Monday, June 22, 2026
ADVT 
National

Feds See Ontario Stance On CPP As Roadblock To Expanding Pension Plan

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 31 May, 2016 12:28 PM
  • Feds See Ontario Stance On CPP As Roadblock To Expanding Pension Plan
OTTAWA — Federal sources say Canada's most populous province has become a roadblock in work to gain the required support from provinces to make reform and expand the Canada Pension Plan.
 
Ontario's position in the ongoing talks is that it wants reforms to the Canada Pension Program to dovetail with the provincial pension program Ontario has vowed to create.
 
Ontario Finance Minister Charles Sousa says he plans to use the Ontario program as leverage in negotiations for timely amendments to the national program, but doesn't want to obstruct ongoing talks.
 
 
Federal, provincial and territorial finance ministers will meet near the end of June in Vancouver where CPP reform will be a key part of the agenda.
 
Federal Finance Minister Bill Morneau has said he wants to see a deal for an expanded CPP completed by the end of the calendar year.
 
Sousa says the talks will all be for naught if a majority of provinces don't signal their backing for immediate changes to the pension plan at the June meeting.

MORE National ARTICLES

Man Serving 3-Year Sentence For Stanley Cup Riot Dies In New Westminster Hospital

William Fisher was sentenced on Feb. 19 to three years in prison after being found guilty on a series of charges including taking part in a riot, aggravated assault and break and enter.

Man Serving 3-Year Sentence For Stanley Cup Riot Dies In New Westminster Hospital

As B.C. Hydro Reworks Estimates, Utility Seeks 4 Per Cent Interim Rate Hike

As B.C. Hydro Reworks Estimates, Utility Seeks 4 Per Cent Interim Rate Hike
BC Hydro is calling for an interim, one-year rate increase of four per cent, adding about $4 a month to residential power bills.

As B.C. Hydro Reworks Estimates, Utility Seeks 4 Per Cent Interim Rate Hike

B.C. Judge Clears Asbestos Contractor Of Contempt, Says Workplace Law Too Vague

B.C. Judge Clears Asbestos Contractor Of Contempt, Says Workplace Law Too Vague
Judge ruled that Seattle Environmental Consulting Ltd. owner Mike Singh and his son Shawn Singh are not in contempt of court after WorkSafeBC complained the pair didn't follow workplace regulations designed to prevent exposure to asbestos.

B.C. Judge Clears Asbestos Contractor Of Contempt, Says Workplace Law Too Vague

CEO Tim Cook Defends Apple's Resistance In FBI iPhone Case

CEO Tim Cook Defends Apple's Resistance In FBI iPhone Case
"We do these because these are the right things to do," Cook said in a brief reference to the company's privacy stance in the case.

CEO Tim Cook Defends Apple's Resistance In FBI iPhone Case

Nova Scotia Man Loses Challenge Of Minimum Sentence For Shooting, Killing Son

Nova Scotia Man Loses Challenge Of Minimum Sentence For Shooting, Killing Son
Michael Paul Dockrill was convicted in April of criminal negligence causing death for shooting his son 20-year-old son, Jason.

Nova Scotia Man Loses Challenge Of Minimum Sentence For Shooting, Killing Son

Skier Dies From Injuries Suffered In Sunday Avalanche Near Golden, B.C.

Skier Dies From Injuries Suffered In Sunday Avalanche Near Golden, B.C.
The 64-year-old man, who was from Canmore, was airlifted to Calgary in critical condition

Skier Dies From Injuries Suffered In Sunday Avalanche Near Golden, B.C.