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Toronto raises fines for more than 100 parking violations to reduce congestion

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TORONTO – Fines for more than 100 parking offences in Toronto are increasing today, an initiative the city says is aimed at reducing congestion and promoting safer roads.

The city says it raised the fines for 123 offences to help curb illegal parking, stopping and standing.

It says increasing parking fines can reduce congestion by discouraging drivers from stopping in high-traffic areas while promoting other forms of transportation, like cycling or public transit.

The new penalties were approved by city council in April.

They include $200 for illegally parking in a bike path or a pedestrian way — an increase from a previous $60 penalty — and a $75 fine for parking in an electric vehicle charging stall and not actively charging.

The fine increases come after Toronto bike advocates called for urgent action following the death last week of a 24-year-old cyclist who was hit by a dump truck.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published August 1, 2024.

The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.

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Private equity firm Birch Hill signs deal to buy Rexall Pharmacy and Well.ca

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TORONTO – Drugstore chain Rexall Pharmacy Group and online retailer Well.ca are due to land under Canadian ownership after a Toronto-based private equity firm announced Thursday that it would purchase both brands from McKesson Corp.

Birch Hill Equity Partners did not immediately reveal financial terms of the agreement it struck with McKesson, a Texas-based healthcare services business that said selling off the two companies would allow it to focus on growing its oncology and biopharma divisions instead.

The deal will hand Birch Hill, whose portfolio has previously included Mastermind Toys, Sleep Country and Ace Bakery, a toehold in the pharmacare industry and put its retail prowess to the test once more.

Rexall operates 385 pharmacies across Canada and employs about 8,000 people. Well.ca offers more than 40,000 health and wellness products online.

Their sale to Birch Hill could be “the fuel that accelerates the expansion and innovation of these brands in Canada,” said Liza Amlani, co-founder of the Retail Strategy Group in an email.

“Rexall has a fraction of stores in Canada compared to Shoppers Drug Mart,” she said, referencing Loblaw Companies Ltd.’s pharmacy giant, which counts more than 1,300 locations.

“The new leadership team could help innovate Rexall and make them more relevant compared to Shoppers stores which have a monopoly in the market.”

While Birch Hill declined an interview request on the deal, it said in its Thursday release that it’s “committed to maintaining and investing in reliable, accessible health care services to expand Rexall’s network of pharmacies across Canada.”

The private equity firm added McKesson will remain Rexall and Well.ca‘s wholesale distribution supplier, ensuring a smooth transition for the business.

McKesson hanging on as a wholesale supplier likely indicates it sees that arm of the business as more profitable than the retail side and a good way to raise cash for its other, more core businesses, said Joanne McNeish, an associate professor at Toronto Metropolitan University focused on marketing.

McNeish liked that the deal hands assets to a Canadian company because so often homegrown firms are sold to foreign firms, but she worried about the buyer being a private equity firm.

“When I think of private equity companies, it seems to me they act like house flippers,” she wrote in an email.

“A coat of paint and new countertops and the company is sold again for a higher price. There is no long-term management and investment in the purchased company.”

While Amlani didn’t weigh in on low long Birch Hill might own the brands for, she thought the deal was a chance to “put some life back into” Rexall and Well.ca and give them a much-needed “facelift.”

“Rexall needs an upgrade to its stores, loyalty program and product mix,” she said.

“Well.ca has a vast product assortment but they could use more brand power and an investment in marketing.”

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 5, 2024.

The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.



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Quebec premier to shuffle cabinet today after ‘superminister’ Fitzgibbon steps down

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Quebec Premier François Legault is expected to shuffle his cabinet later today following the sudden departure of one of his most influential ministers.

Pierre Fitzgibbon, the “superminister” who held the economy and energy portfolios, stepped down Wednesday, saying he lost motivation to do his job.

Legault is scheduled to wrap up a caucus retreat today in Rimouski, Que., where he will hold a news conference.

Then he’ll travel to Quebec City to announce who will replace Fitzgibbon.

Fitzgibbon’s replacement will inherit a major energy reform bill, hearings for which begin next week as the legislature reopens for the fall session.

In addition to economy and energy, Fitzgibbon also held the innovation portfolio and was the minister responsible for the Montreal region.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 5, 2024.

The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.



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Latest failure: Energy firm fails in its bid to generate power from the Bay of Fundy

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HALIFAX – Another energy company has failed in its bid to develop tidal power from the Bay of Fundy.

The Nova Scotia government confirmed today that Occurrent, formerly BigMoon Power, is filing for insolvency because it can’t pay its bills.

Last year, Sustainable Marine Energy — based in the United Kingdom — also failed, with estimated losses of more than $30 million.

Patricia Jreige, a spokeswoman for the province’s Natural Resources Department, says Occurrent’s collapse is “a concern for our tidal industry,” but she says the province remains open to considering other tidal-power projects.

Colin Sproul, president of the Bay of Fundy Inshore Fishermen’s Association, says he wants to know when the anchors that were to be used for Occurrent’s project — four submerged rail cars filled with concrete — will be removed from the floor of the bay.

The province says it holds security for the cleanup of what it refers to as “temporary gravel pads” on underwater Crown lands in the bay’s Minas Basin.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Sept. 5, 2024.

The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.



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