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|    Message 89,601 of 90,757    |
|    Harper'sDueDate:Oct19 to All    |
|    Ontario unions: Bill C-377 to be short-l    |
|    03 Jul 15 15:59:01    |
      From: brewnoser2@gmail.com              Surely what should follow from the Harper Cons is a Bill to 'force disclosure       on how corporations spend our government subsidies' ?       _____________________________________       CBC News Posted: Jul 02, 2015              Union disclosure Bill C-377 angers Ontario Federation of Labour       Bill C-377 forces unions to disclose expenditures                     Sid Ryan, president of the Ontario Federation of Labour, which represents 54       unions, says his organization will redouble efforts to make sure Prime       Minister Stephen Harper's Conservatives don't win October's federal election.              The federation's leader is upset with the passing of Bill C-377, the       Conservatives' controversial private member's bill that forces labour unions       to publicly disclose how they spend their money.              The bill, sponsored by Conservative MP Russ Hiebert and backed strongly by the       Prime Minister's Office, gained Senate approval Tuesday and requires unions to       publicly disclose any spending of $5,000 or more and any salary of more than       $100,000.              Unions will have to provide that information to the Canada Revenue Agency,       which would publicly post the information to its website.              Conservatives argued the bill will shed light on union finances.              Ryan called it "a blatant attack" on unions.              "It's punitive. Nobody else is expected to do this," he said.              Ryan claims Conservatives argue that not all members of a union share a       common, agreed-upon political view and that unions are using dues to mount       political action campaigns members may not agree with.              "What it's trying to do is create internal strife in the labour movement       itself," Ryan said of the bill.              He admitted unions will campaign against the Conservatives this fall.              "We'll redouble our efforts to make sure Harper doesn't get re-elected," he       said.              Ryan claims the new law will force unions to hire auditors and bookkeepers       that aren't necessary. Union books are open to the membership, but not       necessarily the public.              "It's so ridiculous. We have to account for every $5,000 expenditure we've       got. It doesn't matter what it is, we have to account for it," Ryan said.              The $5,000 expenditures could include new roofs, furnaces and political       contributions.                     'Transparency' necessary, group says              A group that lobbied for the Senate to pass the bill applauded the final vote       Tuesday.              "Transparency and accountability are fundamental to democracy," Terrance       Oakey, president of Merit Canada, said in a statement. "If labour       organizations want to enjoy the dual benefits of mandatory dues collection and       beneficial tax treatment, they must        earn it by operating in a transparent manner."              The bill covers all "labour organizations,"or any organization formed for       purposes including the regulation of relations between employers and employees:               Organized groups.        Federations.        Congresses.        Labour councils.        Joint councils.        Conferences.        General committees.        Joint boards of such organizations.              Former Conservative senator Hugh Segal, who opposed the bill, had previously       told The Canadian Press that the        ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^       passage of C-377 could hurt the Conservatives in dozens of ridings where       labour unions could influence the outcome of the fall vote.              "Why somebody would decide that kind of suicidal, ideologically narrow excess       is in the national or the party's interests or the prime minister's interests       is completely beyond me," Segal said in an interview last week.              In a statement Tuesday, minutes after the final vote on C-377, Liberal Leader       Justin Trudeau vowed to repeal the law should his party form the next       government. ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^       ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^              The NDP has also pledged to repeal the bill if it forms government.       ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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