Sunday, June 21, 2026
ADVT 
National

Ford Canada CEO To Raise Concerns Over Trans-pacific Partnership With Ottawa

The Canadian Press, 11 Feb, 2016 12:03 PM
    TORONTO — The CEO of Ford's Canadian operations says risks posed by the Trans-Pacific Partnership to the automotive manufacturing sector are among topics she plans to raise in a meeting with federal government officials later this month.
     
    Dianne Craig says the need to boost government subsidies to help attract more global investment in Canada's auto sector will also be discussed.
     
     
    Ontario, which relies heavily on the auto manufacturing sector, has been losing new investment to Mexico and the southern U.S., where labour costs are lower.
     
    Ray Tanguay, a special automotive adviser to the federal and Ontario governments, has called for the federal automotive innovation fund to be restructured.
     
    The fund offers loans to provide incentives for automotive investment, but Tanguay would like to see the money doled out as grants.
     
    However, he has stopped short of calling for higher monetary incentives, noting it is up to federal and provincial officials to evaluate the economic benefits they reap from such incentives.
     
    Craig agreed that the fund should be restructured, but added that the amounts of the subsidies should be boosted as well.
     
    "Right now, the way the loans are treated by the Canadian government, they're not competitive, because in other jurisdictions, they're not taxable," Craig said at the Canadian International AutoShow in Toronto on Thursday.
     
    She also slammed the TPP, saying that the way the deal is structured will hurt Canadian auto manufacturing operations.
     
    "We support free trade, but it has to be fair trade," Craig said.
     
    "We've got to get these trade agreements right, and right now as the TPP stands, there will be no positive outcome for Canadian manufacturing."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Ivan Henry Wrongful-Imprisonment Case About Risks Of Self-Representation: Crown

    John Hunter says 69-year-old Ivan Henry should bear some responsibility for his conviction after repeatedly refusing legal counsel during his 1982 sexual-assault trial.

    Ivan Henry Wrongful-Imprisonment Case About Risks Of Self-Representation: Crown

    Rohinie Bisesar, Indian-Origin Woman Stabs Shoppers Drug Mart Employee To Death In Toronto

    Rohinie Bisesar, Indian-Origin Woman Stabs Shoppers Drug Mart Employee To Death In Toronto
    Rohinie Bisesar stabbed the victim at a Shoppers Drug Mart in Toronto's financial district last Friday.

    Rohinie Bisesar, Indian-Origin Woman Stabs Shoppers Drug Mart Employee To Death In Toronto

    Surrey Police, Health Officials Issue Unusual Pre-Christmas Fentanyl Warning To Families

    Surrey Police, Health Officials Issue Unusual Pre-Christmas Fentanyl Warning To Families
    Police say the respiratory depressant is 50 to 100 times more toxic than morphine and is being cut into other illegal drugs.

    Surrey Police, Health Officials Issue Unusual Pre-Christmas Fentanyl Warning To Families

    Christopher Neil, Convicted Pedophile Dubbed 'Swirl Face' Pleads Guilty In B.C. To 5 Sex Charges

    Christopher Neil, Convicted Pedophile Dubbed 'Swirl Face' Pleads Guilty In B.C. To 5 Sex Charges
    British Columbia man imprisoned in Thailand for sexually assaulting young boys has pleaded guilty in Canada to five sex tourism and pornography charges involving children

    Christopher Neil, Convicted Pedophile Dubbed 'Swirl Face' Pleads Guilty In B.C. To 5 Sex Charges

    Punjabi Singer Lehmber Singh Goes Missing From Mississauga, Ontario

    Punjabi Singer Lehmber Singh Goes Missing From Mississauga, Ontario
    According to police, Lehmber Singh had come from India to perform music. He had about $100 (rpt $100) with him when he went missing from Mississauga on the outskirts of Toronto.

    Punjabi Singer Lehmber Singh Goes Missing From Mississauga, Ontario

    Men Accused Of Running Down B.C. Sheep With Trucks Charged, Say Mounties

    Men Accused Of Running Down B.C. Sheep With Trucks Charged, Say Mounties
    The collision occurred on Oct. 1, on a four-lane stretch of Highway 3, near Keremeos, about 350 kilometres east of Vancouver.

    Men Accused Of Running Down B.C. Sheep With Trucks Charged, Say Mounties