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As Parties Feud Over Canada Pension Plan, One Constant: We're Not Saving Enough

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 28 May, 2015 10:13 AM
    OTTAWA — Federal political parties may be quarrelling over how best to expand the Canada Pension Plan, but they seem to agree on one thing: Canadians should be saving more for retirement.
     
    The Harper government, long opposed to expanding the CPP, has suddenly decided to consider giving people the option to funnel more earnings into the program in order to grow their nest eggs.
     
    Employment Minister Pierre Poilievre says the Conservative government wants Canadians to save more for retirement.
     
    But opposition parties say a voluntary expansion of the plan doesn't go far enough to ensure people are in good financial shape when they retire.
     
    Liberal MP John McCallum, a former bank economist whose party is proposing a mandatory expansion of the CPP, says people aren't saving enough for their golden years.
     
    The New Democrats also support a compulsory add-on to the national pension plan.
     
    The debate over retirement savings is already shaping up to be a major ballot-box issue for the election campaign slated for this fall.

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    Who Gets The Biggest Share Of The Benefits From Tory 'Family Tax Cut?'

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    Saskatchewan To Restrict Use Of Indoor Tanning Beds To Adults In Time For Summer

    Saskatchewan To Restrict Use Of Indoor Tanning Beds To Adults In Time For Summer
    REGINA — Saskatchewan is planning to ban young people under 18 from using indoor tanning beds in an effort to help protect youth from skin cancer.

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    Police Charge Man In Deaths Of Young Brothers Who Were Asphyxiated By Python

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    CAMPBELLTON, N.B. — Police in New Brunswick have charged a man with criminal negligence causing death after two young brothers were asphyxiated by a python.

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    B.C. Auditor Rips Performance Of Government's $182 Million Computer System

    B.C. Auditor Rips Performance Of Government's $182 Million Computer System
    VICTORIA — The B.C. government has spent seven years and $182 million trying to modernize aging computer systems in the social services ministries, but the province's auditor general says only one-third of that goal has been achieved.

    B.C. Auditor Rips Performance Of Government's $182 Million Computer System

    Baby Boom Continues For Endangered J Pod Orcas With New Calf Spotted Off B.C.

    Baby Boom Continues For Endangered J Pod Orcas With New Calf Spotted Off B.C.
    GALIANO ISLAND, B.C. — Researchers say yet another baby has been born to an endangered population of orcas off British Columbia's coast.

    Baby Boom Continues For Endangered J Pod Orcas With New Calf Spotted Off B.C.