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8/31/11

Winnipeg Facts

Winnipeg is the capital city of the province of Manitoba, Canada. Located at the geographical centre of Canada, Winnipeg is a transportation centre, with extensive rail and air links, as well as the head offices of several major Canadian trucking firms. Winnipeg has a diverse economy and is also a multicultural city where more than 100 languages are spoken. While Winnipeg is an eminently affordable city, it is host to world-class ballet, theatre, visual arts, music and festivals.

Winnipeg is located at the junction of the Red and Assiniboine Rivers, near the centre of North America.

464.01 sq km (179.16 square miles)(Statistics Canada, 2006 Census)

633,451 (Statistics Canada, 2006 Census)

1870

1873. Reincorporated in 1972.

A Winnipeg general municipal election is held every four years on the fourth Wednesday in October. This includes elections for the Mayor and city councillors, as well as elections for school trustees.

Date of the last Winnipeg municipal election: Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Date of the next Winnipeg municipal election: Wednesday, October 22, 2014

Winnipeg's city council is made up of 16 elected representatives: one mayor and 15 city councillors.

Major attractions in the capital city include:

Winnipeg has short, very warm summers and long bitterly cold winters. Winnipeg gets lots of snow, usually starting in November and sometimes not finishing until April. Winnipeg is also a windy city, which can make winter more difficult. On the positive side, Winnipeg has the most days of winter sunshine of any Canadian city, and is also dry, which makes the cold more tolerable.


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Study Permits for Canada

A study permit is an official document allowing someone who is not a Canadian citizen or a permanent resident of Canada to study in Canada. Most international students need a study permit to study in Canada. Some international students also need a temporary resident visa. You do not need to make a separate application for a temporary resident visa - it will be issued at the same time as the documentation necessary for you to enter Canada as an international student.

Before you apply for a study permit for Canada you must be accepted to study at a recognized school, university or college in Canada, and receive a letter from that educational institution confirming your acceptance.

Education is a responsibility of the provincial and territory governments in Canada, and educational standards are set by the individual provinces and territories. For more information on education in Canada and to find provincial departments of education, elementary and high schools, school boards, and universities and colleges in Canada, check

Citizenship and Immigration Canada advises that it takes at least six months to gather the information and documents required to apply for a study permit for Canada, and to plan and prepare for a move to Canada as an international student.

The process and documents required to study in the province of Quebec are different, so check the Ministère de l’Immigration et des Communautés culturelles for details.


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Penalties for Late Taxes

Updated: 03/21/11

Filing your Canadian income taxes late can cost you money. If you owe income tax and file your income tax return late, the Canada Revenue Agency will charge you a penalty and also charge interest on the unpaid amount.

The deadline for filing your Canadian income taxes is midnight April 30. Since April 30 falls on a Saturday in 2011, your 2010 return will be considered to be filed on time if it is postmarked by midnight on Monday May 2, 2011.

If you owe Canadian income tax and file your Canadian income tax return after the deadline, the Canada Revenue Agency will charge a penalty of five percent of the balance owing andone percent of the balance owing for each full month that your return is late, to a maximum of 12 months.

If you were charged a late-filing penalty in one of the previous three years and are late filing your income taxes again, the Canada Revenue Agency will charge a penalty of ten percent of the balance owing for the current year andtwo percent of the balance owing for each full month that your current income tax return is late, to a maximum of 20 months.

In addition to the penalty for filing your Canadian income taxes late, the Canada Revenue Agency will also charge compound daily interest on any unpaid amounts owing for 2010, starting May 1, 2011 andon any penalties charged, starting the day after your return is due.The interest rates charged can change every three months.

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Social Insurance Number

Canadians are used to being asked for their Social Insurance Number as a piece of identification, but the Canadian Social Insurance Number is a confidential number and an important piece of personal information. Your Social Insurance Number can be used, in combination with other pieces of personal information, to monitor many of your daily activities or steal your identity, so it should be treated carefully. Here are the basics on when and how to use your Canadian Social Insurance Number.

The Canadian Social Insurance Number - or SIN - is a unique nine-digit client account number used by the federal government in Canada to administer specific government programs. The Canadian Social Insurance Number was originally created to be used for the administration of the Canada Pension Plan and unemployment insurance programs, but is now also used for tax purposes and a variety of other income-related purposes.

Basically, you need a Social Insurance Number to work in Canada, to file your income taxes and to receive Canadian federal government benefits, such as the Old Age Security Pension. Only specific government departments and programs are authorized to collect and use your Social Insurance Number. Other Canadian organizations are also required by legislation to use the Social Insurance Number for income-related purposes, for example banks.

You are required to give your Social Insurance Number for insurable or pensionable employment in Canada. You are required by law to show your employer your Social Insurance Card within three days of the start date of employment. to file your income taxes. You must give your Social Insurance Number to any organization which prepares income tax information for you. This includes federal, provincial and municipal government agencies which report financial assistance payments for income tax purposes. to organizations where you earn interest or income, such as banks, credit unions, or stock brokers. to authorized Canadian federal government departments and agencies.

Service Canada has a complete list of federal government Legislated Uses of the Social Insurance Number in Canada.

Many other organizations, both inside and outside governments in Canada, have found that using the Canadian Social Insurance Number is an easy way to organize their own accounts. While there is no legislation authorizing them to do so, there is also no legislation preventing them.

However, your Social Insurance Number is a confidential number and should not be used for general purposes of identification.

The Office of the Privacy Commissioner of Canada recommends that if you are asked for your Social Insurance Number: ask if it is required by law ask what it will be used for if your Social Insurance Number is not required by law, offer to provide another piece of identification if your Social Insurance Number is not required by law and the organization refuses service unless you provide it, then file a complaint with the Office of the Privacy Commissioner of Canada.

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8/30/11

RRSP Contribution Limit

Updated: 01/06/11

There are four easy ways to find out the amount of RRSP contributions you are allowed to deduct for your income taxes.

Your RRSP deduction limit can be found in the RRSP Deduction Limit Statement on your latest Notice of Assessment or Notice of Reassessment.

Call the Canada Revenue Agency TIPS at 1-800-267-6999. The service is available from the middle of September to April 30.

You will be asked for your Social Insurance Number, your month and year of birth, and the Total Income amount on line 150 of your 2008 or 2009 filed and processed income tax return.

You can use the Canada Revenue Agency Quick Access service online to find out the limit of your RRSP contributions allowed for your income taxes.

You can also use the Canada Revenue Agency My Account service online to find out the limit of your RRSP contributions allowed for your income taxes.

Please note that all CRA My Account User IDs and passwords expired on October 4, 2010. The Government of Canada epass is no longer valid, and after October 4, 2010 you will have to register to create a new CRA User ID and password to log into the My Account service. If you are a new user of My Account or are registering a new User ID and password, you will have to wait for about 5 business days to receive a CRA security code in the mail.


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8/29/11

Tommy Douglas

A small man with a huge personality, Tommy Douglas was gregarious, witty, feisty and kind. The leader of the first socialist government in North America, Tommy Douglas brought massive change to the province of Saskatchewan and led the way for many social reforms in the rest of Canada. Tommy Douglas is considered the Canadian "father of medicare." In 1947 Tommy Douglas introduced universal hospitalization in Saskatchewan and in 1959 announced a Medicare plan for Saskatchewan.

Introduced universal hospitalization in Saskatchewan in 1949 and a Medicare plan for Saskatchewan in 1959. Crown Corporation Act led to the establishment of provincial air and bus lines, SaskPower and SaskTel. Labour legislation included the Trade Union Act, the improvement of workers compensation and minimum wages, and a labour relations board. Industrial development reduced the province's dependence on agriculture. Introduced the first public automobile insurance in Canada.

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8/28/11

Tobacco Into Canada - Visitors

If you are a a visitor to Canada, you are allowed to bring a limited amount of tobacco and tobacco products (cigarettes, cigars, cigarillos, tobacco sticks, tobacco) into the country without having to pay duty or taxes as long as the tobacco accompanies you.

You may bring in : 200 cigarettes 50 cigars or cigarillos 200 grams (7 ounces) of manufactured tobacco, and 200 tobacco sticks.

If you take a side trip outside Canada during your visit, you must be out of Canada for at least 48 hours to be eligible to claim these amounts again.

You may bring in more than the quantities of tobacco listed above as long as you pay full duty and taxes on the excess amount.

If you have questions or require more information on bringing tobacco into Canada, please contact the Canada Borders Services Agency.

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8/24/11

State TV: Oil pipeline bombed in Syria

Syrians demonstrate against the government after Friday prayers in Hama on July 29, 2011.Human rights group says seven are dead in protest clashesState-run SANA news agency reports two police officers killedA journalist says security forces in Damascus fired into crowdsSyria has been wracked by violent crackdowns by government forces

(CNN) -- At least seven civilians died in clashes between Syrian protesters and security officials Friday, a human rights group said.


Demonstrators chanting anti-government slogans marched in Damascus, Homs, Lattakia and other cities, and were frequently met by security forces who fired into the crowds and beat protesters, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.


The group said two demonstrators were killed during protests in Lattakia and one in Daraa. In addition, one man fell to his death while running from security forces on top of a building, while three others died during incidents at security checkpoints, the group said.


The state-run SANA news agency said one police officer died and another was in a "state of clinical death" following attacks by gunmen in the Kneinas neighborhood of Lattakia, the Bab Dreib neighborhood in Homs in Homs and Al-Boukamal. The agency did not specify where the fatal clashes it reported had taken place.


The agency said some neighborhoods around Damascus, Hama, Homs and Idleb "saw gatherings" after Friday prayers but did not elaborate.


The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said security forces fired on demonstrators in Homs. Heavy gunfire was also heard near the Abraham Mosque in a Damascus suburb and in the area of a protest in another Damascus neighborhood.


The group said it had also received reports of troops near mosques in several towns. A curfew had been imposed in Jabal al-Zawiya and people were not allowed to go to mosques. They had to pray in fields, instead, the group said.


CNN could not independently verify the reports.


Journalist Alexander Page, who said he was with protesters who were marching from Damascus' Midan neighborhood to Zahera, reported that he saw three people shot when security forces aimed into the crowd and fired. Four buses carrying "regime thugs and riot police" had arrived on the scene, and security forces were stopping cars and beating people, Page said.


The wounded were picked up by security forces and taken away in buses, Page said.


He said a man on a motorbike filmed the faces of protesters as he drove past them. They chased and beat him, Page said.


In the Damascus suburb of Haja Al Aswad, heavy gunfire was heard as demonstrators departed Abraham Mosque. In another Damascus neighborhood, security forces dispersed hundreds of protesters who were chanting anti-government slogans.


Meanwhile, state media said a terrorist attack was to blame for an explosion in an oil pipeline in Tal Kalakh, about 160 kilometers (100 miles) north of Damascus.


The explosion happened around 4 a.m., according to the state-run news agency SANA and Syria TV. They described the explosion as a bombing and said it created a 15-meter (about 50-foot) crater.


"Some citizens heard an explosion near a pipeline for transporting crude oil to Banyias," Homs Gov. Ghassan Abdel al-Aal told SANA.


Procedures to stop the oil spill and prevent it from spreading into the water of Tal Hosh Dam were taken, the governor said.


The violence came a day after at least seven civilians, including a 15-year-old boy, died and five others were wounded by security forces in Zabadani and Deir Ezzor, according to human rights groups.


Syrian Security forces also carried out a series of raids and arrests in Jobar in Damascus province on Thursday evening, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.


Some civilians fled their homes after they came under direct shelling by security forces.


Syria has been wracked by violent government crackdowns on protests across the country since mid-March, when teens were arrested for writing anti-government graffiti in the southern city of Daraa.


As the clashes intensified, demonstrators changed their demands, from calls for freedom and an end to abuses by the security forces to calls for toppling the regime of President Bashar al-Assad.


Syrian opposition groups have held a number of meetings in Turkey in recent months. The last one, organized by the Syrian National Salvation Council, took place in mid-July in Istanbul.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights says that since the unrest in the country began, 1,513 civilians have died. It put the toll among government forces at 367, not including Friday's report by SANA.

CNN's Salma Abdelaziz contributed to this report.


Quoting : CNN.com

8/23/11

Hariri killing suspects identified

Former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri addressing The World Urban Forum in Barcelona in September 2004A judge revealed the names FridayA source has told CNN the suspects are members of HezbollahRafik Hariri was killed in 2005

Beirut, Lebanon (CNN) -- The judge of a U.N. special tribunal on Friday lifted a confidentiality order in the investigation of the killing of former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri, revealing the names of the suspects.


Arrest warrants were issued this month for the suspects, who the court identified as Salim Jamil Ayyash, Mustafa Amine Badreddine, Hussein Hassan Oneissi, and Assad Hassan Sabra. A highly placed source in the Lebanese army, who had correctly given CNN the names of the suspects previously, has said that all four belong to the Shiite group Hezbollah.


The tribunal was established by the United Nations at Lebanon's request in 2005, after the death of Hariri


Hariri, a wealthy entrepreneur turned politician, died when his motorcade passed a bomb that exploded in Beirut on February 14, 2005.

Supporters say he was killed because of his opposition to Syrian influence in Lebanon. His death prompted mass protests that led to the withdrawal of Syrian troops who had been in Lebanon for nearly 30 years.


Quoting : CNN.com

8/22/11

Soldier wanted to attack Ft. Hood troops

NEW: Naser Jason Abdo makes a reference to the 2006 rape and murder of an Iraqi girlAdditional charges are likely against Abdo, a U.S. attorney's spokesman saysAbdo is being held without bond by federal authoritiesHe is a "very dangerous individual," the police chief says

Killeen, Texas (CNN) -- The U.S. Army private who authorities say admitted to planning to bomb a restaurant popular with soldiers from Fort Hood is to be held without bond, a federal magistrate ordered Friday.

Pfc. Naser Jason Abdo was formally charged with possession of an unregistered destructive device. Additional charges are likely, said Daryl Fields, a spokesman for the U.S. attorney's office in San Antonio, Texas.

Abdo, who refused to stand when Judge Jeffrey C. Manske entered the courtroom, shouted an apparent reference to the 2006 rape of an Iraqi girl by U.S. soldiers and the 2009 shooting spree at Fort Hood by Army Maj. Nidal Hasan before being hustled out of the courtroom by marshals.

Abdo, a Muslim American soldier who had been granted conscientious objector status before going AWOL, was being held Friday in federal custody at an undisclosed location.

According to the criminal complaint unsealed after his appearance Friday, Abdo admitted he planned to turn two pressure cookers found in his Killeen hotel room into gunpowder- and shrapnel-filled bombs to detonate inside an unnamed restaurant popular with soldiers from Fort Hood.

Among other things, police and FBI investigators who searched the room found six bottles of gunpowder, shotgun shells and pellets and ammunition cartridges.

Police who arrested him found wire, a handgun, ammunition and an article titled, "Make a bomb in the kitchen of your Mom" in the backpack he was carrying, according to the complaint. The backpack also contained a notebook with a hand-written list for many of the components police recovered.

The public defender appointed to represent Abdo, attorney Keith Dorsett of Waco, did not immediately respond to e-mails and telephone messages seeking comment.

Killeen police arrested Abdo, 21, on Wednesday after a gun store employee tipped them that Abdo's behavior had raised red flags when he purchased six pounds of smokeless gunpowder and other supplies.

The tip came from Greg Ebert, a retired police officer who works at the Guns Galore gun store. He said the young man appeared suspicious as soon as he pulled up in a taxi cab.

"How many people go shopping at gun stores in a taxi cab?" Ebert asked. He described Abdo as being guarded and asking odd questions.

Abdo browsed for about 20 minutes, Ebert said, choosing six pounds of gunpowder, shotgun ammunition and a magazine for a semiautomatic handgun. He asked Ebert what smokeless gunpowder was before finishing the purchase.

"Well, hello! Why are you buying this if you don't know what it's for?" Ebert said later. "That is a red flag for me. He should know. Why is he buying that much?"

Ebert said he called police after discussing the transaction at length with the owner of the store, which is the same place where Hasan bought supplies for his shooting spree.

Abdo joined the infantry in 2009 and was assigned to Company E of the 101st Airborne Division's 1st Brigade Combat Team when he refused to deploy to Afghanistan on religious grounds.

The Army approved his request to be discharged as a conscientious objector. But on May 13, he was charged with possession of child pornography on his computer, according to the statement.

After a June 15 hearing, at which Abdo was recommended for court-martial, he went AWOL.

In media interviews last year, Abdo talked about seeking conscientious objector status, saying he felt compelled to remain true to his faith.

"We have two things that I believe make us American, and that's freedom of religion and freedom of choice," he said.

When he signed up for the military, Abdo said, he had not thought that his religious beliefs would be an issue. "I was under the impression that I could serve both the U.S. Army and my God simultaneously," he said.

But as his deployment neared, he began to rethink things and eventually worked up the courage to approach his unit and tell them how he felt, he said.

"Islam is a much more peaceful and tolerant religion than it is an aggressive religion," he said. "I don't believe that Islam allows me to operate in any kind of warfare at all, including the U.S. military and any war it partakes in. I believe that our first duty as a Muslim is to serve God."

In court Friday, Abdo mentioned "Iraq 2006," an apparent reference to an incident in which U.S. Army soldiers were accused of killing three members of an Iraqi family, including a 6-year-old girl, and raping the family's 14-year-old girl before also killing her and setting the bodies on fire in an attempt to cover up the killings.

Four soldiers were convicted and imprisoned for their roles in the shootings, rape and subsequent cover-up.

After Abdo's arrest, Texas Gov. Rick Perry issued a statement calling it "a sobering reminder of the importance of remaining vigilant in the ongoing efforts to protect our communities from those that would do us harm."

Rep. John Carter, R-Texas, the House Army Caucus chairman, praised the gun-shop employee who tipped police to Abdo, as well as the police themselves, for interrupting what could have been a deadly plot.

"Thanks to quick action by a Texas gun dealer in alerting local police to a suspicious character, and a prompt and vigorous response by the Killeen Police Department, we may well have averted a repeat of the tragic 2009 radical Islamic terror attack on our nation's largest military installation," he said.

"We now have an example of what works to prevent these type attacks, and as the coming days reveal more details about this attempt, we can determine better ways to thwart similar efforts in the future," Carter said.

In addition to being the site of the Fort Hood shootings, Killeen is also where, in 1991, George Hennard crashed his pickup into a Luby's cafeteria, fatally shot 23 people and wounded another 20 before killing himself.

"We've been through a lot in this community," Killeen Police Chief Dennis Baldwin said. "But I can tell you that's when the character of the community is more obvious."

CNN's Tracy Sabo, Barbara Starr, Marylynn Ryan and Carol Cratty contributed to this report.


Quoting : CNN.com

8/21/11

Norway honors terror victims

Memorial service honors Norway victimsYouth leader vows that the Labour Party's youth movement will return to UtoyaA memorial service for victims of the attacks takes place in OsloThe first two funerals, both for teenagers, are heldAnders Behring Breivik was questioned by police

Oslo, Norway (CNN) -- Norway paid tribute Friday to those killed and wounded in two terror attacks a week ago with a somber memorial service in Oslo organized by the youth movement of the ruling Labour Party.

As the service began, Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg recalled the scores of young people lost to a "cold-blooded massacre."

Police raised the death toll from 76 to 77 Friday after one of the wounded died.

The shooter targeted the party's youth camp on Utoya Island, where it was holding a summer camp, after a bombing in downtown Oslo that struck government offices.

"The shots hit our young people but they actually hurt the whole nation," Stoltenberg told relatives of the victims and political leaders attending the service. "It was a vicious attack on all our common values."

The prime minister urged young Norwegians not to feel alone as they struggled to come to terms with what happened, saying the party would support them.

"Out of our grief a much stronger unity will arise," he said. "We are going to honor and celebrate our heroes -- but most of all we are going stay true to our ideas and our values."

Workers Youth League leader Eskil Pedersen, who was on Utoya during the shootings, vowed that the youth movement would return to the island where it has held political summer camps every year for decades.

"Today, we promise that July 22 next year we will be back at Utoya," he said. "We will forever be the generation of July 22. That is a great responsibility," he added. "This is a watershed, a new start and beginning of something lasting and important."

The first funerals for victims of the attacks took place Friday, for Bano Rashid, 18, and Ismail Haji Ahmed, 19.

Rashid, who was laid to rest in a Christian and Muslim ceremony, was reported to be a Kurd who came to Norway with her family in 1996 after fleeing Iraq.

Flags on government buildings were flown Friday at half-staff.

Meanwhile, Anders Behring Breivik, the suspect, was interrogated for a second time Friday, police said.

Investigators had interviewed him a day after the attacks, but had more questions, police attorney Pal-Frederick Hjort Kraby said.

Breivik is being kept in solitary confinement at Ila Prison, near Oslo, which held Nazi prisoners during World War II. His sole contacts are with his lawyer and prison staffers who take food to him, Kraby said.

Breivik has admitted carrying out the bombing in Oslo, in which eight people died, and the shootings on Utoya, his lawyer and a judge have said. He has also pleaded not guilty.

Police said Thursday that the search in the water around the island was ongoing.

More than 50 investigators remained on the island and will likely remain there for several more weeks, officials said.

On Friday, authorities completed the identification of the dead, releasing the names of all 77.

A key question for investigators is whether Breivik acted alone.

"At this moment in time we don't think there are more people involved in this action, and we don't know whether there are more bombs," said Janne Kristiansen, director of the Norwegian intelligence police.

But she downplayed the possibility of further carnage.

"We think, more than likely, he has been on his own and nothing is going to happen here," she said. "So people should go on living their lives."

She said Breivik acted lawfully during his preparations, registering his weapons and used his farm as a front to collect the fertilizer that powered the bomb. His meticulousness extended to his communications with others, even in his Internet messages, which were "very moderate," she said.

"He has been what we call a lone wolf," she added. "With a lone wolf, they always operate alone, having no accomplices anywhere, and this is, obviously, what he has done."

But, she added, "We believe that he might have had contacts in the rest of the world and we're investigating this."

His primary goal: "The focus from the world press, which he now has," Kristiansen said. "He's totally evil, and he's using us, and he's using you -- especially the media -- to bring forward his voice."

Police predicted that most of the court hearings attended by Breivik will be closed to the public.

CNN's Laura Smith-Spark and Nic Robertson contributed to this report.


Quoting : CNN.com

8/20/11

Donut company Dunkin' shares pop in IPO

Dunkin' Brands, the parent of doughnut maker Dunkin' Donuts, traded above its IPO price Wednesday.

NEW YORK (CNNMoney) -- Dunkin' Brands made its debut as a public company Wednesday, with investors showing strong demand for the doughnut maker's initial public offering.


Shares of the parent company of Dunkin' Donuts and Baskin-Robbins started trading at $25 each, up 31% from the list price.


Dunkin' (DNKN) shares rose to a high of $27.70 in early trading on the Nasdaq.


The offering of over 22 million shares of common stock raised $423 million for the company. Dunkin' plans to use the IPO proceeds to pay down debt.


Dunkin' is majority-owned by a group of private equity investors including Bain Capital Partners, The Carlyle Group and Thomas H. Lee Partners. That group paid $2.4 billion for Dunkin' in a 2006 leveraged buyout, and retains about a 75% stake following the offering.


Stephanie Chang, an analyst at Greenwich, CT.-based IPO investment firm Renaissance Capital, said the offering was expected to do well.


"Dunkin is a well-known brand and a market leader with global reach," she said. Investors were also attracted to the company's "aggressive store expansion strategy," she added.


Dunkin' is well known in the Boston and New York regions, where the doughnut and ice cream franchise has expanded rapidly over the past few years. It currently has 6,799 locations in 36 U.S. states, and more than 3,000 stores abroad.


The company opened 200 new U.S. stores last year and plans to open another 200 to 250 locations this year. Its long-term goal is to operate 15,000 Dunkin' Donut franchises nationwide.


The company, whose stores are almost entirely franchise-owned, had total sales of about $7.6 billion last year, according to its prospectus.


In the first three months of 2011, Dunkin' and Baskin-Robbins franchises reported $1.8 billion in domestic and foreign sales, up slightly from last year.


Investors are betting the company's franchise model will help it continue expand rapidly, said Chang.


That's because franchisees pay most of the cost of setting up new Dunkin' Donuts or Baskin-Robbins locations. In addition, the company has little exposure to volatile commodity prices, since the store owners pay those costs too.


Despite the company's name, Dunkin' Donuts sells more coffee than fried dough.


In 2010, beverage sales made up 60% of total sales. The rest came from sales of baked goods, including doughnuts, bagels and sandwiches.


Dunkin's main competitors are McDonalds (MCD, Fortune 500) and Starbucks (SBUX, Fortune 500), which also sell coffee and baked goods. Its main rival in the doughnut business is Krispy Kreme (KKD).


The offering is the latest in a string of IPOs that have received a warm welcome from investors, including several unprofitable technology companies.


Chang said it's too soon to say how Dunkin' stock will perform after the IPO euphoria fades. But she added that investors have been nibbling on shares of other fast-food companies as the economic recovery slowly chugs along.


"The consumer space in general is an area where investors are showing a lot of interest," she said. "Hopefully that should sustain demand for the stock going forward." To top of page

First Published: July 27, 2011: 11:01 AM ET

Quoting : CNN

Canadian Embassy South Korea

Canadian Embassy - Seoul, South Korea
16-1 Jeong-dong
Jung-gu
CPO Box 6299
Seoul, Korea 100-662
Tel: 822-3783-6000
Fax: 822-3783-6239


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8/19/11

Libya rape accuser arrives in U.S.

Alleged Libyan rape victim Eman al-Obeidy says she is excited and happy to be in the United States.Eman al-Obeidy arrives in New York, flies to her final destinationShe had been in a UN refugee facility in Romania since June 6She thanks the U.S. government, secretary of state

(CNN) -- Eman al-Obeidy, who caught the world's attention in March when she publicly accused members of Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi's forces of gang-raping her, has relocated to the United States.


After spending 54 days in a U.N. High Commissioner for Refugees facility in Romania, Obeidy arrived in New York late Wednesday night, then boarded a flight to the destination where she will reside.


She told CNN she is excited and happy to be in the United States, and passed her thanks to the U.S. government and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, adding that she hopes to meet her someday.


Other than her brief conversation with a CNN producer, she said she is not ready to speak to the media.


The relocation is the latest leg in a harrowing odyssey that began March 26, the day al-Obeidy stormed into the Rixos Hotel in Tripoli, Libya, where international journalists were having breakfast, and shouted that she had been taken from a checkpoint and held against her will for two days while being beaten and raped by 15 of Gadhafi's militiamen.


A scuffle ensued, and government officials and hotel staff whisked her outside to a car, and she was driven away.


She wasn't heard from for more than a week. In the days afterward, in interviews with CNN and other media, she spoke graphically of her ordeal and said she feared she would never feel safe in Libya.


In May, she escaped to Tunisia with the help of a defecting military officer and Libyan rebels, and found temporary sanctuary in Qatar before being deported back to Benghazi in Libya in early June.


She was granted asylum in the United States, and on June 6 arrived at the U.N.refugee facility in Romania.

More on Eman al-Obeidy's story


Quoting : CNN.com

RRSPs - A Canadian Tax Break

Updated: 01/08/11

Whether you're just starting out in the work force, or well advanced in your retirement planning, it's in your best interest to stay up to date on one of Canada's best tax breaks - registered retirement savings plans or RRSPs. The deadline to make contributions eligible for deductions on your 2010 income tax is midnight March 1, 2011, but the sooner you make your contribution, the better. December 31 of the year you turn 71 is the last day you can contribute to your own RRSP.

It may not be light reading, but the authoritative source on retirement savings plans is the Canada Revenue Agency section on RRSPs and related plans. It's a good idea to look through this area before the RRSP deadline arrives, in case there are still ways you can save on your taxes. You'll find information on setting up an RRSP, making contributions and withdrawals, getting payments and what to do when you turn 71.

Most Canadian banks and financial planning sites also have general RRSP information. One example is Investor Education Fund: RRSPs where you can find useful articles on the basics, from contributing to an RRSP, choosing the right RRSP for you and getting income from your RRSP savings.

When you're planning your RRSP contribution, be sure to find out your RRSP contribution limit. It's also a good idea to get a copy of the latest general income tax package and do a rough cut on your income taxes so you can see what the tax benefits of different levels of RRSP contributions will be.

It's easy to get a quick handle on the going rates for RRSPs online. CANOE Money, for example, has a useful RRSP rates chart that shows current RRSP rates at major financial institutions across Canada.

If you still prefer to keep your RRSPs with Canadian banks, you can probably make this year's contribution online. Many Canadian financial institutions allow you to contribute to an RRSP through online banking. Most restrict you to already having an RRSP with the particular bank, and paying with funds from an account at the same bank.


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Ontario Elections

Ontario now has set dates for provincial general elections. The next Ontario provincial election is scheduled for Thursday, October 6, 2011.

On October 10, 2007, at the same time as the 2007 Ontario general election, a referendum was held to ask Ontario voters which type of electoral system should be used in the future to elect members to the Ontario Legislative Assembly. Ontario voters rejected the proposed electoral reform.

Not sure about the meaning of a term or phrase used in Canadian elections? Look it up here.


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8/18/11

Mystery over Libya rebel leader death

Details murky on Libya rebel chief deathNEW: Younis' killing is "more proof that the transitional council of the traitors is not able to lead," says IbrahimThe death of the top rebel commander in Libya stokes speculation of a rebel rift An ex-ambassador says "revenge by Tripoli" is the "most likely scenario"One expert says the death is a reminder of the rebel coalition's fragility

Tripoli, Libya (CNN) -- The killing on Thursday of the top rebel military commander shows that those forces are in disarray, a spokesman for Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi said Friday.

Gen. Abdul Fattah Younis and two other rebels were killed after the country's main rebel organization, the Transitional National Council, sought to question him about military matters and allegations that he or those close to him had ongoing ties to Gadhafi, Younis' supporters said.

Younis' killing represents "more proof that the transitional council of the traitors is not able to lead any sort of government or have any control of eastern cities of Libya," said Musa Ibrahim, the Gadhafi spokesman.

Ibrahim accused two members of al Qaeda of having arrested Younis with the help of the Transitional National Council and subsequently charging Younis with treason for "betraying the cause."

But the abductors knew that a fair trial would have been lengthy and that Younis' tribe would have intervened to help him, so they killed him, Ibrahim said. "He was shot and his body was immediately disfigured," he added.

The killing shows that "al Qaeda is the real power among the rebels," he said, repeating Gadhafi's assertion that rebel forces are allied with al Qaeda. "They have the most soldiers; they have the training; they have the weapons; they have the faith -- a wicked faith; they have the strategies."

The killing also sends a powerful message to other tribes: "Try to exclude us from your settlement, your political settlement, and this is your fate," Ibrahim said.

Younis was killed along with a colonel and a lieutenant colonel, the Transitional National Council said in a prepared statement. No further details were immediately released.

The deaths have provoked questions and stirred speculation that they might cause a rift among opposition leaders.

"We really don't know what happened yet," said Marina Ottaway, senior associate of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace's Middle East program. "Politically, it's a reminder of how tenuous a coalition it is."

Rebels have been battling government troops in a fight to oust Gadhafi, who has ruled the North African nation for nearly 42 years.

NATO has used air power to enforce a U.N. resolution protecting civilians from the regime, and world powers have announced their support for Libya's rebel umbrella group.

This week, the United Kingdom joined the United States and other Western powers in recognizing the TNC as the legitimate governing authority in Libya, a decision that could steer millions of dollars to the opposition.

Younis had served as interior minister in Gadhafi's government until February, when he defected to the Benghazi-based rebel movement.

A onetime general in Gadhafi's army, Younis told CNN in February that he switched sides after Gadhafi told him he planned to bomb Benghazi -- a move Younis said would have killed thousands.

A young man in a tan uniform who spoke in Benghazi after Friday Muslim prayers said on rebel TV that Younis "was assassinated by him like the other martyrs of Libya" and called for "revenge for everyone who took part in this crime." It wasn't clear whom he was implicating in Younis' death.

The man said that "knowing the truth of what happened to him and avenging his death is a debt every Libyan man and woman owes. My message to Mustafa Abdel Jalil is we will be with you on this path," the man said, referring to the leader of the rebels' government.

Alistair Burt, the British Foreign Office's minister for the Middle East and North Africa, said, "Exactly what happened remains unclear." He added that the "killing will be thoroughly investigated."

"We agreed that it is important that those responsible are held to account through proper judicial processes."

Sir Richard Dalton, a former British ambassador to Libya and associate fellow for the Middle East and North Africa Programme of the London-based Chatham House, said "one scenario is revenge by Tripoli."

However, Dalton said, the ultimate impact of the killing on the opposition movement will depend on the facts that emerge about the killing.

"They've been promising it for a while," he said of the Gadhafi government. "Right from the start, they've threatened people who've turned away. There are stories that AFY (Younis) had rebuffed approaches by Tripoli."

There have been tensions between different parts of the opposition forces, Dalton said. So a "second hypothesis" is that a quarrel got "out of hand. But he warned not to jump to conclusions about the significance of a "single episode."

"We haven't got much to go on," he said. "I think our governments will find out soon."

Ottaway, the Carnegie Endowment scholar, said the killing raises questions about the rebel council.

"It's clear there are divisions" within the Transitional National Council, she said. "There are suspicions of some of the people who went from being close allies (of Gadhafi), as Younis was, to joining" the rebels.

The motives of those who switched sides have been questioned by people who weren't sure whether they had truly made the transition or were just pretending to have changed. There has been speculation, she said, that Younis might have been dealing somehow with Gadhafi.

"The main point perhaps is that the unity at the Transitional National Council is tenuous at best. This is a strange coalition at best," she said. "They are very aware of the fact that they are not an organization that represents the entire country."

As for how the killing might affect the rebels' military effort, Ottaway said it's not clear how much control Younis had. She pointed out that the killing occurred on the same day rebels embarked on an offensive in western Libya. The fighters said their forces captured five towns and surrounded a sixth in the plains below the Nafusa mountain range, which borders Tunisia.

Mark Quarterman, a senior adviser and director of the Center for Strategic and InternationalStudies' Program on Crisis, Conflict and Cooperation, said the "potential implications" of the death are "very worrisome" and could help the Gadhafi regime in the short run.

The death has had the effect of "roiling rebel politics," Quarterman said. The killing has fomented anger among members of Younis' Obeidi tribe, according to news reports.

Quarterman, an expert on the Libyan crisis, said the killing undermines the bet NATO powers have made that, by enforcing the U.N. resolution protecting Libyans, they would give rebels space to defeat Gadhafi forces.

Quarterman noted that Younis had been engaged in a dispute with another rebel commander, Khalifa Hifter.

"They seem unable to take and hold territory. This makes things worse," Quarterman said. "You can't have a lot of faith and confidence in forces saying, 'I'm the commander, no I'm the commander.'

"If this disarray does continue, this only benefits Gadhafi. And it makes the coming of a post-Gadhafi Libya that much more distant."

There has been talk among world powers about negotiated settlements and scenarios that could include Gadhafi remaining in Libya after the conflict ends, Quarterman said.

The international sense that the conflict would end quickly with "capitulation on the part of the Gadhafi regime is fading," Quarterman said.

"As a result, the end game is seeming much more murky."

CNN's Joe Sterling contributed to this report.


Quoting : CNN.com

Winnipeg Facts

Winnipeg is the capital city of the province of Manitoba, Canada. Located at the geographical centre of Canada, Winnipeg is a transportation centre, with extensive rail and air links, as well as the head offices of several major Canadian trucking firms. Winnipeg has a diverse economy and is also a multicultural city where more than 100 languages are spoken. While Winnipeg is an eminently affordable city, it is host to world-class ballet, theatre, visual arts, music and festivals.

Winnipeg is located at the junction of the Red and Assiniboine Rivers, near the centre of North America.

464.01 sq km (179.16 square miles)(Statistics Canada, 2006 Census)

633,451 (Statistics Canada, 2006 Census)

1870

1873. Reincorporated in 1972.

A Winnipeg general municipal election is held every four years on the fourth Wednesday in October. This includes elections for the Mayor and city councillors, as well as elections for school trustees.

Date of the last Winnipeg municipal election: Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Date of the next Winnipeg municipal election: Wednesday, October 22, 2014

Winnipeg's city council is made up of 16 elected representatives: one mayor and 15 city councillors.

Major attractions in the capital city include:

Winnipeg has short, very warm summers and long bitterly cold winters. Winnipeg gets lots of snow, usually starting in November and sometimes not finishing until April. Winnipeg is also a windy city, which can make winter more difficult. On the positive side, Winnipeg has the most days of winter sunshine of any Canadian city, and is also dry, which makes the cold more tolerable.


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Lagarde: 'Clock is ticking' on U.S. debt

~ Christine Lagarde, the managing director of the International Monetary Fund, said Tuesday the U.S. government needs to act immediately to resolve the impasse over the federal debt ceiling."On the debt ceiling, the clock is ticking, and clearly the issue needs to be resolved immediately," said Lagarde in a speech delivered at a conference in New York.Lagarde, the former finance minister of France, said the U.S. government also needs to come up with a convincing plan to bring down long-term budget deficits and reduce unsustainable debt levels. "A credible fiscal adjustment plan is needed sooner rather than later," she said.The comments came amid a high stakes showdown between Democrats and Republicans in Washington over the nation's finances, which could result in a downgrade of the nation's credit rating if officials cannot reach an agreement before next week.The immediate concern is that a delay in raising the federal borrowing limit, which currently stands at about $14 trillion, will impede the government's ability to meet its financial obligations as soon as Aug. 2, when the Treasury has said it will not have sufficient cash on hand.While officials from both sides have said that avoiding a default is paramount, the parties remain far from a deal on basic issues such as spending cuts and tax increases.Lagarde, who replaced Dominique Strauss-Kahn at the IMF last month, praised the rescue package officials in Europe announced for Greece last week, saying the hard-fought agreement should set the tone for talks in the United States."I'm hopeful that the political courage shown by European leaders will soon be followed by bold fiscal action in the U.S," she said.Despite her call for urgent action, Lagarde warned that too much belt tightening in the United States could derail the nation's fragile economic recovery. She said policy makers should act now to put in place measures that would bring down deficits as the economy becomes more robust."The United States could be facing another jobless recovery," she said. "Again, that's why we've advised against fiscal consolidation that is unduly hasty -- even as we stress the importance of getting a fiscal consolidation plan agreed soon."The first woman to run the global financial institution, Lagarde discussed the challenges facing an increasingly interconnected global economy.She highlighted overlapping concerns including issues related to sovereign debt, tepid global economic growth and social instability.The IMF expects "reasonable growth" of about 4% through 2012, "but the recovery remains unbalanced, and risks are clearly to the downside," she said. Emerging economies have been growing rapidly, but are in danger of overheating. In addition, she said the recent surge in commodities prices has raised the risk of social upheaval in the developing world.Meanwhile, advanced economies are struggling with the fallout of the financial crisis, including high unemployment and unsustainable public debts, she said. Quoting : CNN

Canadian Embassy Saudi Arabia

Canadian Embassy - Riyadh, Saudi Arabia
Diplomatic Quarter
P.O. Box 94321
Riyadh 11693
Saudi Arabia
Tel: 966 (1) 488 2288
Fax: 966 (1) 488 1997

See Also:
Saudi Arabia Travel Report


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8/17/11

Travel Safety for Canadians

The best way to have a safe trip when you're traveling to unfamiliar places is to do your research first. Canadian government resources can help with your travel planning.

Before you decide on a travel destination, it's a good idea to check the Travel Reports page from Foreign Affairs Canada. The Travel Reports list lets you look up travel conditions in more than 180 countries around the world. The travel information reports for individual countries cover general conditions, such as crime levels, and types of crime, regulations, information on the local Canadian embassy and emergency assistance, health conditions and entry requirements.

Where appropriate the Travel Reports include Travel Warnings highlighting conditions in countries the department considers unsafe for Canadians.

You'll also be able to read information on current issues of interest to Canadians living or traveling abroad, including upcoming elections, natural disasters and avian influenza.

The Public Health Agency of Canada provides health information for Canadian travelers. The Well on Your Way travel booklet is a good starting point to develop the questions you should ask your doctor before you travel, and includes information on immunizations. For more specific information, check with one of the travel medicine clinics across Canada.


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Temporary Resident Visas

A Canadian temporary resident visa is an official document issued by a Canadian visa office. The temporary resident visa is placed in your passport to show that you have met the requirements for admission to Canada as a visitor, student or temporary worker. It does not guarantee your admission to Canada. When you arrive at the point of entry to Canada, an officer from the Canada Border Service Agency will decide if you will be admitted to Canada. A change of circumstances between the time of your application for a temporary resident visa and your arrival in Canada or additional information available could still result in you being refused entry.


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Young Libyan amputee treated in U.S.

Malaak Al-Shami, who arrived in the U.S. on Thursday, was injured when a rocket hit her bedroom wall in Misrata, Libya.Malaak's home was hit during an attack by pro-government forces in MisrataA rocket struck the house and exploded, injuring MalaakHer brother and sister died in the attackA nonprofit has brought Malaak to the U.S. to fit her with an artificial limb

New York (CNN) -- Five year-old Malaak Al-Shami arrived in the U.S. on Thursday evening to get fitted with a prosthetic leg after suffering injuries in Libya's raging civil war.


She landed at New York's John F. Kennedy International Airport from Germany, the last part in a journey arranged by the Global Medical Relief Fund, a U.S. nonprofit.


The group aids children who have lost the use of, or are missing, limbs or eyes. It says it is funded almost exclusively by donations.


Malaak and her parents are being housed temporarily at The Ronald McDonald House of Long Island, which shelters families with sick children undergoing treatment at area hospitals.


"All the kids that come here, they're bewildered, reluctant; and once they're here, they open up," said Elissa Mantonti, founder of the nonprofit.


Malaak, who arrived in a wheelchair, initially appeared to be tired, but she quickly perked up when the other children housed in the facility came out to greet her.


She got off her wheelchair and started exploring a toy room and play space with the other children. She quickly befriended three Iraqi boys who, like her, speak Arabic.


They, too, were brought to the U.S. by the nonprofit. They suffered their injuries in Iraq's continuing violence, according to Mantonti.


Malaak's rebel-controlled neighborhood in the western Libyan city of Misrata was attacked by pro-government forces on May 13. A Grad rocket, which looks like an overgrown bullet about 9 feet long and 15 inches around, slammed into her bedroom wall and exploded, causing a gaping hole. Her 3-year-old brother and 1-year-old sister died in the attack.


Malaak's right leg was severed below the knee in the attack.


According to Mantonti, her organization helped arrange for the family to be ferried by boat from Misrata, which is still under siege from pro-government forces despite recent rebel advances.


From there, the family boarded a flight to Frankfurt, Germany, and continued onward to New York.


The girl's father expressed a mixture of hope and sadness upon his arrival in the U.S.


"I feel joy that my daughter will get treatment for her leg," Mustafa Al-Shami said.


"At the same time, I feel grief for the loss of my two other children. And, even though I feel that Malaak may never be the same after the attack, I'm so happy that she will be able to walk and run again one day."


She is scheduled for an initial fitting for a prosthetic leg at Shriners Hospitals in Philadelphia, with the fitting process taking up to seven weeks, Mantonti said.

The family plans to return to Libya once the treatment is complete.


Quoting : CNN.com

Ice Storm in 1998

For six days in January 1998, freezing rain coated Ontario, Quebec and New Brunswick with 7-11 cm (3-4 in) of ice. Trees and hydro wires fell and utility poles and transmission towers came down causing massive power outages, some for as long as a month. It was the most expensive natural disaster in Canada. According to Environment Canada, the ice storm of 1998 directly affected more people than any other previous weather event in Canadian history.

The water equivalent of freezing rain, ice pellets and a little snow was double previous major ice storms. The area covered was massive, extending from Kitchener, Ontario through Quebec to New Brunswick and Nova Scotia, and also covering parts of New York and New England. Most freezing rain lasts for a few hours. In the ice storm of 1998, there were more than 80 hours of freezing rain, nearly double the annual average.

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8/16/11

Canadian Embassy Philippines

Canadian Embassy - Manila, Philippines
Levels 6, 7 and 8, Tower 2
RCBC Plaza
6819 Ayala Avenue
Makati City 1200
P.O. Box 2098
Philippines
Tel: (02) 857-9000
Fax: (02) 843-1082

See Also:
Philippines Travel Report


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Budget cuts dominate U.S. defense hearing

Gen. Dempsey is in line to become the next chairman of the Joint Chiefs of StaffSen. McCain expresses concern about defense cuts with "no strategic or military rationale"Sen. Levin predicts "tremendous pressures on the Defense Department's budget"

Washington (CNN) -- The Senate Armed Services Committee could be forgiven had Tuesday's confirmation hearing for Gen. Martin Dempsey gone very quickly. Dempsey is President Obama's nominee to be the next chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, but he just went through a confirmation hearing four and a half months ago when he was nominated to be the Army chief of staff.

The hearing, however, provided an opportunity for senators to discuss the issue that has dominated the hill for weeks: budget cuts.

"What concerns me most about our current debate is that the defense cuts being discussed have little or no strategic or military rationale to support them," Republican Sen. John McCain said. "Our national defense planning and spending must be driven by considered strategy, not arbitrary arithmetic."

Across the aisle, Sen. Carl Levin, the Democratic chairman of the committee, said, "The fiscal realities that confront the nation will put tremendous pressures on the Defense Department's budget. Those fiscal realities require us, when considering defense planning and programs, to take into consideration historic budgetary constraints."

Dempsey testified that this budget debate is an anomaly.

"I'm a student of history, as you know, and I've studied the post-Vietnam period, I've studied the post-Desert Storm, Desert Shield period," he said. "What makes this period different is we're doing all this while we're still actively engaged in conflict and we have young men and women in harm's way. And that -- that adds a degree of complexity and a degree of uncertainty that I think we can't discount."

McCain claimed that the Obama administration is pushing for $800 billion in defense cuts over the next 12 years and asked Dempsey about it.

"I haven't been asked to look at that number," the general said, "but ... we are looking at $400 billion, and I would react in this way: Based on the difficulty of achieving the $400 billion cut, I believe $800 billion would be extraordinarily difficult and very high risk."

The issue of the mission in Iraq, where Dempsey served two long tours of duty, came up as well.

He explained that his sources there tell him it appears "Iran's activities in southern Iraq are intended to produce some kind of Beirut-like moment, and then in so doing to send a message that they have expelled us from Iraq."

Dempsey later, referring to a possible Iranian attack on U.S. troops, said, "It would be a gross miscalculation to believe that we will simply allow that to occur without taking serious consideration or reacting to it."

As in March, when he was before the same committee for his appointment as Army chief of staff, Dempsey is expected to be easily confirmed as the next chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. He would take over for Adm. Michael Mullen, who is set to retire this fall.


Quoting : CNN

Privacy Law

Are you worried about the privacy of your personal information? Do you hesitate to use your credit card online? Do you wonder who has access to the personal information you are required to give Canadian governments? What about Canadian banks? Just what do they do with all the information they collect about you? Who monitors the private sector? Here is a quick overview of the laws governing the collection, use and disclosure of your personal information by both governments and businesses in Canada.

The 1983 federal Privacy Act puts limits and obligations on over 150 federal government departments and agencies on the collection, use and disclosure of personal information. It also gives Canadians the right to find out what personal information the federal government has about them by making a formal request under the Privacy Act. The Office of the Privacy Commissioner of Canada has the authority to investigate complaints.

The governments of all provinces and territories in Canada, except for Newfoundland and Labrador, also have legislation governing the collection, use and disclosure of personal information. The legislation varies from province to province, but the general right to access and correct personal information exists in all, and each has a commissioner or ombudsman who is authorized to handle complaints.

The Personal Information Protection and Electronic Documents Act, or PIPED Act, regulates how private sector organizations collect, use and disclose personal information in the course of business activities. This Act has been implemented in three stages: January 1, 2001 - federally regulated private sector, for example banks and international air carriers, is covered January 1, 2002 - personal health information collected, used or disclosed by federally regulated organizations covered. January 1, 2004 - covers information collected in the course of any commercial activity in any province or territory in Canada, including provincially regulated organizations. If a province has legislation substantially similar to the federal law, then that province may be exempted. At the beginning of 2004, the only province exempted from the federal PIPED Act was Quebec. Quebec businesses are not covered by the PIPED Act, but must comply with the Quebec private sector privacy law.

The PIPED Act establishes ten principles that organizations must follow when collecting, using and disclosing personal information in the course of commercial activity. These principles have been adapted from the Model Privacy Code of the Canadian Standards Association. accountability identifying purpose consent limiting collection limiting use, disclosure and retention accuracy safeguards openness individual access challenging compliance

Individuals can complain to the Privacy Commissioner of Canada about violations, and the Commissioner can start his own investigation without waiting for a complaint.


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8/15/11

Work Permits Canada

Anyone who is not a Canadian citizen or a Canadian permanent resident who wants to work in Canada must be authorized. Usually that means getting a temporary work permit for Canada.

Some temporary workers do not need a temporary work permit for Canada. Categories of workers exempted from needing a temporary work permit include diplomats, foreign athletes, clergy and expert witnesses. These exemptions may change at any time, so please check with the visa office responsible for your area to confirm that you are exempt from a temporary work permit.

Some job categories in Canada have streamlined procedures for applying for a temporary work permit or have different requirements.

The process and documents required to work temporarily in the province of Quebec are different, so check the Ministère de l’Immigration et des Communautés culturelles for details.

You can apply for a temporary work permit as you enter Canada if you meet the following requirements: you are a citizen or permanent resident of the United States, Greenland or Saint-Pierre et Miquelon you do not need a medical exam you do not need a temporary resident visa to visit Canada your job does not need a labour market opinion from Human Resources and Skills Development Canada (HRSDC) or you have a labour market opinion from HRSDC.

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Role of Prime Minister

The prime minister is the head of government in Canada. The Canadian prime minister is usually the leader of the political party that wins the most seats in the House of Commons in a general election. The prime minister may lead a majority government or a minority government. Although the role of prime minister in Canada is not defined by any law or constitutional document, it is the most powerful role in Canadian politics.

The prime minister of Canada is head of the executive branch of the Canadian federal government. The Canadian prime minister provides leadership and direction to government with the support of a cabinet, which the prime minister chooses, the prime minister's office of political staff, and the privy council office of non-partisan public servants who provide a focal point for the Canadian public service.

Cabinet is a key decision-making forum in Canadian government.

The Canadian prime minister decides on the size of cabinet and selects cabinet ministers - usually members of parliament and at least one senator - and assigns their department responsibilities and portfolios. In selecting the members of cabinet, the prime minister tries to balance Canadian regional interests, ensures an appropriate mix of anglophones and francophones, and makes sure that women and ethnic minorities are represented.

The prime minister chairs cabinet meetings and controls the agenda.

Since the source of power of the prime minister in Canada is as leader of a political party, the prime minister must always be sensitive to the national and regional executives of his or her party as well as to the grassroots supporters of the party.

As party leader, the prime minister must be able to explain party policies and programs, and be able to put them into action. In elections in Canada, voters increasingly define the policies of a political party by their perceptions of the party leader, so the prime minister must continuously attempt to appeal to a large number of voters.

Political appointments - as senators, judges, ambassadors, commission members and crown corporation executives - are often used by Canadian prime ministers to reward the party faithful.

The prime minister and cabinet members have seats in Parliament (with occasional exceptions) and lead and direct Parliament's activities and its legislative agenda. The prime minister in Canada must retain the confidence of the majority of the members in the House of Commons or resign and seek a dissolution of Parliament to have the conflict resolved by an election.

Due to time constraints, the prime minister participates in only the most important debates in the House of Commons, such as the debate on the Speech from the Throne and debates on contentious legislation. However, the prime minister does defend the government and its policies in the daily Question Period in the House of Commons.

The Canadian prime minister must also fulfill his responsibilities as a member of parliament in representing the constituents in his riding.


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Don nears Texas coast, could deliver needed rain

Tropical Storm Don is expected to make landfall late FridayThe expected track of the storm is farther south than earlier predictedThe storm could bring up to seven inches of rain to some areas

(CNN) -- Tropical Storm Don was poised to make landfall late Friday on a popular stretch of beach in south Texas, but the promise of much-needed rain for much of the parched state dimmed as the storm aimed farther south than previously predicted.

The storm was forecast to make landfall on the Padre Island National Seashore, between Corpus Christi and Brownsville, between 9 p.m. and midnight, according to CNN meteorologist Dave Hennen. The seashore is not heavily populated.

Don, well shy of hurricane force-winds of 74 mph, is expected to weaken significantly after landfall, the Hurricane Center said. While heavy rain is predicted for coastal areas Friday night and Saturday, the National Weather Service predicts a 40% chance or less of scattered storms farther inland.

For example, the chance of rain was 20% in San Antonio, San Angelo and Abilene.

A narrow band west of the landfall could see between 5 inches and 7 inches of rain, but Friday's predicted track shows the storm mainly drenching mountains in a slice of southern Texas and northern Mexico, then quickly dissipating by Sunday.

At 4 p.m. CDT, Don had maximum sustained winds of 50 mph and higher gusts as it spun toward the west-northwest at 16 mph, according to the National Hurricane Center. The storm was about 95 miles southeast of Corpus Christi and about 105 miles northeast of Brownsville.

Storm surge will increase water levels a foot or two over normal in the immediate landfall area, the Hurricane Center said.

A tropical storm warning remained in effect Friday afternoon from the mouth of the Rio Grande River to Matagorda, Texas.

With the winds expected at landfall to be in the 50 to 60 mph range, limited damage is forecast, according to Hennen.

David Villareal, who operates David's Fishing Lodge in Port Mansfield, said, "I don't see anyone panicking or boarding up."

Port Mansfield is a departure point for those hoping to catch speckled trout and redfish in Laguna Madre, the bay between the mainland and Padre Island.

Companies with personnel along the Texas coast took precautions as the storm neared.

ExxonMobil began evacuating nonessential personnel from offshore facilities in the path of the storm Thursday, spokesman Patrick McGinn said. Gross production of approximately 8,000 barrels per day of liquids and 50 million cubic feet per day of natural gas was shut down.

The U.S. Coast Guard issued a warning Thursday afternoon, urging people to plan and prepare ahead of the storm. The statement cautions residents to stay clear of beaches, to take action early -- including securing boating equipment and hazardous materials -- and to evacuate as necessary.

Any rain would be a welcome relief for many Texas farmers, who are suffering from the third worst drought in recorded history, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

But most farmers had adopted an "I'll believe it when I see it" attitude toward the speculation earlier this week that Don could bring rain to the state, Texas Agriculture Commissioner Todd Staples said Thursday.

CNN's Chelsea Bailey and Molly Green contributed to this report.


Quoting : CNN.com

8/14/11

Statistics Languages in Canada

Canada is increasingly becoming a multilingual society according to language statistics from the 2001 Census of Canada. Statistics Canada says that while most people in Canada speak English or French at home, one out of every six reported having a mother tongue other than English or French.

Statistics Canada says that more than 100 languages were reported in the 2001 Census question on mother tongue. Mother tongue is defined by Statistics Canada as the first language learned at home in childhood and still understood. The fastest growth comes in Asian and Middle East language groups.

According to the 2001 Census, nine out of 10 people in Canada still speak either the English or French languages at home. All the other languages reported as mother tongue are not spoken at home as frequently. Only 10 percent spoke a language other than English or French at home, compared to 18 percent who reported another language as their mother tongue.

The 2001 Census total of anglophones, those who report their mother tongue as English, was 17.5 million, or 59.1 percent of the population of Canada, down from 59.8 percent at the last census in 1996.

The 2001 Census total of francophones, those who report their mother tongue as French, was 6.8 million, or 22.9 percent of the population, down from 23.5 percent in 1996.

In contrast, the 2001 Census total of allophones, those who report a mother tongue other than English or French, was 5.3 million, or 18 percent of the population, up from 16.6 percent in the 1996 census.

Chinese is the third most common mother tongue in Canada, with the number of people reporting Chinese as their mother tongue at a total of 872,400. That's approximately 2.9 percent of the total population of Canada, up about 0.3 percent since 1996.

The other most common languages reported as mother tongue were Italian German Punjabi Spanish

Cree was the Aboriginal language reported as a mother tongue by the highest number of people in Canada at 80,000. The Inuktitut language was claimed as the mother tongue by 29,700 and Ojibway by 23,500.


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High Commission Jamaica

Canadian High Commission - Kingston, Jamaica
The Canadian High Commission
3 West Kings House Road (Waterloo Road Entrance)
P.O. Box 1500
Kingston 10, Jamaica
Tel: (876) 926-1500
Fax: (876) 733-3493

See Also:
Jamaica Travel Report


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Summer in Edmonton, Alberta

To help city lovers make Canadian travel plans, here are summer activities in Edmonton, Alberta and links to local directories, a city map, the local daily newspapers and the Edmonton weather forecast.

Play some golf, or take advantage of Edmonton's river valley parks system for walking and running. There are lots of tourist attractions in Edmonton to keep you entertained. Don't miss a tour of the Alberta Legislature. Be sure to leave time to go to the West Edmonton Mall. The equivalent of 48 city blocks, it has 800 stores, an amusement park, skating rink, and even a casino. Expand your mind with a visit to the TELUS World of Science, Edmonton's planetarium and science centre. To find out what's on around town, check the Edmonton City Guide from Canada.com.

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BP profits hit $5.3B year after Gulf spill

BP CEO explains profit reboundBP reports large jump in profits compared to same quarter last yearRising oil prices offset 11% slump in productionCEO Bob Dudley says 2011 is a year of consolidation for the company

(CNN) -- Oil giant BP is back in the black, announcing profits of $5.3 billion just a year after the Deepwater Horizon disaster left it facing heavy losses.

The company said rising oil prices had helped it record a second quarter replacement cost profit of $5.309 billion -- despite an 11% slump in production.

In the same quarter last year, BP made a loss of $16.973 billion, because of costs related to the Gulf of Mexico oil spill.

BP has paid out $6.8 billion to repair environmental and economic damage in the region.

The company's CEO, Bob Dudley, told CNN that BP had come a long way in the past 12 months.

"It was only a year ago -- just -- that oil was still flowing into the Gulf... We've re-stabilized the company, re-strengthened the balance sheet.

"We've announced new exploration deals across the globe, our credit ratings have increased, and we're back heading in the directions we need to."

An explosion on the Deepwater Horizon oil rig on April 20, 2010, killed 11 workers and left 205 million gallons of oil pouring into the Gulf of Mexico.

Several efforts to contain the spill failed, and the well was not sealed until August, leading to widespread criticism of BP.


Quoting : CNN

8/13/11

Cdn High Commission Malaysia

Canadian High Commission - Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia
17th Floor, Menara Tan & Tan
207 Jalan Tun Razak
50400 Kuala Lumpur
Malaysia
Tel: 60 (3) 2718-3333
Fax: 60 (3) 2718-3399

See Also:
Malaysia Travel Report


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Decriminalization of Marijuana in Canada

Issue - Decriminalization of Marijuana in Canada Canadian Government Plans to Ease Marijuana Laws

Update: 05/26/03

The Issue - Decriminalization of Marijuana in Canada

Canada's Justice Minister Martin Cauchon says that Canadian laws relating to marijuana could do with "modernization." Although the Justice Minister doesn't plan to go so far as to make marijuana legal, he is expected to introduce legislation in 2003 to decriminalize the use and possession of small amounts of marijuana for personal use. In other words, the use and possession of small amounts of marijuana would remain illegal, but jail sentences and criminal records would be replaced with fines.

Background on Marijuana Laws in Canada Marijuana was first banned in Canada in 1923 under the Opium and Drug Act. Since 1997 marijuana has been covered by the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act.In 2000 over 30,000 Canadians were charged with simple possession of marijuana, according to the Senate Committee on Illegal Drugs.Current laws are enforced unevenly across the country.Most of those convicted of possession of marijuana do not go to jail, but do receive a criminal record.Status of Decriminalization of Marijuana in Canada

Two committees of parliament have examined Canadian anti-drug policies and legislation in Canada:
The Special Senate Committee on Illegal Drugs reviewed Canada's current anti-drug policies and legislation and reported in September 2002. The Committee said that marijuana is not a gateway drug and should be treated more like tobacco or alcohol than like harder drugs.The House of Commons Special Committee on the Non-Medical Use of Drugs looked at an overall drug strategy for Canada and issued their report in December 2002. The House committee said that while marijuana is unhealthy, the current criminal penalties for possession and use of small amounts of cannabis are disproportionately harsh. They recommended that the Canadian Ministers of Justice and of Health come up with a strategy to decriminalize the possession and cultivation of not more than thirty grams (about an ounce) of cannabis for personal use.What Supporters Say

For many, like supporters of the Marijuana Party of Canada, full legalization of the possession and use of marijuana is the only route to take. That is not likely to happen in Canada. Arguments supporting the more likely alternative of decriminalization of marijuana include:
current penalties are too harshmost resources are now directed at law enforcement, when they could be better spent on the public health and education aspects of marijuana use and addiction. In its response to the House of Commons Report on the Non-Medical Use of Drugs, the Canadian Medical Association said the decriminalization of the possession of small amounts of marijuana for personal use should be "tied to a national drug strategy that promotes awareness and prevention, and provides for comprehensive treatment."Most of those convicted of possession of marijuana do not go to jail, but do receive a criminal record. A criminal record causes employment difficulties and problems with international travel.What Opponents Say

Arguments against decriminalization include:
when illicit drugs are legalized, drug use increasesmarijuana is a gateway drug to harder drugsdecriminalization would send conflicting messages to young peopleconcern expressed by U.S. drug enforcement officials that relaxing Canadian marijuana laws would increase the likelihood of more marijuana flowing south across the border and could make efforts to secure the Canada-U.S. border more difficult.In July 2002, John Walters, director of U.S. drug policy, told a meeting of the College on Problems of Drug Dependence in Quebec City that marijuana is the most heavily abused drug in the United States and addiction rates have risen in recent years.

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Panel: Set up federal corporation to deal with spent nuclear fuel

President Obama stopped Nevada's Yucca Mountain nuclear waste storage project, shown here in an undated photo."New institutional leadership is needed," the Blue Ribbon Commission on America's Nuclear Future saysPresident Barack Obama created the commission last yearCorporation should use "consent-based" approach to find communities willing to take spent fuel, panel says

Washington (CNN) -- A presidential commission charged with addressing what to do with the nation's nuclear waste is recommending that a new "federal corporation" be created to solve the problem.


It said the corporation should be entrusted with an existing $25 billion fund and adopt a "consent-based" approach to find communities willing to take spent fuel.


"New institutional leadership is needed," the Blue Ribbon Commission on America's Nuclear Future says.


President Barack Obama created the commission last year after he halted the controversial Yucca Mountain project in Nevada, which was to be the final destination for the nation's radioactive waste. Obama asked the group to recommend options for the safe storage and disposal of the used fuel.


In its 154-page report, the commission avoids drawing conclusions about the suitability of Yucca Mountain or any other site as a storage site. But it pointedly says America has the where-with-all to develop safe deep-Earth storage sites, saying the government must find a way to convince communities "that their interests have been adequately protected and their well-being enhanced -- not merely sacrificed or overridden by the interests of the country as a whole."


Experience has shown that any attempt to force a "top-down, federally mandated solution" will fail, the commission said. Instead, the United States should adopt a "staged, consent-based" approach, it said.


There are no quick fixes, the commission said. "Any attempt to short-circuit the process will likely lead to more delay," it says.


The commission's draft report, released Friday, will be followed in six months with a final report after the commission considers public comment.


Few are worried the problem will disappear in the interim. The search for a safe dumping ground for radioactive waste dates back to the dawn of the nuclear age.


Meanwhile, an estimated 63,000 metric tons of spent fuel has accumulated at commercial reactors in 33 states as of January 2010, and the stockpile is increasing at approximately 2,000 tons per year, according to the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.


The March 11 earthquake and tsunami in Japan have only added to the urgency of the issue, the commission said. Following the tsunami, workers at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant were unable to monitor water levels and fuel conditions in four spent fuel pools, and had to resort to pumper trucks and high booms to replenish water.


Among the highlights of the commission report:


-- The commission said Congress should give the new "federal corporation" control of the $25 billion nuclear waste fund, with congressional oversight. "We recognize that these actions mean no longer counting nuclear waste fee receipts against the federal budget deficit and that the result will be a modest negative impact on annual budget calculations," the commission said, but adds "The bill will come due at some point."


-- The commission said the new "consent-based" approach "in practical terms... means encouraging communities to volunteer to be considered to host a new nuclear waste management facility while also allowing (the government) to approach communities that it believes can meet the siting requirements."


-- Congress should remove responsibility for finding a site from the Department of Energy and give it to a single-purpose, congressionally-chartered "federal corporation." "New institutional leadership is needed," the report says, and a federal corporation "is best suited to provide the stability, focus, and credibility needed to get the waste program back on track."


-- Congress should pass legislation to transfer the unspent balance of a $25 billion Nuclear Waste Fund to the new corporation, so the corporation could carry out its mission independent of annual congressional appropriations.


-- The commission notes that even if the Yucca Mountain project is resurrected, the inventory of spent fuel soon will exceed the amount that can legally be placed at Yucca Mountain. "So under current law, the United States will need to find a new disposal site even if Yucca Mountain goes forward," the report says.


-- The commission says both interim and permanent storage facilities are needed. Developing interim storage capacity "would allow the federal government to begin the orderly transfer of spent fuel from reactor sites to safe and secure centralized facilities independent of the schedule for operating a permanent repository," the commission said. Interim facilities are especially crucial for fuel from shut down nuclear plants, it said.


-- The commission says it sees no unmanageable safety or security risks with current methods of storing nuclear waste. But it says research should continue on degradation issues, vulnerability to terrorism, and other issues.


In the draft report, the commission expresses both frustration and optimism. "The overall record of the U.S. nuclear waste program has been one of broken promises and unmet commitments," the report says. "And yet the Commission finds reasons for confidence that we can turn this record around."


The commission is co-chaired by former congressman Lee Hamilton and Gen. Brent Scowcroft.

The report can be found at http://brc.gov/sites/default/files/documents/brc_draft_report_29jul2011.pdf.


Quoting : CNN.com

8/12/11

Alcohol Into Canada - Settlers

If you are moving to Canada permanently or if you are coming to Canada to work for more than three years, you are allowed to bring a small quantity of alcohol (wine, liquor, beer or coolers) into the country without having to pay duty or taxes as long as: the alcohol accompanies you you meet the minimum legal drinking age for the province or territory in which you enter Canada

You may bring in one of 1.5 litres (50.7 US ounces) of wine, including wine coolers over 0.5 percent alcohol, or 1.14 litres (38.5 US ounces) of liquor, or a total of 1.14 litres (38.5 US ounces) of wine and liquor, or 24 x 355 millilitre (12 ounce) cans or bottles of beer or ale, including beer coolers over 0.5 percent alcohol (a maximum of 8.5 litres or 287.4 US ounces).

Except in the Northwest Territories and Nunavut, if you are moving to Canada to settle you may bring in more than the personal allowances of liquor listed above as long as you pay customs and province / territory assessments. The amounts you are allowed to bring into Canada are also limited by the province or territory in which you enter Canada. For details on specific amounts and rates, contact the liquor control authority for the apporpriate province or territory before you come to Canada.

If you are moving to Canada to take up permanent residence or temporary employment for more than three years, and you want to ship alcohol to Canada (the contents of your wine cellar, for example), contact the liquor control authority for the appropriate province or territory to pay the provincial or territory fees and assessments in advance. To have your shipment released when you get to Canada, you will need to show the receipt for the provincial or territory fees and assessments and you will also need to pay the applicable federal customs assessments.

If you have questions or require more information on bringing alcohol into Canada, please contact the Canada Borders Services Agency.

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Key U.S. vote on debt plan delayed

Debt ceiling: The whole world watchesThe House calls off a Thursday vote on the Boehner planHouse Republicans and Senate Democrats call Friday caucus meetingsSen. Reid promises to defeat the Boehner plan, assuming it passes the HouseFailure by Congress to raise the debt ceiling by August 2 risks a possible default

Washington (CNN) -- House Republicans called off a vote Thursday on Speaker John Boehner's plan that would raise the nation's debt ceiling and enact sweeping cuts in government spending, but the possibility remained that the measure could come up on Friday.

"Members are advised that there will be NO VOTES in the House tonight," said a message from House Majority Whip Kevin McCarthy's office. "We apologize for the late notice."

The delay in voting on the proposal revealed a deep rift within the GOP that could undermine the party's latest attempt to avoid an unprecedented national default and stave off potential economic catastrophe.

Boehner, R-Ohio, was unable to muster sufficient support from his own caucus to guarantee his proposal would pass in the face of expected unified Democratic opposition. Even if the Boehner plan does pass the House, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nevada, has promised the Democratic-controlled Senate will block it.

McCarthy's announcement came more than four hours after the House had been expected to vote on the Boehner plan. The House Republican caucus then announced a previously unscheduled meeting for 10 a.m. Friday morning.

In an indication of the seriousness of the debt ceiling issue in Congress, Reid also announced that Senate Democrats will hold their own meeting at the same time.

Democratic leader Rep. Nancy Pelosi accused the Republicans of taking the country to "the brink of economic chaos," saying they needed to come back to "the table to negotiate a bipartisan, balanced agreement."

The tone was similar from Democratic National Committee Chair Debbie Wasserman Schultz, who said Thursday's developments should be a "wakeup "call to the "intransigent Republican majority" in the House.

"Now that his attempt at partisan politicking has failed, I hope that Speaker Boehner will finally join with President Obama and Democratic Congressional leaders in a serious way to enact bipartisan legislation to prevent an historic and catastrophic default on the United States' debt," she said.

Earlier, Rep. Nan Hayworth, R-New York, who supports the Boehner plan, told CNN that some members "have had a lot of deep thinking to do" about their votes, and said the delay might be to confirm "the last few" supporting votes.

The vote in the House had been scheduled for roughly 6 p.m. ET. Few if any Democrats were expected to back the measure. Assuming House Democrats remain united against the bill, Boehner will need the support of at least 216 of the House's 240 Republicans.

After announcement of the delay in the vote, conservative congressmen were seen entering and leaving Boehner's office as the speaker tried to generate the necessary support. A floor debate on the plan was cut short, and the House moved on to discuss the naming of a post office in Illinois.

Staff members were later seen carrying pizzas from a local restaurant into Boehner's office.

Defeat of the measure would be a major setback for Boehner, who assumed his post in January, and further muddy the already tense negotiations over a deficit reduction deal that would also increase the federal borrowing limit. In particular, it would show Boehner was unable to control the tea party conservatives elected last year in a Republican wave that delivered a GOP majority in the House and his ascension to speaker.

Earlier, Boehner declared to reporters that the measure would pass, but McCarthy, R-California, only would say progress was being made in rounding up the votes.

Another speaker at the news conference, Republican Rep. Renee Ellmers of North Carolina, let slip there's more work to be done, calling on House colleagues "who may not be there yet" but were "moving forward on those votes."

Whether Boehner can push the measure through remains an open question. Tea party-backed conservatives staged a virtual revolt against the bill over the past two days, complaining that it doesn't do enough to shrink the size of government and stem the tide of Washington's red ink.

"We don't have the votes yet, (but) we're going to get it passed," Boehner declared Thursday morning to his caucus, according to one Republican source who spoke on condition of not being identified.

Some Republicans have said this will be their last, best proposal. Senate Democrats, however, have warned the plan is dead on arrival on their side of Capitol Hill even if it passes the House.

Reid declared that the Senate was prepared to immediately vote on -- and defeat -- the speaker's plan, assuming the House approves it.

"There are things that either side cannot get," Reid said Thursday morning, adding that Republicans need to "accept that and move on." Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-New York, called Boehner's proposal "a futile gesture."

GOP leaders responded by accusing the Democrats of playing political games.

"When is somebody on the other side of the aisle going to say yes?" Boehner asked. "We have a reasonable, responsible (plan). Let's pass this bill and end this crisis."

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Kentucky, warned that "Democrats are playing with fire here."

"It's hard to conclude that they're doing it for any other reason than politics," he said.

White House Chief of Staff Bill Daley told CNN on Thursday that, presuming the Boehner plan wins House approval and gets blocked in the Senate, the next step is for everyone "to take a step back in the Congress and look at where is a point of compromise."

Daley said that similarities between the Boehner plan and a competing proposal offered by Reid "may be the grounds for a deal that, hopefully, both parties can pass."

Both the House and Senate planned to work through the weekend, and officials say ongoing behind-the-scene talks will continue.

As the political maneuvering continues, the clock continues to tick down. If Congress fails to raise the current $14.3 trillion debt ceiling by August 2, Americans could face rising interest rates and a declining dollar, among other problems.

Some financial experts have warned of a downgrade of America's triple-A credit rating and a potential stock market plunge. The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell nearly 200 points Wednesday, but opened positively Thursday on the basis of encouraging news from job and housing markets.

Without an increase in the debt limit, the federal government will not be able to pay all its bills next month. President Barack Obama recently indicated he can't guarantee Social Security checks will be mailed out on time.

Regardless, some conservatives insist they won't back the Boehner plan or anything short of deep spending cuts, caps on future spending and a balanced budget to the U.S. Constitution. Rep. Phil Gingrey, R-Georgia, told CNN on Thursday morning that he's not on board.

"I love my speaker, (but) we just keep spending," Gingrey complained. A balanced budget amendment is "the only way we can constrain ourselves," he said.

However, one of the GOP's party elders, Arizona Sen. John McCain, argued Wednesday that it's "worse than foolish" to suggest the current Congress will pass such an amendment by August 2. It's "bizarro," McCain said.

Leaders of both parties now agree that any deal to raise the debt ceiling should include long-term spending reductions to help control spiraling deficits. But they differ sharply on both the nature and timetable of the cuts. Republicans are seeking another vote on the debt ceiling before the 2012 election; Democrats call the demand a political nonstarter and economically destabilizing.

The Boehner and Reid plans both suffered setbacks earlier this week when the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office released reports concluding that they fell short of their stated deficit reduction goals.

Specifically, the CBO concluded that Boehner's plan would cut spending by $850 billion rather than the $1.2 trillion proponents claimed it would save, which was below the $900 billion increase in the debt ceiling included in the measure.

Boehner has since revised his plan, and the CBO now estimates it would generate a total of $917 billion in savings over the next decade, an increase of about $65 billion over the initial version.

With the revisions, Boehner's proposal now meets his pledge to match any debt ceiling hike with dollar-for-dollar spending cuts.

Boehner's plan would require two separate votes by Congress, allowing for a combined debt ceiling increase of up to $2.5 trillion. In addition to imposing nearly $1 trillion in spending reductions, it would create a special congressional committee to recommend additional savings of $1.6 trillion or more.

Any failure on the part of Congress to enact mandated spending reductions or abide by new spending caps would trigger automatic across-the-board budget cuts.

The plan also calls for a congressional vote on a balanced budget amendment to the Constitution by the end of the year.

Boehner has promised anxious conservatives votes on two versions of a balanced budget amendment on Friday, according to GOP leadership sources.

One version, if adopted by the states, would require Washington to maintain a balanced budget. The other version, one that conservatives have long been pushing, would also require a super-majority vote in both chambers to approve any tax increases.

As for Reid's plan, a CBO analysis released Wednesday concluded it would reduce deficits over the next decade by $2.2 trillion -- $500 billion short of promised savings of $2.7 trillion. Democrats had been claiming their plan would meet the GOP's demand that total savings should at least match any debt ceiling hike through 2012.

Michael Steel, a spokesman for Boehner, said Wednesday that the CBO analysis of Reid's proposal "shows the Senate plan for what it is: a grab-bag of gimmicks that gives the president a blank check."

Democrats responded by arguing that Reid's plan has more guaranteed savings than Boehner's. They also promised that the final version of Reid's bill will include more savings.

Reid's plan would cut spending by $1.8 trillion as part of the total $2.2 trillion in savings, according to the CBO. Roughly $1 trillion in the savings are based on the planned U.S. withdrawals from military engagements in Afghanistan and Iraq.

Limiting future discretionary spending would save another $751 billion, and an estimated $375 billion would be saved in interest payments due to reduced borrowing because of the spending cuts.

Reid's plan also would establish a congressional committee made up of 12 House and Senate members to consider additional options for debt reduction. The committee's proposals would be guaranteed by a Senate vote with no amendments by the end of the year.

Among other things, Reid has stressed that his plan meets the key GOP demand for no additional taxes. Boehner, however, argued this week that Reid's plan fails to tackle popular entitlement programs such as Medicare, which are among the biggest drivers of the debt.

Beneath the harsh partisan rhetoric, there have been signs of a growing recognition of a need for further compromise. McConnell called Tuesday for renewed negotiations with Obama, and indicated that his party must be willing to move away from some of its demands.

Sources close to the negotiations have told CNN that Vice President Joe Biden is very much in the mix of the back-channel conversations that are occurring on a possible fallback position.

Obama made a nationally televised plea for compromise Monday night.

A CNN/ORC International Poll reveals a growing public exasperation and demand for compromise. Sixty-four percent of respondents to a July 18-20 survey preferred a deal with a mix of spending cuts and tax increases. Only 34% preferred a debt reduction plan based solely on spending reductions.

According to the poll, the public is sharply divided along partisan lines; Democrats and independents are open to a number of different approaches because they think a failure to raise the debt ceiling would cause a major crisis for the country. Republicans, however, draw the line at tax increases, and a narrow majority of them oppose raising the debt ceiling under any circumstances.

CNN's Ted Barrett, Kate Bolduan, Gloria Borger, Keating Holland, Brianna Keilar, Jeanne Sahadi, Xuan Thai, Jessica Yellin and Deirdre Walsh contributed to this report.


Quoting : CNN

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