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Ontario to sell off 60% of Hydro One, allow beer in grocery stores

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 16 April 2015 | 21.48

Ontario's Liberal government will announce this morning that it plans to sell off 60 per cent of Hydro One and allow the sale of beer in some grocery stores.

CBC has confirmed the details of a report to be released this morning into how Ontario's Liberal government can squeeze more money out of big Crown assets such as the Liquor Control Board of Ontario (LCBO) and Hydro One, the province's electrical transmission utility. 

CBC News has also confirmed that current Hydro One chair Sandra Pupatello will soon be succeeded by David Denison, former president and CEO of the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board.

The report comes ahead of the provincial budget, which is set to be released on April 23. 

The province will retain a 40 per cent stake in Hydro One, and no minority shareholder will be able to buy more than 10 per cent of the company.

Ontario's opposition parties have warned that a sale of Hydro One will drive up electricity prices, something the Liberals warned would happen when the Tories wanted to privatize it in 2002.

Premier Kathleen Wynne said Wednesday the government would retain majority ownership and would make sure consumers are protected against price hikes.

The panel will also recommend that Ontario expand beer sales to more retail outlets.

There were reports the government was planning to allow the sale of wine in grocery stores, but it now appears that change won't come right away. 

In an interim report, the panel headed by former TD Bank CEO Ed Clark rejected that the province sell the LCBO, but proposed major changes to the retail system to give consumers more access, especially to beer.

He wants the foreign-owned Beer Store to pay a fee for its virtual monopoly on 80 per cent of beer sales, so Ontario taxpayers get a "fair share" of its profits.

Wynne has said she wants consumers to have more access to beers from Ontario's craft brewers, who complain the Beer Store makes it difficult -— and expensive —  to list their products in its 448 retail outlets. 


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RBC customer says fraudster fooled telephone banking agent

A Royal Bank branch in Cornwall, Ont., has apologized to a customer who says a stranger gained access to his account via telephone banking, even though he gave the wrong answers to the security questions.

Montreal resident Glen Langburt told CBC Daybreak on Thursday that he first learned of the alleged identity theft in mid-March after his wife tried to fill up at a gas station, and discovered her debit and credit cards had been frozen.

Langburt called the bank and discovered that an unknown man had recently called up Royal Bank's customer service line to gain access to his account.

"I'm shocked. I've been a Royal Bank customer for 45 years now," Langburt said.

He said he was able to get a transcript of the phone call, and recounted some of the call details to Daybreak host Mike Finnerty.

First, he said, the caller got questions about his birth year, banking products and regular deposits wrong. He said the customer service agent did not ask his personal security questions — for example, the name of his first pet or the town his father grew up in.

Then, Langburt said, "The [customer service] person on the phone feeds the fraudster one of my work addresses."

The would-be thief then changed the address on file and ordered new cheques.

"These cheques were sent out right away. The bank tried to stop them but they were sent out within a day," Langburt said.

RBC sent CBC News an email statement saying it is carefully reviewing the case.

"It's a rare and unique occurrence," a representative of the bank said. "We apologize to the clients for this incident, and we are committed to taking steps to resolve the matter and to help protect them."

Langburt said the bank told him that since he didn't incur a financial loss, there wasn't much they could do besides limiting the number of people at RBC who can make changes to his account.

He said he came forward to warn others about this kind of identity theft.

"The bank is really responsible for all this right now," Langburt said.


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'Blinking is like a kitty kiss': Researchers aim to decipher how cats talk to us

When it comes to cats, those meows mean … well, a lot of things.

With each purr, yowl or even blink, felines are saying, "Hello," "Let's snuggle" or "Beat it, Mom." For the increasing number of cat owners who want to connect with their often-aloof fur babies, experts say there's something to gain from those attempts at communication.

Cats are very independent, and so they are easily misunderstood, says Dr. Gary Weitzman, chief executive of the San Diego Humane Society and SPCA and author of the new National Geographic book How to Speak Cat. He aims to unravel the mystery by helping people discern what cats are trying to convey.

Blinking is like a kitty kiss.- Dr. Gary Weitzman

Crafty kitties can make 16 different meow sounds and usually only unleash them when people are around, he said. Meows can be their way of saying feed me, pet me or let me out, and hardly ever get exchanged between cats.

That's because cats learn they can get something desirable from people if they meow, said Dr. Bonnie Beaver, executive director of the American College of Veterinary Behaviourists and a professor at Texas A&M University's College of Veterinary Medicine. She also wrote the 2003 textbook Feline Behavior.

The meaning of a scratch or a hiss is pretty clear, but cats can talk in more subtle ways — with their eyes and tails. A slow blink from a feline, for example, is like a wink between friends, Weitzman said.

Like a handshake

"Blinking is like a kitty kiss," he said.

Pets Cat Talk

Dr. Gary Weitzman, chief executive of the San Diego Humane Society and SPCA and author of the new National Geographic book How to Speak Cat, gives a chin scratch to Stewart in San Diego. (Lenny Ignelzi/Associated Press)

And extending their tails straight up equates to a human handshake, he said. A cat perks up that appendage as it approaches to show it's happy to see you.

Susan McMinn, 55, of Tryon, N.C., was eager to try the slow-blinking exercise with her Siamese cat, Jade, after reading the book.

"I sat and blinked slowly at my cat, and she blinked right back. I know she loves me, of course, but now I feel I understand her communication even more," McMinn said.

McMinn has owned Jade for 10 years and has had six cats over her lifetime, but she says it's clear she still has a lot to learn. "And I thought I was an expert!" she said.

Even ear and whisker movements signify something worth listening to. If a cat's ears are flat, don't get close because it's scared or facing a fight, Weitzman said.

Help them prey

A kitty is happy, calm or friendly when its whiskers are naturally out to the side. Twice as thick as a human hair and rooted three times as deep, the whiskers guide them, help them with prey and show how they are feeling.

Learning to communicate with cats becomes even important for those who adopt a pet based only on the colour or breed they want versus a connection with the animal.

At Happy Cats Sanctuary in Medford, N.Y., a potential owner might ask for a "white cat with fluffy fur," said Melissa Cox, director of communications and development.

She tells them not to go by looks alone because the true indicator of compatibility is spending time with a cat and getting to know it.

For McMinn, she says she isn't done with the book and plans to use some of its training tips. But now she knows "what to look for in her (cat's) tail and ear movement, whisker positions and in her eyes."


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Saguenay, Que., mayor to address top court's ruling against prayers at council meetings

The mayor of Saguenay, Que., is expected to react this morning to yesterday's Supreme Court of Canada decision striking down prayer at municipal council meetings.

In a unanimous decision, the top court said reciting a Catholic prayer at council meetings infringes on freedom of conscience and religion.

Mayor Jean Tremblay denied interview requests Wednesday following the ruling, but is expected to speak at 10 a.m. ET at Sagenuay city hall.

The case had been making its way through tribunals and courts since 2007. Sagenuay resident Alain Simoneau, an atheist, had filed a complaint with the Quebec Human Rights Tribunal about elected officials praying in council chambers before meetings.

Tremblay, a devout Catholic, was ordered to cease the practice. He instead appealed the decision to the Quebec Court of Appeal, which ruled in his favour in 2011.

Simoneau bumped the case up to the Supreme Court, which agreed last year to hear it.

Tremblay argued that reciting a 20-second prayer before city council meetings respects Quebec's Catholic heritage.

The Supreme Court ordered the City of Saguenay and the mayor to stop the prayers. It also ordered the city and Tremblay to pay Simoneau a total of $33,200 in compensatory damages, punitive damages and costs.


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HMS Erebus video to offer glimpse of ice dive to Franklin shipwreck

COMING UP LIVE

Holes cut through two-metre-thick Arctic ice to give divers access to wooden ship

CBC News Posted: Apr 16, 2015 10:06 AM ET Last Updated: Apr 16, 2015 10:11 AM ET

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Bank of Canada leaves rate unchanged, says growth has stalled

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 15 April 2015 | 21.48

Breaking

Bank says oil price drop hurting economy more now than expected, but pain should be shortlived

By Catherine Cullen, CBC News Posted: Apr 15, 2015 10:12 AM ET Last Updated: Apr 15, 2015 10:14 AM ET

The economic pain inflicted by plunging oil prices is hurting this country more than expected right now, but that pain should start to ease in the next few months, the Bank of Canada said in its latest forecast.

But unlike January's surprise announcement, the bank on Wednesday opted not to change its overnight lending rate, leaving it  at 0.75 per cent.

Bank of Canada Governor Stephen Poloz will discuss his forecast at a press conference at 11 a.m. ET. CBCnews.ca will carry it live.

Canada's economic ills are acute right now. Poloz, famously predicted GDP growth in the first quarter of 2015 would be "atrocious." Now the numbers are in and show the economy effectively stalled, with zero economic growth in the first three months of 2015. The bank had previously estimated growth of 1.5 per cent for the same period.

The central bank says the economic strife caused by oil prices is proving to be more "front-loaded" than predicted, but not larger. It anticipates non-energy exports will start to improve and investments will increase around mid-2015. By the end of 2016, the bank estimates the economy will have reached full capacity.

The bank has also shifted its prediction for overall economic growth in 2015 to 1.9 per cent.

That's roughly in line with the average of the private-sector economists Finance Minister Joe Oliver with last week. They predicted 2 per cent growth for 2015, which is the number Oliver says he plans to use when making his planning assumptions for the budget he intends to table next week.

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The House

  • Week One of the Mike Duffy trial Apr. 11, 2015 2:01 PM This week on The House, with week one of the Mike Duffy trial now in the books, we break down the first week of proceedings and the political implications of the case with the CBC's Terry Milewski, Radio-Canada's Emmanuelle Latraverse, the former law clerk of the House of commons Rob Walsh and the Senate's longest-serving member Anne Cools.

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5 reasons India matters so much to Canada

Canada welcomes Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi for a three-day visit. CBCNews.ca will have live coverage throughout the day, including events in Ottawa and a major Modi speech before a large crowd in Toronto at 7:30 p.m. 

Watch Joint news conference LIVE here at 10:40 am ET 

For two countries that Prime Minister Stephen Harper calls "natural partners" in a new global economy, Canada and India might appear to share a rather meek business relationship.

Not even one per cent of Canadian exports currently ship to India, with goods exports around $3.1 billion in 2014 — less than one-sixth what Canada exports to China.

Promising to open India to global commerce, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi's historic three-day Canadian tour this week seeks to change that.

His trip ends a 42-year dry spell since a head of state from the world's largest democracy visited to talk bilateral relations.

As Harper pushes for a free-trade pact with Modi, Canadian economists and business leaders representing South Asian professionals lay out their case for why India is a social, political, cultural and economic force that matters.

1. A hot opportunity

"Let's not forget there's a race to get to India's door," says Jaswinder Kaur, director of the Canada-India Centre of Excellence in Ottawa.

"We're competing against Japan, the French, the Australians, and this is an opportunity for Canada to demonstrate how we can contribute and make a true partnership."

JAPAN-INDIA/

India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi was elected partially on the promise that he would open India up to global commerce. (Toru Hanai/Reuters)

Canada's Global Markets Action Plan identified India as a priority market, with a burgeoning economy and roughly 11 million people under 30 entering the workforce each year.

India has for years remained the largest market for Canada's pulses (grain legumes such as lentils and peas), and Canada also supplies lumber and potash.

"But are Canadian companies ready to do business?" Kaur says. "That's where the real work is going to begin."

The International Monetary Fund projects that by 2016, India's GDP growth will outpace that of China's becoming the fastest-growing major economy in the world.

In the meantime, two-way bilateral trade has grown to $6 billion, up 47 per cent since 2010, when trade was around $4.09 billion.

2. Energy demands

Much has been made, Kaur notes, of Modi "shopping for uranium" as part of this Canadian tour.

India needs the radioactive element to feed its nuclear reactors, and Canada has a vast supply.

'Mr. Modi will be looking for a signed contract for Canada to be a supplier of uranium, as India desperately needs energy as it expands.'- Elliot Tepper, Carleton University South Asian studies professor

If Ottawa allows, Saskatchewan-based Cameco Corp. could resume uranium exports to India following a ban 40 years ago, when India was accused of testing a nuclear weapon in 1974, and then again in 1998, using Candu technology supplied by Canada.

"Since then, our relations have slowly climbed back up to the point where we have a nuclear agreement," said Elliot Tepper, a South Asian studies professor at Carleton University.

"Mr. Modi will be looking for a signed contract for Canada to be a supplier of uranium, as India desperately needs energy as it expands, and wants to rely more on nuclear power."

Meanwhile, Canadian natural gas and oil will continue to be useful resources to India.

3. Young population

The under-35 demographic represents more than 65 per cent of India's population, and many of them are migrating from rural areas to cities searching for education and employment, both of which Canada can help supply.

GERMANY-TRADE FAIR/

Open for business. India's Prime Minister Narendra Modi addresses the world's largest industrial technology fair, the Hannover Messe, in Hanover, Germany, earlier this month. He has been on something of a world tour, trying to drum up industrial investment in job-hungry India. (Reuters)

Modi's "Make in India" initiative is encouraging international firms to set up manufacturing plants in India to spur job creation at home and become a low-cost alternative to China.

Flipping the saying that China will grow old before it grows rich, Gary Comerford, president of the Canadian Indian Business Council, believes "India will grow wealthy before it grows old."

Over the last decade, he says, a large number of Indians have "pulled themselves out of poverty" and into a rising middle class.

"And that means they're consuming," Comerford says of the next generation of big spenders. "They're getting a fridge, a TV, a cellphone.

"If you take that sheer population of 1.2 billion and convert it into a consuming group, as well as being an economic powerhouse, it will be a political powerhouse as well."

4. Cross-cultural understanding

India remains a democracy with a "remarkably pluralistic society," which Canada can appreciate as a state that welcomes diversity as a foundation of the country, says Tepper.

Indian PM Harper 20150412

Two business-friendly PMs, India's Narendra Modi and Canada's Stephen Harper chat at the G20 summit in Australia in November. (The Canadian Press)

"That makes our two countries both natural allies and rather special in terms of the states of the world," he says, adding that the two countries have worked together quietly for years on such things as counter-terrorism and sharing concerns about violent extremists.

University of Toronto professor Kanta Murali, who analyzes Indian politics at the Centre for South Asian Studies, points to a 1.2 million-strong Indian diaspora in Canada as "central to the excitement surrounding Modi's visit."

A shared history under British colonial rule, a broadly English-speaking population and a democratic system add to a sense of kinship, adds Comerford.

5. A knowledge economy

According to Dherma Jain, president of the Indo-Canada Chamber of Commerce, more than 15,000 Indian students have decided to pursue foreign studies at universities and colleges in Canada.

Modi's visit is expected to seal some educational co-operation agreements such as twinning programs, Tepper said.

"Canada will be providing expertise that India invites as it wants to upscale its own capacity, from technology to agriculture, and attracting people to come to Canada instead of going elsewhere," he said.

India is interested in harnessing green tech as well, notes Karunakar Papala, chairman of the Indo-Canada Ottawa Business Chamber, which represents some 600 business owners in the capital.

Modi's plan for India to develop 100 high-tech "smart cities" that are more energy and resource efficient, could benefit from Canadian know-how. (The Indian prime minister made a similar pitch when he visited Germany recently.)

"Solar technologies, green technologies, Canada has got a lot to offer there," Papala said.


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Liberals lose lead to Tories for 1st time since Trudeau took over: Eric Grenier

For the first time since Justin Trudeau took over the party two years ago, the Liberals have lost the lead in national voting intentions.

While that has placed the Conservatives in top spot, it is the New Democrats who have benefited from the Liberals' slip.

ThreeHundredEight.com's latest poll averages put the Conservatives narrowly ahead with 32 per cent support. The Liberals trail with 31 per cent, while Thomas Mulcair's NDP is in third with 22 per cent.

The Greens stand at an average of 7 per cent support in the polls, with the Bloc Québécois at 5 per cent.

Federal polling averages, Apr. 9

Federal polling averages, with polls in the field to Apr. 9, 2015. (ThreeHundredEight.com)

Stephen Harper's Conservatives have swapped positions with the Liberals almost by default, as the party has been consistently polling at between 32 and 33 per cent since early December and the Liberals have slipped.

Trudeau's party was polling at between 33 and 34 per cent for the first three months of the year, but has been dropping over the last three weeks.

This is taking place as the New Democrats put together their most positive string of polls in more than a year. That was the last time the NDP managed at least 23 to 25 per cent support in four consecutive polls, the same streak they are currently riding.

With these levels of support, the Conservatives would likely win between 120 and 161 seats. That puts them short of the 170 needed to form a majority government. The Liberals would take between 98 and 136 seats, while the New Democrats could win between 61 and 88 seats.

The Greens would likely take two seats, with one to nine seats going to the Bloc Québécois.

NDP gains come in Ontario, B.C.

Liberals votes appear to be trickling to the New Democrats in the areas the party can least afford. In Ontario, where the Conservatives are holding steady with 37 per cent, the Liberals have dropped four points in two months to 35 per cent. The NDP, meanwhile, has picked up three points, sitting at 19 per cent.

With those numbers, the Conservatives could take 49 to 65 seats, with the Liberals winning 40 to 57 and the NDP pocketing 14 to 17.

The NDP is also taking support away from the Liberals in another battleground province. The Liberals and Conservatives are tied with 29 per cent apiece in British Columbia, but that represents a drop of five points over the past two months for the Liberals. The NDP has increased its share by five points to 27 per cent.

The Greens, at 13 per cent, continue to post their best numbers in the country here.

And in Atlantic Canada, the only region in Canada where the Liberals hold a definitive lead, Trudeau's support is starting to falter. From 53 per cent at the beginning of the year, the Liberals have dropped to 46 per cent. Marginal gains have been made by the Tories, NDP and Greens in the region.

Voting intentions are holding steady in Saskatchewan and Manitoba, where the Conservatives lead with 42 per cent. The Liberals trail with 30 per cent and the NDP with 20 per cent.

Liberals, NDP stagnant in Quebec

The New Democrats have not replicated their gains in Quebec, however. The Liberals and NDP are tied at 27 per cent support in the province. By comparison, the Liberals were at 34 per cent and the NDP at 32 per cent in October.

Both the Conservatives, up six points since then to 20 per cent, and the Bloc Québécois, up four points to 19 per cent, have been the beneficiaries. But the Liberals and NDP are still on track to take the bulk of the province's seats: 29 to 45 for the NDP and 19 to 25 for the Liberals.

The Tories could triple their current representation in Quebec, with between 13 and 18 seats. The recent candidacies for the Conservatives of Gérard Deltell, former ADQ leader, and Alain Reyes, the popular mayor of Victoriaville, should help in that regard.

Provincial spill-over in Alberta?

The most unexpected development in federal polling has been the steep drop of support for the Conservatives in Alberta. As Jim Prentice's Progressive Conservatives find themselves in a three-way race, the federal Tories have dropped nine points in the last two months in Stephen Harper's own backyard.

The Conservatives still dominate the province with 46 per cent, but if that number holds on election day it would be the party's worst performance in Alberta since 1963.

The Liberals, at 25 per cent, are holding steady. But the federal NDP has replicated some of the provincial NDP's gains in Alberta, increasing its support by seven points in the last two months. They now stand at 19 per cent, and could conceivably be in the running for two to three seats. The Liberals could win four to seven, with the Tories taking the remaining 23 to 28.


ThreeHundredEight.com's vote and seat projection model aggregates all publicly released polls, weighing them by sample size, date, and the polling firm's accuracy record. Upper and lower ranges are based on how polls have performed in other recent elections. The seat projection model makes individual projections for all ridings in the country, based on regional shifts in support since the 2011 election and taking into account other factors such as incumbency. The projections are subject to the margins of error of the opinion polls included in the model, as well as the unpredictable nature of politics at the riding level. The polls included in the model vary in size, date, and method, and have not been individually verified by the CBC. You can read the full methodology here.


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Mexico replacing army with activism to take on the drug lords: Brian Stewart

There have been times in recent years when Mexico felt that its only hope to stem the rising blood-tide of its drug war was to send in the military to the most affected states, to clamp down on the near anarchy.

For the six years under former president Felipe Calderon, from 2006 to 2012, army units waged tough campaigns against ruthless drug cartels in northern Mexico.

And yet the violence soared with each escalation of force, to the point where an estimated 60,000 people were killed in drug-related violence in these years, while another 25,000 went missing.

To put this in perspective, violence in Mexico has at times surpassed the annual death toll in Afghanistan's civil war.

And while it is not classified as a "failed state," large chunks of Mexico appeared on the verge of becoming so hollowed out by corruption and violence as to be virtually crippled.

People and jobs fled, local economies stagnated, and police and local administrations were too often bought out by the drug cartels.

The recent scandal over the kidnapping and murder of 43 activist students last fall in the state of Guerrero by a gang thought to be allied to local police has rocked the current national government and highlighted its seeming ineffectiveness in rooting out corruption.

Fortunately, however, the picture is not all bleak. Indeed, some social experiments by very brave civic reformers are starting to show promise in pointing Mexico's way back from the brink.

What makes these efforts particularly interesting are the results of two recent reports that help evaluate the usefulness of military action in cities such as Tijuana, Ciudad Juarez, Nuevo Laredo and Culiacan as they compared to a gentler, civic-reform approach. 

Troops arrive, killings increase

The results of army intervention, it seems, were as disruptive as they were depressing. 

Violence did not subside in the face of military boots on the ground. In fact it quickly grew worse, according to a detailed study by the science journal The American Statistician.

Mexico Drug Cartel Arrest

Soldiers escort a man identified as Omar Trevino Morales, alias "Z-42," leader of the infamous Zetas drug cartel, last month after he was arrested in a pre-dawn raid. The military option is still very much a part of Mexico's attempts to dismantle the cartels. (The Associated Press)

In 16 of 18 regions studied, the arrival of soldiers either failed to reduce the number of homicides or saw the number of murders and other crimes soar almost immediately as the targeted cartels simply splintered into ever more warring gangs.

Soldiers trained for combat seemed understandably helpless amid a complex climate of rampant corruption, intimidation of civilians and vengeance killings.

For example, after troops arrived in Ciudad Juarez in 2007, killings rose 15-fold to more than 3,000 a year, which earned the city the sad label "murder capital of the world." It seemed a truly hopeless case.

What's so remarkable, therefore, is that Juarez has, in a very few years, reversed that decline, according to a second report, this from the Brussels-based International Crisis Group.

It may now even be an object lesson for other areas of the world desperate to find ways out of social collapse.

Back from the brink?

In Ciudad Juarez, after the army's intervention failed to restore peace, a broad alliance of civic leaders — academics, non-profit volunteers, feminist activists, business and profession groups — came together and set out to devise a social approach to the problems at hand, especially in poor areas most affected by gang rule.

The group tried to improve the lives of local citizens while, at the same time, demanding accountability from all levels of government, especially local police.

Community centres, schools and hospitals were built or renovated, job programs boosted and special social programs launched for youth most at risk of recruitment into criminal gangs.

Public demonstrations also spread to expose and denounce corruption.

Mexico Drug War

Doctors in the northern border city of Ciudad Juarez take part in a "die-in" protest in 2010, one of the earliest demonstrations to get authorities to guarantee public safety. (The Associated Press)

These were extremely brave efforts given the cartel's penchant for killing anyone who spoke out.

Still, the new united front, using what was called "socio-urban activism," was able to finally get municipal, state and federal governments to join an extraordinary security and justice working group.

Juarez remains a very troubled city with too much crime, but the results of all this civic action have been dramatic enough to attract, this time, positive international attention: homicides have fallen by around 86 per cent, other crimes also plummeted and there is finally a palpable sense of a nightmare passing, the ICG reports.  

"Normalcy seems to have returned, as restaurants and night clubs reopen downtown, factories resume hiring, and local police (not troops) patrol the streets," the group says in its recent report "Back from the brink: saving Ciudad Juarez."

Old-school activism

It's a fascinating story, and none of the improvements came easily. They required, along with much local courage and vision, substantial help from the current federal government of Enrique Pena Nieto.

In office since 2012, Pena Nieto has downplayed, at least somewhat, the military options and pushed instead an ambitious national program to strengthen civil action and boost respect for laws.

Significant funding alongside commitments from six different ministries were given to Juarez as a test case.

Fortunately old-fashioned civic activism, the kind we often belittle these days, had somehow survived against all odds in Juarez and this public resilience was up to the challenge.

Volunteer groups, like those that had previously rallied against violence against women, were experienced enough to spearhead much of the campaign. Doctors, long extorted and threatened by kidnappings, mobilized to support victims in their demands for justice.  

Certain business interests joined with the activists to demand that all levels of governments end the "halo of impunity that envelops the city."

APTOPIX Mexico Violence

Mourners comfort each other during a ceremony last week to honor slain policemen in Tlaquepaque. On Monday, the Jalisco New Generation drug cartel stopped a police convoy on a rural highway and opened fire, killing 15 officers and wounding five in the bloodiest single attack on Mexican law enforcement in recent memory. (The Associated Press)

Of course, it very much remains to be seen whether the Juarez example can work right across Mexico, as the scourge of official corruption and multiplying criminal gangs continues in many areas.

And the distrust of authority is so widespread that vigilante militias are now spreading.

What's clearly critical for there to be success in these cases, though, is that citizens themselves mobilize for reform and governments react as an ally rather than a foe.

As the military option fails, it is possible to look to the Juarez mix of civic courage and empowerment as the only model left to move crime-infested regions back from the brink. 


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No right to pray at municipal council meetings, Supreme Court rules

The Supreme Court of Canada ruled unanimously this morning that elected officials do not have the right to recite prayers at municipal council meetings.

The case dates back to 2007, when Alain Simoneau, a resident of Saguenay, Que., complained about councillors praying in public at city hall.

Canada's top court concluded Wednesday that Saguenay Mayor Jean Tremblay was promoting his own religious beliefs to the detriment of others', which is in breach of the state's duty of neutrality. 

The court has ordered the City of Saguenay and the mayor to stop reciting prayer. 

It also awarded Simoneau $33,200 in compensatory damages, punitive damages, and costs. 

The Supreme Court did not rule out the presence of religious symbols, because it decided to limit the scope of its investigation to prayer only. 


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Was Tom Mulcair right about 'Dutch disease' economics?

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 14 April 2015 | 21.48

The latest national job numbers came as a great surprise.

Great because they were up — a surprise because analysts were predicting the numbers would be down.

The top-line numbers, however, mask the hollowing out of a portion of the Canadian economy.

According to the Labour Force Survey, 1,688,300 Canadians were employed in the manufacturing sector in March, a drop of 1.8 per cent from the previous month.

That means there are currently fewer people working in that sector of the economy than at any time in the nearly 40-year history of the modern Labour Force Survey.

In January 1976, the first month of the new survey, Statistics Canada reported more than 1.8 million people were working in manufacturing.

To put those numbers in greater context — the entire labour force for all industries at the time numbered 9.6 million.

Today it stands at 17.9 million; an 86 per cent increase.

Manufacturing keeps shrinking

Manufacturing has shrunk over the same time period by more than a quarter.

Tom Mulcair attack ad

A screen capture shows an ad produced by the Conservative Party against NDP Leader Tom Mulcair. (YouTube)

Last fall, Bank of Canada governor Stephen Poloz said parts of the sector have lost 75 per cent of their output since 2000.

He pointed out this is more than just cancelling the third shift at a plant — that kind of decline represents factory closures and companies restructuring to slim down.

The closures and restructuring were made necessary because of declining demand from international clients, whose currency isn't going as far as it used to compared with the Canadian dollar.

The loonie was being driven largely by the power of strong oil prices.

"It's by definition, Dutch disease." opined Tom Mulcair in an interview with the CBC in May 2012.

Wilting tulips

The term was coined in 1977 to describe the downside of the discovery of natural gas fields off the coast of the Netherlands.

The ensuing economic boom boosted the country's currency, which was harmful to its other exports and — in the end — the overall economy after commodity prices slumped.

Sound familiar?

"The currency's appreciation of almost 60 per cent over the last 15 years has really hurt the manufacturing sector," is the assessment of Canada's economy by Bank of America Merrill Lynch economist Emanuella Enenajor.

Poloz hasn't used the term (certainly not publicly), but did concede, "capacity in these subsectors has simply disappeared."

It might not come back

Just because low oil prices are reducing transportation and energy costs, and the floundering loonie is making Canadian exports attractive again — it doesn't mean the sector will bounce back immediately.

You can't just turn the lights back on in the factory and start sending the widgets out the door again.

When the energy sector started to lose steam, the old stalwarts of the economy weren't there to pick up the slack.

"The Dutch disease that Canada has experienced has been more than a decade in the making, and I think it has really hurt business confidence," added Enenajor.

Supporting that view is the Bank of Canada's latest survey of companies, which suggests that cheaper oil is reducing their expectations for the economy in the near term.

But that's just economics

It takes economists reams of research and data to offer evidence Canada suffered from, and continues to have the after effects of, Dutch disease.

Mulcair's 2012 diagnosis has merit, but the Conservatives use far fewer words to show that counts for very little in an election year.

"The leader of the NDP calls [the natural resources] sector a disease!" Pierre Poilievre sneered at Mulcair across the floor of the House of Commons last week.

A rebuke even economists have to admit will likely put what they call "downside pressure" on the NDP's vote in at least some parts of the country.


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Shrinking airline seats: What's healthy for airlines causes pain in the back rows

The rapidly shrinking airline seat may be profitable for the carriers, but the discomfort for passengers has drawn the attention of the U.S. Department of Transportation.
   
An advisory committee will hear testimony today from expert witnesses, including the Federal Aviation Administration Civil Aerospace Medical Institute, the Centers for Disease Control, and the inventor of the Knee Defender, a gadget designed to prevent airline seats from reclining.

At issue is the move by many carriers toward higher density aircraft. Airlines around the world, including American Airlines, KLM, Air France and Emirates among others, are expanding their high-cost, high-margin first and business class sections, but they don't want to cut back on the number of paying passengers in economy. So they're installing lighter, narrower seats and squeezing rows closer together.

That is helping push profits skyward, to record levels in the case of Air Canada.

Same space, more seats

According to the Wall Street Journal, in 2010, about 15 per cent of the largest version of the Boeing 777 were delivered with nine seats per row.

airline room

Remember when airline seats came with real room to recline? (CBC)

In 2012, the paper says, more than 70 per cent of 777s came with 10 seats per row.

Seat width is down from about 47 centimetres in the 1990s to as narrow as 42 centimetres on some flights now.

But it's legroom that has become even more cramped.

The seat pitch, or the distance between your seat and the seat in front of you, on Air Canada flights in economy on Boeing's 767-300ER is as much as 86 centimetres.

On Rouge, Air Canada's discount leisure brand, seat pitch on the same plane (excluding Rouge Plus) is 76 centimetres.

"Like our main Canadian competitors, Air Canada has reconfigured its aircraft to add more seats in order to remain competitive," says spokesman Peter Fitzpatrick.  

Fitzpatrick says passengers have the option to purchase "preferred seats" throughout the aircraft that offer more legroom and Air Canada is also introducing "premium economy," with pitch of 97 centimetres in its widebody fleet.

On its Rouge carrier, Fitzpatrick says, "seating is designed to match that available on competing leisure airlines" and has remained the same size and pitch since the airline's launch.

Standard seat pitch on Westjet's Boeing 737s is 79 centimetres to 84 centimetres.

Long legs? You're out of luck

Diminishing legroom can be annoying for average-sized people. If you're above average though, it can be torturous.

"I had to sit almost in the fetal position," says Dave Rasmussen, who is seven feet three inches tall and suffers from a pulmonary condition that makes it hard to breathe when sitting hunched over.  

Rasmussen

Dave Rasmussen (right) has trouble fitting into a regular seat. (Dave Rasmussen)

"I couldn't put my feet down on the floor. I just put a pillow between my knees and the seat ahead and I kind of sat there in the fetal position for the hour flight, or whatever it was."

Rasmussen, who works in information technology for the University of Wisconsin, says he "doesn't have a basketball player's salary" and can't afford to go business class.  

Airline employees used to put him in the exit row, but now anyone can buy those seats for an extra fee. With regular seats getting smaller and smaller, Rasmussen says it has gotten tougher for him to travel.

"I think humanity has sort of lost touch with what's good for people as opposed to profits for executives. I believe that transportation should be something of a utility. It should accommodate the people," Rasmussen says.

Defend yourself

Without legislation, some passengers are guarding their shrinking legroom any way they can.

"Nobody wants to buy [my] product. They buy it because it's the least bad alternative to the situation they're in," says Ira Goldman, inventor of the Knee Defender.

His device, which attaches to an airline seat's tray table and prevents the seat in front from reclining, made international news last summer when a man using it had pop tossed in his face by another irate passenger.

Goldman is scheduled to testify at the US DOT committee hearing. He says that without some sort of regulatory involvement, there's nothing to stop airline seats from getting even smaller.  

"They have no financial downside and every financial upside to cram us in there," Goldman tells CBC news.  

Consider the head of discount carrier Ryanair once famously suggested selling standing-only tickets as a way to cut costs.

A recent study suggested a standing cabin would increase the passenger capacity on a Boeing 737 by 21 per cent, while lowering fares by as much as 44 per cent.


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'I feel beautiful,' says Pink to critics 'concerned' about her weight

Pink 84708437 John Wayne 30th annual odyssey ball April 11 2015

Pink arrives for the John Wayne 30th Annual Odyssey Ball at Regent Beverly Wilshire Hotel on April 11, 2015 in Beverly Hills, California. The Stupid Girls singer has taken to Twitter to tell critics that she's beautiful despite their "concern" about her weight. (Gabriel Olsen/Getty)

Pink has posted an open letter for so-called fans who seemed "concerned" about the singer's weight after she appeared at a cancer benefit this weekend in Beverly Hills.

The 35-year-old American pop star, whose 2006 song Stupid Girls poked fun at celebrity beauties, received less than flattering comments after she was photographed Saturday in a black cocktail dress at the John Wayne 30th Annual Odyssey Ball.

But the mother of one refused to take the fat shaming comments in silence, telling critics "While I admit that that dress didn't photograph as well as it did in my kitchen, I will also admit that I felt very pretty. In fact, I feel beautiful."

Can't see the tweet? See it here.

"I'm perfectly fine, perfectly happy and my healthy, voluptuous and crazy strong body is having some much deserved time off," Pink tweeted Sunday.

"Thanks for your concern," she wrote, signing the note "Love, cheesecake."

Pink's self-love missive inspired an outpouring of support from her fans, who shared pictures of their bodies with the pop star.

The singer, who is married to professional motocross racer Carey Hart, took time to respond to their messages, re-posting some of them to her 26 million followers.

She also shared a photo of herself in the black dress, posing with her daughter Willow, adding the caption:

"Willow said to me the other day whilst grabbing my belly-"mama-why r u so squishy?"And I said.."b/cuz I'm happy baby"


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Canada to join U.S., Britain in training Ukraine military

Prime Minister Stephen Harper has announced Canada will join a training mission to help Ukraine's beleaguered military.

After months of requests for help from the Ukrainian government, Tuesday morning's announcement represents the first time the Canadian Forces have joined Ukrainian forces in their struggle against Russian-backed rebels.

Harper made the announcement at a staged photo call and took no questions. 

A press release said 200 troops will be deployed "on both a sustained and periodic basis" until March 31, 2017, to "develop and deliver military training and capacity-building programs for Ukrainian forces personnel." It's intended to start this summer, the release says.

Defence Minister Jason Kenney and Chief of Defence Staff Tom Lawson are answering questions about the long-anticipated move at the defence department's headquarters.

Canada's British and American allies are already in Ukraine conducting training missions of their own.

Canadian forces are expected to help with explosive ordnance disposal and improvised explosive device disposal training, military police training, medical training, flight safety training, and logistics system modernization training.

Some of the IED skills Canada will pass on were painfully learned during the five-year combat mission in Kandahar, Afghanistan.

The release also says Canada will provide individual and unit tactics training to Ukrainian National Guard personnel as part of a mission led by Americans.

UKRAINE-CRISIS/

Newly mobilized Ukrainian paratroopers carry an anti-tank grenade launcher during a military drill near Zhytomyr on April 9. Canadian troops could soon be joining U.S. and British forces training the Ukrainian military. (Valentyn Ogirenko/Reuters)

The U.S. military has deployed 800 troops to train three — possibly four — battalions in western Ukraine and the British recently sent 75 soldiers to give instruction in command procedures, tactical intelligence and battlefield first aid.

Defence sources say that this deployment will see Canadian soldiers working and housed far away from the battle taking place on the eastern side of the country. Canadian soldiers will be stationed in an existing NATO training centre located in Yavoriv, near the Polish border. 

Training will also take place at the Ukrainian Ministry of Defence Demining Centre in Kamyanets-Podilsky in western Ukraine.

Canada's mission is another attempt to push back against the Russian regime of President Vladimir Putin. 

Both Washington and Ottawa have been under pressure to ship lethal military aid to President Petro Poroshenko's government, which has been struggling to hold a shaky ceasefire together with rebels.

The Pentagon delayed the training program for Ukrainian soldiers last month to avoid giving the Kremlin an excuse to scrap the peace deal struck in February.

There have been widespread reports in the last week that Russian-backed separatists are preparing for a spring offensive in the southern region, a sign the conflict could re-ignite.

Russia could very well consider the deployment of NATO trainers as a provocation at a time when it has rattled most of Europe with massive, snap military exercises along its borders involving tens of thousands of troops.

It strikes at the heart of the dilemma faced by Western leaders: how to stop Russian President Vladimir Putin's slow-motion dismemberment of Ukraine without provoking a major war.

The announcement of Canada's participation comes just days after Estonian President Toomas Hendrik Ilves told a British newspaper that he was in favour of NATO deterring Russia with the permanent stationing of combat units in the Baltic states.

Four Canadian CF-18s took part in NATO air policing missions to protect the Baltic States last year, and a company of soldiers belonging to the Royal Canadian Regiment are currently involved in exercises in the region.

In February, Defence Minister Jason Kenney said Canada was "actively considering different options for engaging" in the emerging training mission, but he also said Canada would and could not act alone in supplying lethal weapons to bolster Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko's government.

The Canadian Press reported in December that a small team of fewer than 10 soldiers travelled to Ukraine to look for training opportunities with Ukrainian forces in the areas of military police, medical personnel and "personal protective measures." Officials did not characterize the very small number of troops as a pre-deployment team.

"There are a number that have come and gone in support of various missions and the military police, they're coming, they will be here for a deployment and then they will leave. This is a continuing effort," then-defence minister Rob Nicholson told reporters.

Tuesday's training mission is in addition to the help offered to Ukraine in the past through Canada's military training and cooperation program, the press release said.


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Supreme Court quashes mandatory minimum sentences for gun crimes

The Supreme Court of Canada has ruled that the Harper government's law requiring mandatory minimum sentences for gun crimes is unconstitutional.

By a 6-3 margin, the high court has upheld the 2013 Ontario Court of Appeal ruling that labelled the law cruel and unusual, in contravention of Section 12 of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms.

Tuesday's ruling is a setback for the government's tough-on-crime agenda.

The ruling said the mandatory minimum sentence could ensnare people with "little or no moral fault" and who pose "little or no danger to the public." It cited as, an example, a person who inherits a firearm and does not immediately get a license for the weapon.

"As the Court of Appeal concluded, there exists a 'cavernous disconnect' between the severity of the licensing-type offence and the mandatory minimum three-year term of imprisonment," Chief Justice Beverley McLachlin wrote for the majority.

The court was deciding two appeals involving mandatory minimum sentences for gun crimes brought by the Ontario and federal attorneys general.

The top court upheld the appeal court's quashing of both the three-year mandatory minimum for a first offence of possessing a loaded prohibited gun, as well as the five-year minimum for a second offence.

The Ontario and federal governments argued that the minimums do not breach the charter protection against cruel and unusual punishment.

The new sentencing rules were enacted in 2008 as part of a sweeping omnibus bill introduced by the federal Conservatives.

The two governments say they enacted the mandatory minimums in response to the increasing number of handgun possession cases coming before the courts.

In one of the two cases that made up the appeals heard by the Supreme Court, a young Toronto man with no criminal record was sentenced to three years after pleading guilty to possession of a loaded firearm.

The judge in the case said that without the mandatory minimum, he would have sentenced Hussein Nur to 2½ years.

In the second case, Sidney Charles pleaded guilty to firearms offences after he was found in his rooming house bedroom with a loaded and unlicensed semi-automatic handgun.

He was sentenced to five years because he had two previous convictions.

In defending the mandatory sentence for repeat offenders, Ottawa and Ontario argued that it is within a reasonable range of legislative choice.

The Supreme Court has clashed with the Conservative government on several key policies, although it recently sided with Ottawa over the destruction of gun registry data, which Quebec sought to preserve.

That win for the Conservatives came after several losses at Canada's top court.

Other recent setbacks for the federal government at the Supreme Court include:


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Why Stephen Poloz can't fix a weak economy: Don Pittis

Written By Unknown on Senin, 13 April 2015 | 21.48

Everyone knows the bit of folk wisdom "If it ain't broke, don't fix it."

But as the economies of China, Japan, Europe and North America coast in neutral, that may be part of the problem.

The latest employment numbers from Canada and the U.S. showed job growth is OK, but not great. Last week, the OECD – the rich-country think tank  released new statistics that, as the Wall Street Journal reported, "suggest the global economy once again faces a patchy, and therefore relatively weak, recovery." 

As global economies limp from crisis to crisis – never breaking but never really recovering, either – does something serious have to go wrong before the world can return to growth?

This is a question that must keep Bank of Canada Governor Stephen Poloz awake nights. And yet keeping destructive forces at bay will be one of Poloz's jobs when he presents his Monetary Policy Report later this week.

Economy stalled

In his newly published book, Stalled, business commentator Michael Hlinka examines why the Canadian economy seems stuck in low gear.

His prescriptions, including a low minimum wage, less welfare, smaller government and low taxes, seem to come right out of a conservative playbook.

And yet after nearly a decade of Conservative government rule, most of it with a strong parliamentary majority, there are few signs that the Canadian economy is about to burst into life.

Hlinka says that in a democracy, governments can't force change down people's throats. The electorate has to be convinced. And he says that's a good thing. But it means that change may need an outside stimulus.

Greece Bailout

The ancient Acropolis is seen through a smashed window in Athens last month. Is it possible to nurse the Canadian economy back to health, or do we need to wait until it is broken, a la Greece? (The Associated Press)

"I think there's going to have to be some kind of [economic] shock, and I'm not quite sure what that shock is," said Hlinka in an interview.

That sounds a bit like the "crisis theory" recently outlined by Canadian political economist Daniel Drache as it applied to the as-yet unresolved economic imbroglio in Greece. 

But as Drache warned, the danger of counting on such a strategy is that one crisis can lead to another and no one knows where it will end. And that is why central bankers from Poloz to U.S. Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen to Europe's Mario Draghi are so anxious to thread their way between the potential abyss of deflation on one side and the unknown jungle of inflation on the other.

The courage to act

This is why the title of former Fed chairman Ben Bernanke's new memoir, The Courage to Act, is earning raspberries from many quarters. Instead of doing something radical that would set the U.S. and world economy on a new track, imply the comments on Twitter, Bernanke bailed out the banks and perpetuated the status quo.

The fact of the matter is, perpetuating the status quo was his job. Whether you think the world economy needs some serious discipline (similar to Hlinka's advice for Canada) or that recovery demands some other radical rethink (as the Occupy protestors did in 2011), you are unlikely to get it from central bankers or incumbent politicians.

Their role is to keep the machine running – with wire and bits of string if necessary – as long as possible, in the hope that the global economy will once again find its footing in the traditional way. In a democracy, the only ones qualified to demand radical change are voters.

And even they can get it wrong, as The Atlantic Monthly reported last week. Last year, Kansas re-elected tax-cutting Governor Ted Brownback, who offered "a real live experiment" to get the state's economy back on track. But whether through a failed strategy or poor execution, the tax cuts did more harm than good and the experiment failed.

Pressures build

There are enormous pressures coming to bear on developed economies. Populations are aging, with fewer workers to support the retired and pay for their health care. Economic growth may be moving to the poorer countries of the developing world as they cry out for a fairer share. 

But fear of creating a worse crisis prevents governments from intervening. That is, until the machine actually breaks. Only then will our elected representatives and the officials they appoint be permitted to try more radical experiments to fix it.

Hlinka is not optimistic.  

"I think what's more likely, however, than the shock," says Hlinka, "is just a kind of downward drift over the next five or 10 years."  

Or as the poet T.S. Eliot said in his poem The Hollow Men, this is the way change happens: "Not with a bang, but a whimper."


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Leafs' house cleaning: Shanahan to address media

Coming up Live

Watch news conference LIVE starting at 2 p.m. ET

CBC Sports Posted: Apr 13, 2015 9:50 AM ET Last Updated: Apr 13, 2015 10:17 AM ET

Toronto Maple Leaf president Brendan Shanahan will hold a 2 p.m. ET news conference today following Sunday's firings of general manager Dave Nonis, interim coach Peter Horachek and several others after the team finished the season with one of the worst records in the NHL. Watch the event LIVE here.

  • Watch the news conference LIVE by clicking on the video player above.

The Leafs found themselves finishing the season with a loss to Atlantic Division winners the Montreal Canadiens on Saturday night, and out of the playoffs, which begin this week with the Habs and four other Canadian teams in the hunt for the Stanley Cup.

The Leafs won only nine of 42 games (9-28-5) since Horachek took over from the fired Randy Carlyle on Jan. 7. At that time, the team was 21-16-3 and in a playoff spot.

Among the Leafs' low lights this season, they won just one road game in 2015, had an 11-game losing streak, and failed to win a game for 16 straight games, the second-worst losing streak in franchise history.

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SpaceX launch chases 'holy grail' of spaceflight — a reusable rocket

WATCH LIVE: SpaceX's launch and soft landing attempt, set for today at 4:33 p.m. ET in Cape Canaveral, Fl., will be livestreamed on CBCNews.ca.

To the SpaceX engineers behind this afternoon's test launch, recycling really is a matter of rocket science.

Railroads don't scrap their locomotives after every trip. Airports don't junk their jets with each flight. Yet for all their space-age know-how, aerospace scientists have long struggled with how to recommission spent booster rockets that cost tens of millions of dollars to build.

That could change after today, if SpaceX's launch and soft landing attempt succeeds in sending its Falcon 9 rocket into orbit and returning it to Earth, intact and primed for another launch.

"It would be utterly revolutionary," says Boston-based space analyst Charles Lurio, a former aerospace engineer who publishes the Lurio Report, a newsletter about the commercial space industry.

"Reusability means you don't want to throw away a multimillion-dollar vehicle on every flight. This would break this vicious cycle we've had since the '60s."

With each of SpaceX's resupply rockets so far costing in the ballpark of $60 million, the prospect of wasting a booster after each launch is not to be taken lightly.

'Close, but no cigar'

The last failed attempt in January was — as billionaire SpaceX CEO Elon Musk put it — "close, but no cigar."

Approaching its targeted ocean barge in January, the Falcon 9's booster rocket headed toward the landing pad, but its steering fan ran out of hydraulic fluid. The rocket struck the barge at an angle, smashing its legs and engine before exploding.

Space X Elon Musk Dragon V2 Hkg9872037 May 2014

SpaceX CEO Elon Musk has said he hopes to some day die on Mars — just not in a rocket crash. (Robyn Beck/AFP/Getty)

John Logsdon, professor emeritus at the Space Policy Institute at George Washington University, remembers the attempt as a near-success.

"It got back, but it didn't slow down enough and bounced off the platform," he said. "But it did get all the way back to the platform."

That was as promising a start as any Logsdon has seen.

"Reusability has been the holy grail in the space business for a long time," Logsdon said. "The space shuttle developed in 1969 was supposed to be fully reusable until it was discovered that was too hard."

'All rockets that need to get up into orbit have to be built as light as possible.'—Kieran Carroll, chief technology officer at Gedex

Conventional launching systems are designed to separate into subsets, or "stages," after the rocket lifts off, shedding fuel tanks and engines that essentially become dead weight after their fuel is spent.

This allows the vehicle to ascend more efficiently, hauling its payload containing science experiments or supplies toward its destination.

Expendable rockets ditch their first stage, or bottom portion of the launch vehicle, into the ocean. By that point, the first stage is a virtual wreck, having been damaged by heat upon re-entering Earth's atmosphere.

An uncompromising equation

Building a beefier rocket isn't the answer, however.

A primary problem with reusability has been an uncompromising principle in rocket design known as the Tsiolkovksy equation, which concerns how much cargo a rocket can carry.

"It's the core equation in all of rocket design. All rockets that need to get up into orbit have to be built as light as possible," said Kieran Carroll, chief technology officer at Gedex, a Toronto aerospace instruments company funded by the Canadian Space Agency.

A typical launch vehicle only dedicates about five per cent of its total mass to payload.

Devices such as landing gear add weight, putting even more of a squeeze on room for the payload capacity.

"So you strip out everything non-essential. Shave off mass so you don't take away from the payload capacity," Carroll said.

That slimmed-down design, however, means the rocket won't last.

Until recent years, Carroll said, the thinking was that "maybe you could build a more robust reusable rocket, but you wouldn't be able to carry any payload."

Carroll said SpaceX designers have since taken advantage of progress in material science. A lighter yet stronger aluminum-lithium alloy, for example, has replaced aerospace-grade aluminum for propellant tanks.

Mars a future target

Commercial space expert Paul Kostek, former president of the IEEE Aerospace and Electronic Systems Society, also points to advances in navigation systems, noting they have allowed for unmanned GPS-guided steering of booster rockets.

hi-spacex.jpg

A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket is seen at the launch site at Cape Canaveral, Fla. SpaceX plans to launch a Falcon 9 on Monday, with the goal of steering it back to a landing pad in the Atlantic Ocean so the booster can be reused. (Reuters/NASA)

Once the Falcon 9 heads back to its football field-sized barge in the Atlantic Ocean, pop-out steering fins will deploy for aerodynamic guidance.

Kostek said landing legs will unfurl as the first stage of the rocket touches down.

Musk, who has stated his wish "to die on Mars, just not on impact," expresses a wider public desire for futuristic manned missions to other planets, via rockets that would land and ferry people between Earth and the moon or the Red Planet.

07739436

SpaceX plans to use an ocean barge as a landing pad for the first stage of its Falcon 9 rocket. (SpaceX/Associated Press)

Reusable rockets would be essential for that to happen.

But SpaceX's mission to pull off a vertical landing manoeuvre is more than a mere flight of aerospace fancy for those dreaming of lunar colonies.

"Bringing materials up to a space station, to the moon, becomes a much quicker turnaround activity," said Kostek.

"You turn around missions faster, costs drop, and for businesses putting satellites in space, they now have a cheaper means of doing it," he said.

Check back later today for CBCNews.ca's full coverage of SpaceX's Falcon 9 liftoff at 4:33 p.m. ET.


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Half-tons, hunting, hockey: What makes Canadiens' Price tick

Carey Price drives a half-ton truck.  A big one. He's kind of addicted to trucks. In fact, as he wheeled me around downtown Montreal the other day he told me he can't remember ever driving anything else.

It's not that surprising, actually, when you consider Price, the star goaltender for the Montreal Canadiens, is a country boy at heart.

Price loves the outdoors and spends as much time as he can fishing, hunting and breathing-in fresh, clean air.

There's the story of how he sat five or six metres up in a tree with his bow and arrow waiting patiently for a 10-point buck to pass, one he'd been tracking for days. He was alone, it was very quiet, no sounds but the ones nature makes. He'd been in the tree from well before sunrise. Price was at peace - just the way he so often looks minding the net.

He usually wins in the net. He won against the 10 pointer, too.

Carey Price

Carey Price is considered by many to be the best goalie in the world. (Courtesy National Hockey League)

It's been that way since he was a couple of years old, living in a log cabin with a tin roof near the shores of Anahim Lake in British Columbia. Part First Nations, his mom is a former chief of the Ulkatcho First Nation. He learned to skate on the frozen creek outside his home.

It sounds like a storybook script, but it's true — it's the real deal and so is Carey Price.

His Dad drove him three and a half hours, each way, to the house league team he played for in Williams Lake. It was a journey they took, wait for it, up to THREE times a week.

When that got to be too much, his Dad bought a small bush plane and flew the kid to the games.

Carey told me he used to fall asleep in the back of the truck dreaming of the day he'd play in the NHL. Just like all those hockey-playing city kids used to do, tucked in their little beds after their five-minute ride home in Mom's minivan. 

The difference is, Carey made it. He went from that frozen creek to the Bell Centre in Montreal, where he's now considered by many to be the best goalie in the world.

He doesn't like talking about that, though, and who can blame him. The NHL playoffs are about to begin, and being the best in the world means nothing if you can't wear a Stanley Cup ring at the same time.

Carey Price

Montreal Canadiens goalie Carey Price makes a 'butterfly' save, spreading his arms and going to his knees so that his pads block shots along the ice. (Ryan Remiorz/The Canadian Press)

For the past few weeks everyone has wanted a piece of Carey Price. He's a great story. But he's also a quiet guy, shy almost. Patient and focused, but quiet. Doesn't like the attention. Just wants to do his job, stop pucks, help win games, and get back in his truck.

But he'd decided on one more feature interview in these final days before the playoffs begin, and of the dozens of requests he could have chosen from all over the hockey world, he'd decided on The National.

Maybe it was because he knew that those kids who worship him out in Anahim Lake, including the underprivileged kids his foundation supports with a Breakfast Club, would be able to see it.  He wants them to know that if he can "make it," they can too, no matter what the "it" is.

We weave our way through downtown Montreal traffic and get up on the expressway. He's in his jeans, a tee-shirt, a trendy work jacket, a ball cap. The truck is filthy outside — it looks like it has been in the bush slapping puddles of melting snow and mud. You can tell he loves the moment.  Except for this intruding journalist sitting beside him babbling away about hockey.

About 20 minutes later we wound up in front of the Price home — Angela and their two Labs were waiting, a CBC crew parked outside anxious to start recording. Angela is Carey's rock, they've been together since he was 17. Nothing much happens anywhere near their south shore home unless she gives the okay.  

With the dogs romping around we tried to decide where to do the actual interview. The back yard? Inside the garage with his workshop in the background? In the house? No, none of those options seemed right.

Two guys in jeans and a dirty truck. That seemed right.

You can catch that interview tonight on The National and this weekend on One on One.

(For more on the 10-point buck story, check out this great piece from a few years ago by Arden Zwelling in Sportsnet Magazine. And full disclosure - I drive a half-ton, too. It's dirty most of the time, too. But I can't stop a beachball, let alone a puck. - Peter Mansbridge)


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It's not just your imagination — flying really is getting worse every year

Think flying is getting worse? A pair of university researchers who track the airline business say it's a fact.

More flights are late, more bags are getting lost, and customers are lodging more complaints about U.S. airlines, government data shows. Dean Headley, a marketing professor at Wichita State and one of the co-authors of the annual report being released Monday, said passengers already know that air travel is getting worse. "We just got the numbers to prove it."

Among the findings in the report:

  • Fewer delays — The percentage of flights that arrived on time fell to 76.2 per cent last year from 78.4 per cent in 2013. Best: Hawaiian Airlines. Worst: Envoy Air, which operates most American Eagle flights.
  • More lost bags — The rate of lost, stolen or delayed bags rose 13 per cent in 2014. Best: Virgin America. Worst: Envoy. Airlines lose one bag for every 275 or so passengers, but at Envoy, the rate is one lost bag for every 110 passengers, according to government figures.
  • More oversold flights — The rate of passengers getting bumped from flights rose 3 per cent. Best: Virgin America. Worst: a tie, between SkyWest and its ExpressJet subsidiary.
  • More complaints overall — Consumer complaints to the government jumped 22 per cent in 2014. Best: Alaska Airlines. Worst: Frontier.

Regional carriers, which operate flights under names like American Eagle, United Express and Delta Connection, tend to earn the worst marks. They fly smaller planes, so when airlines are forced to cut flights due to bad weather, they ground the regionals first to inconvenience fewer passengers.

But the picture was bleak at the four biggest U.S. airlines too. On-time performance fell and complaint rates rose at American, United, Delta and Southwest.

Headley said airlines performed better in the years after 2001, when travel demand fell and planes were less crowded. Airlines were also losing money. They returned to profitability when mergers reduced competition and the remaining airlines limited flights to keep fares up. The average plane is now more than 80 per cent full at most airlines, and many flights are oversold.

"They have put the same number of people in fewer airplanes," Headley said in an interview. "Anytime the system ramps up, it goes haywire."

Airlines are ordering new planes and making other investments that they promise will lead to better service. Many of the biggest improvements are targeted at the airlines' most valued customers — those in first-class and business-class sections.

The annual report is now in its 25th year. Headley and Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University professor Brent Bowen use information that the airlines submit to the U.S. Department of Transportation.


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Mike Duffy diaries reveal frailties, foibles and desire to be popular

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 12 April 2015 | 21.48

The diaries of suspended Senator Mike Duffy laid before an Ottawa court this week made headlines by offering an insider's glimpse of the operations of the Conservative government and its caucus.

But the private notes inside those diaries also reveal the picayune details of the pedestrian life of a Canadian political celebrity — his fragility, his foibles and also his personal touch.

The records of take-out dinners from suburban Swiss Chalets, the care of the family dog, the purchase oD\f a used Toyota Camry all speak to the plainness of the "Ol' Duff's" life, one that his fancy suits and flashy cuff links seemed designed to counter.

But the diaries do more than offer a peek behind the carefully constructed facade of Duffy's public persona, they reveal a man far more complicated, and perhaps tragic, than the gregarious broadcaster known to Canadians through television.

Duffy's words offer insight on a man who seemed near desperate to please and be popular; to be useful to his new bosses, while trying to maintain ties to his old broadcasting friends.

There were memos, about strategic communications, for instance, delivered to the prime minister, advice about Senate appointments whispered to Stephen Harper's wife, Laureen, and emails offering thoughts and analysis to key Conservatives.

"Telecon Jason Kenney re: Gossip on Ruby Dhalla," is one early entry, referrring to a former Liberal Toronto-area MP.

There were also apparently regular conversations with reporters at CTV, where Duffy had only recently worked.

The diary suggests Duffy took care of many of his acquaintanceships, attending wakes and funerals, and sending flowers or calling when he heard someone had fallen ill, lost a loved one or suffered some other calamity. 

"Call Fabian Manning in St. Bride's re collission [sic] with moose etc.," he wrote on May 22, 2011. 

Dinner with follow-up reports

Duffy is seen to be intervening on the behalf of friends looking for work or other assistance through contact with government departments, cabinet ministers, the prime minister and others.

But that fealty, or loyalty, was not universal. It seems based on a pragmatic accounting of which ties mattered most, now.

Duffy's diary: By the numbers

Number of mentions in Mike Duffy's calendar entries covering 2009-2013, submitted by the Crown as evidence at his trial this week:

  • Nigel Wright (ex-PMO chief of staff): 19
  • Gerry Donohue (contracted by Duffy): 19
  • PM Stephen Harper: 22
  • Laureen Harper: 8
  • Ray Novak (PMO staffer): 10
  • "Senate reform": 19
  • Senator David Tkachuk: 7
  • Senator Marjory LeBreton: 10
  • Senator Carolyn Stewart Olsen: 4
  • Senator Patrick Brazeau: 6
  • Senator Pamela Wallin: 5
  • Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau: 4
  • Swiss Chalet: 24
  • Chloe (the Duffys' dog): 47

- Sara Brunetti

Duffy seems to admit to sending private information about the political future of long-time Liberal MP Irwin Cotler to the prime minister's chief of staff, Nigel Wright (later the author of that $90,000 bank draft).

"Write Nigel re: political future of Irwin Cotler," he wrote in one entry, three and a-half hours after this entry:" "Duty entertainment — Mamma's — dinner with Irwin Cotler on his political future."

It's hard to imagine the Liberal Cotler going to dinner with Duffy had he known his remarks would be reported back to the Langevin Block before the dessert spoons had been cleared off the table.

But as one of Duffy's other dining companions might have said in his defence: "Ya dance with the one that brung you." 

Indeed, Duffy records a lunch with former prime minister Brian Mulroney, and a few others, on March 13, 2012 at the tony Rideau Club.

The remarks are blacked out with the scratch of a marker but are clear enough to see that Mulroney's gang was critical of the current occupant of the PMO, who, Duffy wrote, needed to do "'something' big beside the 'accounting of dealing with the deficit.'"

That critique apparently found its way up the chain too: "Write note to PMSH re: lunch with MBM," Duffy writes.​​

Health a concern

Duffy appeared to be worried about his health, which the diary suggests was troubled. He had heart problems, diabetes, sleep apnea, a bad back and received arthritis treatments, which he complained about.

He worried about his weight, and for many months recorded it at least weekly as the numbers swung about, along with blood sugar numbers.

Mike and Heather Duffy

Heather Duffy, left, wife of suspended Senator Mike Duffy, uses an umbrella to block members of the media as she waits with her husband after leaving the courthouse in Ottawa Friday. (Justin Tang/Canadian Press)

This was obviously an embarrassment for Duffy. The print-out of the diaries submitted in court had some lines blanked out. But there was this: "MD scarfs pint of Hagan Daaz [sic]. Yikes"

The diaries reveal Duffy and his wife Heather had regular movie nights together and often got together with a couple called the Riopelles. 

Howard Riopelle's name crops up again and again in the diary as a confidant and a regular at Duffy's pub nights. Riopelle was a lobbyist who also long ago played hockey for the Montreal Canadiens alongside Maurice "The Rocket" Richard.

There were many nights out, and not just with "The Ripper," as Duffy called his friend. And some of them may have proven difficult for Duffy, who has long been known for his love of revelry.

On June 17, 2009, Duffy records a public appearance at the "PEI lobster extravangza [sic]," at the Westin Hotel in Ottawa.

The next day Duffy missed a meeting of the Senate forestry committee. "Indesposed [sic]," he writes.


Duffy's diary: By the numbers

Number of mentions in Mike Duffy's calendar entries covering 2009-2013, submitted by the Crown as evidence at his trial this week:

  • Nigel Wright (ex-PMO chief of staff): 19
  • Gerry Donohue (contracted by Duffy): 19
  • PM Stephen Harper: 22
  • Laureen Harper: 8
  • Ray Novak (PMO staffer): 10
  • "Senate reform": 19
  • Senator David Tkachuk: 7
  • Senator Marjory LeBreton: 10
  • Senator Carolyn Stewart Olsen: 4
  • Senator Patrick Brazeau: 6
  • Senator Pamela Wallin: 5
  • Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau: 4
  • Swiss Chalet: 24
  • Chloe (the Duffys' dog): 47

- Sara Brunetti


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Fake sex allegations lifted from Law & Order: SVU lead to lawsuit

The allegations a female student made against her teacher — rape, torture, waterboarding — could have been pulled straight from the scripts of TV's Law & Order: Special Victims Unit.

And, as it turned out, a B.C. arbitrator concluded they were. 

"Should the student be believed, the teacher is one of the most heinous sexual monsters of our time," wrote arbitrator Joan McEwen in 2014, regarding accusations raised two years earlier by a Nanaimo-area girl against a teacher. Neither were named in the report. 

"Should the teacher be believed, the student is a very troubled person."

Now the teacher, Donald Barber, has identified himself in a B.C. Supreme Court lawsuit which cites McEwen's ruling. 

Barber is suing Marli Rusen, the lawyer hired by the Nanaimo school district to investigate the teen's claims. 

'Ridicule, hatred and contempt'

SVU sex claim

This drawing from a student's diary was submitted to an arbitration hearing that found a teacher was falsely accused of sexual assault. (Arbitration hearing)

In his suit, Barber says he was subjected to "ridicule, hatred and contempt" as a result of a report Rusen provided the district. Rusen claimed in her report Barber had "engaged in significant sexual, physical and sexual misconduct over a number of years." 

The bizarre allegations are spelled out in his lawsuit and the arbitration.

According to Barber's suit, the student accused him in 2012 of assaulting her from Grade 5 to Grade 8. The RCMP arrested him, but the Crown declined to approve charges. 

Barber, who previously had a spotless disciplinary record, was fired in March 2013.

But last July, McEwen upheld a grievance by his union, ordering the school district to "make [him] whole." The final outcome of that matter hasn't yet been decided. 

'Horrific' allegations

According to the arbitration, the student claimed the teacher stuck knives and branches in her vagina, waterboarded and electrocuted her, and nearly suffocated her through burial.

But despite the "horrific" allegations, McEwan noted in her report the student was "never once attended an emergency clinic, hospital or walk-in clinic to treat her injuries." 

"Nor did her attentive parents notice a thing — not the torn clothing, the burns; neither the bleeding to the extent that blood dripped into the swimming pool, nor her midnight foray. Not the filth from being buried or being soaked wet from waterboarding. Nothing. How likely is it that she could suffer the indignities she says she did and then go home for dinner and homework?" 

Diary doubted

According to the arbitration, the girl produced a diary six weeks after police told her, in October 2012, they were dropping the case against Barber because of a "lack of hard evidence."

The diary included numerous entries along with a sketch of a badge the student claimed was worn by a police officer who allegedly raped her at the teacher's house.

SVU sex claim

This picture of a badge drawn by a student was submitted to an arbitration hearing which concluded a teacher was falsely accused of sexual assault. (Arbitration hearing)

But the president of the teachers' union local testified at the arbitration hearing that a search of the internet revealed all the scenarios the student described came from episodes of the long-running TV drama Law & Order: Special Victims Unit. 

The description of the badge also matched one worn by a Dallas police officer in the show.

"It appears that the internet and media provided the student with everything she needed to construct a case that resulted in two years of unimaginable hardship to the teacher," McEwen concluded.

"The similarities between the plot-lines of her favourite shows and reading materials, and her allegations, are numerous and profound." 

In his civil suit, Barber says he is seeking damages over the claims made in Rusen's report — claims he says were defamatory and "maliciously published ... knowing that they were false or with careless disregard as to whether they were true or not."

Rusen's office said she could not comment on the lawsuit.

According to her website, Rusen has "years of extensive experience as a labour, employment and human rights lawyer to her current work as a third-party educator and problem-solver."

The site says Rusen is "routinely retained by many private and public sector employers to investigate allegations of significant human rights, harassment and disciplinary violations."

None of Barber's allegations have been proven in court.


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NHL's Stanley Cup playoff matchups set

The NHL's regular season ended Saturday, and the first-round matchups for the Stanley Cup playoffs are set, including a pair of all-Canadian series.

Montreal vs. Ottawa and Vancouver vs. Calgary will both be broadcast on CBC's Hockey Night in Canada.

EASTERN CONFERENCE

New York Rangers vs. Pittsburgh Penguins

Division winner No. 1 vs. wild card No. 2

Rangers: 53-22-7, 113 points

Penguins: 43-27-12, 98 points

Series opener: Thursday at 7 p.m. ET

Regular-season series: Rangers won 3-0-1 (Penguins 1-2-1)

Montreal Canadiens vs. Ottawa Senators

Division winner No. 2 vs. wild card No. 1

Canadiens: 50-22-10, 110 points

Senators: 43-26-13, 99 points

Series opener: Wednesday at 7 p.m. ET (CBC TV)

Regular-season series: Ottawa won 3-1-0 (Canadiens1-3-0)

Tampa Bay Lightning vs. Detroit Red Wings

Atlantic Division No. 2 vs. Atlantic Division No. 3

Lightning: 50-24-8, 108 points

Red Wings: 43-25-14, 100 points

Series opener: Thursday at 7:30 p.m. ET

Regular-season series: Lightning won 3-1-0 (Red Wings 1-2-1)

Washington Capitals vs. New York Islanders

Metropolitan Division No. 2 vs. Metropolitan Division No. 3

Capitals: 45-26-11, 101 points​

Islanders: 47-28-7, 101 points

Series opener: Wednesday at 7 p.m. ET

Regular-season series: Capitals won 2-0-2 (Islanders 2-1-1)

WESTERN CONFERENCE

Anaheim Ducks vs. Winnipeg Jets

Division leader No. 1 vs. wild card No. 2

Ducks: 51-24-7, 109 points

Jets: 43-26-13, 99 points

Series opener: Thursday at 10:30 p.m. ET

Regular-season series: Ducks won 3-0-0 (Winnipeg (0-1-2)

St. Louis Blues vs. Minnesota Wild

Division leader No. 2 vs. wild card No. 1

Blues: 51-24-7, 109 points

Wild: 46-28-8, 100 points

Series opener: Thursday at 9:30 p.m. ET

Regular-season series: Wild won 2-1-1 (Blues 2-2-0)

Nashville Predators vs. Chicago Blackhawks

Central Division No. 2 vs. Central Division No. 3

Predators: 47-24-10, 104 points

Blackhawks: 48-28-6, 102 points

Series opener: Wednesday at 8:30 p.m. ET

Regular-season series: Blackhawks won 3-1-0 (Predators 1-1-2)

Vancouver Canucks vs. Calgary Flames

Pacific Division No. 2 vs. Pacific Division No. 3

Canucks: 48-29-5, 101 points

Flames: 45-30-7, 97 points

Series opener: Wednesday at 10 p.m. ET (CBC TV)

Regular-season series: Flames won 2-1-1 (Canucks 2-2-0)


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Will consumers pay to watch YouTube?

Would you pay to watch YouTube videos, uninterrupted by advertising?

That's a question a lot of business analysts — and users — are now pondering, as reports emerge that Google's video-streaming site is in the process of launching an as-yet-unnamed monthly subscription service.  

"Probably not, I don't know if I could justify it," says Michael Senchuk, a music blogger in Edmonton. "But if it was a couple bucks a month, maybe."

So far YouTube has declined to confirm specifics, but early reports suggest the cost of the premium service may be $10 a month.  

Whatever the price, the effort will be yet another test of what it takes to get consumers to fork out hard-earned cash for the type of creative content that the internet once offered for free.  

'It's very hard to to go from free to a subscription mode.'- Ramona Pringle

"Netflix has proved people are willing to pay," says Duncan Stewart, a media analyst and trend forecaster with Deloitte Canada. "I'm not suggesting YouTube's success is a foregone conclusion, but I understand why they're trying it."

YouTube is already a global giant, with more than one billion users and $4 billion a year in revenue.

New streaming services

It's not the only content company trying to win over subscribers via the internet. The revolution in how people consume content is ongoing:

Budget-conscious Canadians will need to add up their entertainment costs, especially now that Canada's telecom regulator has ordered that a new pick-and-pay system for cable TV customers be put in place by 2016. 

Ordering from an a la carte menu of services, including Netflix and YouTube plus specialty channels, could end up costing more than the prix fixe of a cable subscription.

Once upon a time the internet was free

Not so long ago, users believed everything on the internet should be free. 

Music, books, video games, television and movies are all industries that have seen their business models blown apart — either by pirates or via legitimate digital companies. And while Netflix, Apple and Amazon have been successful in convincing consumers to pay for online products, others have struggled.  

Canada's largest circulation newspaper, the Toronto Star, attempted to recover revenue lost through falling sales in 2013 by installing a paywall on its website, charging readers who opted for online news.

But a little more than a year later, the paper announced the wall will be coming down. Its digital focus will shift instead to a tablet edition.  

Online-House of Cards

Netflix, which streams the political drama House of Cards, starring Kevin Spacey, left, and Michael Kelly, has been successful in getting people to pay. (Netflix/ Associated Press)

"It's very hard to go from free to a subscription model," says Ramona Pringle, creative director of Ryerson University's Transmedia Zone.

"With Netflix, paying has always been the deal. With YouTube, the users are content creators as much as they're content consumers. They're part of the value proposition. That could cause some pushback against paying."

Pringle notes that the bar has been set high by other subscription models. "Netflix's House of Cards has a huge budget, and Amazon's Transparent won at the Golden Globes."  (Transparent won best comedy and best actor, while House of Cards is both an Emmy and Golden Globes winner.)

More than cat videos

"The stuff that's going to be part of a YouTube paid service will not be kitten videos," predicts Deloitte's Stewart. He expects the service to up its game and to target specific customers.

"There are two types of users," he says.

"Big TV-watchers who want to pay as little as possible to get as much as possible, and real connoisseurs who are willing to pay more for special programming.

"I like to say that subscription television will be craft TV, in the same way we have craft beer. Just like with beer, it tends to be for those who want strong flavours. And those people may consume less, but they'll pay about the same."

Stewart recently analyzed what the world's television watchers pay on an hourly basis for different types of services.

His math was simple — take the billions of hours watched globally and stack that up against the revenues of traditional networks and subscription services.

Consumers pay less when they watch ads

His numbers show that traditional TV with advertising generates just four cents an hour, while Netflix is five times more lucrative at 20 cents an hour.

"Television with advertising tends to be cheaper on a per hour basis than television by subscription," says Stewart.

And he points out that the former president of Bell Media made a similar distinction between types of users in December, when the company launched Crave TV, its Netflix-like add-on for subscribers.  

Kevin Crull noted that 90 per cent of Canadians subscribe to TV services, and suggested cord-cutters aren't true television aficionados.  

"The 10 per cent that aren't TV subscribers, in a general sense, they're not TV lovers," Crull said.

The director of communications for Netflix has little to say about YouTube's effort.  

"If you provide content that people want to watch in a timely fashion and at a reasonable price, they will pay for it," Jonathan Friedland told CBC News.

Consumers will decide what works and what doesn't. As the American writer and internet thinker Clay Shirky observed six years ago, "that is what real revolutions are like. The old stuff gets broken faster than the new stuff is put in its place."


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