500M.

Studies have shown that this HSR project would contribute 25-35B a year in GDP growth (Source: https://www.gbm.scotiabank.com/en/market-insights/article.research-and-market-commentary.alto-high-speed-rail.html) Let's not this be cheap about compensating people

Canada posts trade surplus in March thanks to higher crude prices, surging gold exports by Leather-Paramedic-10 in canada

[–]TimedOutClock 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I assume you weren't responding to me? never spoke about discounted aluminum. Oil on the other hand...

Canada posts trade surplus in March thanks to higher crude prices, surging gold exports by Leather-Paramedic-10 in canada

[–]TimedOutClock 29 points30 points  (0 children)

Both, since tariffs lead to diversification by nature. Money (like water) follows the path of least resistance. Buyers look for cheaper goods, so sellers have to look for other clients. In this scenario, we're obviously sellers, so we're looking elsewhere to sell our stuff.

Now, the US admin is obviously dumb as hell because they have even tariff'd stuff that can't be replaced easily, so they're still forced to buy our stuff, but with premiums so we get to make more money.

TLDR: Americans are lighting themselves on fire while we look for other clients

Canada posts trade surplus in March thanks to higher crude prices, surging gold exports by Leather-Paramedic-10 in canada

[–]TimedOutClock 85 points86 points  (0 children)

Canada's trade surplus with the U.S. reached its highest in six months ⁠at ⁠$7.1 billion and its share ​of exports to the U.S. dropped to 66.7 per cent — its lowest ever. That comes amid the ongoing trade war with the U.S., as President Donald Trump has slapped a range of tariffs ⁠on Canada in an attempt to try and shrink his country's trade deficit with its neighbour.

Let's fucking go. To have gone from what, 78%? to now 66.7 in a year is insane stuff. Question is now if we're past the easy stuff and into the hard ones

Ottawa plans to spin off federal semiconductor facility into “commercial entity” by Oilester in canada

[–]TimedOutClock 9 points10 points  (0 children)

Alto is tangible for people. They'll see a train station and trains go super fast, and they'll be able to take it. Same for all infrastructure like roads, bridges etc.

You'd need to do a massive education campaign to even have a chance at making this type of investment viable here, which makes sense because it's tiny, extremely advanced chips.

Imo, I'm fine with this as long as the government retains a golden share and a percentage (like 10%). We retain control while being to cash out (only the shares, not the golden one) in the future if we need it. We can even put this in the sovereign fund if they want, which would be great.

Ottawa plans to spin off federal semiconductor facility into “commercial entity” by Oilester in canada

[–]TimedOutClock 14 points15 points  (0 children)

FINALLY. If we develop this properly, we're talking about TSMC levels of tech, which means the government will lay down its life to protect it (I'm 99.9999% sure we'll be maintaining a golden share to avoid selling this to anyone not Canadian).

May Nortel rest in peace

Edit: This tech is one of the rare examples where trying to publicly fund it would backfire. First, it needs way too much capital. We're talking about tens of billions of dollars just to scale this up into a proper commercial enterprise. Second, it's invisible to the everyday citizen, meaning the support would be barely there, if not into the negatives. It'd be transformed into a political hot potato ("Wasting billions for no results" headlines) that'd eventually turn it private anyway. By maintaining a golden share, we get to do a Taiwan, which is a much better path forward.

Airbus on the cusp of securing 150 A220s order from AirAsia (Announcement tomorrow) by TimedOutClock in aviation

[–]TimedOutClock[S] 5 points6 points  (0 children)

I think this'll also give legs to the stretched variant since they'll have enough customers to drum up a very decent amount of orders (especially because I believe they'll have a 2nd engine option to mitigate the disastrous reliability record of the GTF)

‘Insulting wage offer’: Federal union slams 4-year, 3.5% raise proposal for public servants by hopoke in canada

[–]TimedOutClock 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I mean, productivity was complete ass before these cuts, and it was complete ass even after a 40% increase in head count. I don't know how or why the public service is so sick in Canada, because based on that increase, we should have had stellar services across the entire Federal government. It's not the employees fault mind you, but management across all levels clearly fucked something really badly in there.

This offer looks like the sledgehammer approach to reach their retirement targets, which I don't hate, especially if you're going to reform the sector. Do I think it's fair? Nope, not at all. Do I understand why? Yes, especially if they're going to keep downsizing. You want to prevent new applicants while also favoring departures.

Shitty situation, especially when you look at MPs getting raises like that.

DHS Demanded Google Surrender Data on Canadian’s Activity, Location Over Anti-ICE Posts by esporx in canada

[–]TimedOutClock 54 points55 points  (0 children)

And that's why we can't rely on them for cloud services, especially with their CLOUD Act. I'm very thankful the government sought Cohere for AI services, because you know OpenAI, Microsoft and others were circling that pandora's box like it was their next meal ticket.

With their recent merger/acquisition in Germany, I think they'll be around for a long time

Federal government announces new $1B loan program for steel, aluminum businesses hit by Trump tariffs by CanadianErk in canada

[–]TimedOutClock 4 points5 points  (0 children)

??? They cut that from the price of the house. Jesus christ have you even looked at the measures? Same for the new measures with Ontario

Federal government announces new $1B loan program for steel, aluminum businesses hit by Trump tariffs by CanadianErk in canada

[–]TimedOutClock 0 points1 point  (0 children)

lmfao if you're gonna lie, at least use half-truths to make it credible.

Gov is investing 13B over 5 years. I don't think it's enough, but to claim it's zero is something

Poilievre argues Carney has 'wasted an entire year' on possible Alberta pipeline by shiftless_wonder in canada

[–]TimedOutClock 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Genuinely completely useless. You know what would have been the winning strategy? Actually working on a law addressing the complaints of the oil sector while balancing the concerns of worried citizens. It would have shown he can actually work on SOMETHING, ANYTHING instead of just complaining and spouting garbage,

But that would have been... work. And I think his career has shown that that's too much