Thursday, January 12, 2023

Uber public policy head wants Ontario to move 'faster and further' on gig economy

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Uber's vice-president and global head of public policy wants Ontario to speed up its efforts to deliver gig economy legislation and act on its pitch to boost gig worker benefits.

"We would like to go further and faster and more quickly than perhaps the government is ready to do," said Andrew Byrne in an interview with The Canadian Press during a visit to Toronto this week.

His comments come a year after Ontario's Working for Workers Act, known as Bill 88, received royal assent. Implementation of the legislation, which delivers minimum labour standards to gig workers, has been slow.

The bill requires digital platforms like Uber to offer minimum wage, provide information on how pay will be calculated, give workers being removed from the platform two weeks' notice and ensure there are mechanisms to resolve disputes that leave workers free from reprisals.

Byrne wants more.

"It's great to give drivers more transparency and I think a minimum earnings guarantee in Ontario is a really great first step, but to really deliver exactly what we think the future of the industry looks like, I do think you need portable benefits," he said.

Portable benefits are a cornerstone of legislation changes Uber has been seeking. The company wants to see a minimum earnings standard equivalent to at least 120 per cent of the minimum wage during engaged time, a benefits fund based on time spent on platforms, notice of account termination, accident coverage and access to workers' rights.

Some workers' groups, such as Gig Workers United, dislike the pitch because they see it as Uber's way of avoiding classifying workers as employees, who would be entitled to minimum wage, vacation pay and parental and medical leave. 

Uber drivers and couriers are considered to be independent contractors because they can choose when, where and how often they work, but in exchange, they have no job security, vacation pay or other benefits.

Uber maintains its research shows the bulk of drivers and couriers want more benefits but not to be classified as employees because that could take away their flexibility to work when and how often as they'd like.

Asked about Byrne's call for the government to move faster and further, provincial Labour Minister Monte McNaughton pointed out Ontario is the first to provide core rights to gig workers, including health and dental care.

"These foundational rights have no precedent or template in Canada to pull from. By providing drivers and couriers with these protections, we’re raising the floor, not setting the ceiling," McNaughton wrote in a statement.

"Nothing is preventing large corporations from providing their workers with higher pay, vacation time, or other protections tomorrow if they chose to do it."

By Byrne's count, there are more than 100,000 people earning money through Uber in Canada, including some who use the platform for as few as two hours a week and others closer to full-time work.

Data that Uber tabulated in December showed many joined the platform in the last six months, when the company detected a "significant" increase in sign-ups. The last three months have amounted to its busiest sign-up period ever, with 65 per cent of the new workers saying they joined to help deal with high inflation, unexpected expenses and to mitigate reduced hours or job losses.

About 75 per cent of them are working fewer than 15 hours per week for Uber and the same amount said flexibility was a key reason for signing up.

"They could be working part-time for someone else in the gig economy. They could also have a full-time job, but we don't necessarily know that and so that's why we feel so strongly that we need to build on the Ontario government's reform proposals and build in a portable benefits system," Byrne said. 

"These people who are working little hours in different places should be able to get the benefit of all of their hours across all the different things and the platforms that they're working on."

To bolster that push, Uber formed a partnership with United Food and Commercial Workers (UFCW) Canada nearly a year ago.

The partnership allows the union to provide representation to more than 100,000 Canadian drivers and couriers, if requested by the workers, when they are facing account deactivations and other disputes with Uber.

Workers are not charged for the representation, which is jointly covered by Uber and UFCW Canada.

But many workers and at least one union objected to the arrangement, accusing Uber of striking the partnership to quiet UFCW, which previously had concerns about driver compensation and rights.

"This is the illusion of a union. This is the illusion of workers' representation, but it is not,” Brice Sopher, a Toronto UberEats courier representing Gig Workers United, previously said.

“It is more so to give Uber the protection, the veneer of being progressive, while they will continue probably to push for the regressive rolling back of worker's rights.”

There was also opposition from the Canadian Union of Postal Workers (CUPW), which made a complaint to the Ontario Labour Relations Board.

CUPW claimed the UFCW agreement was formed without worker input, used its app and email list to promote the agreement to drivers and couriers and favoured one union over another while workers were organizing.

The matter is still before the board, but Byrne said, "UFCW doesn't speak for the whole progressive movement in Canada."

"We absolutely respect other people's right to take shots at us and criticize and give feedback about the work that we do with UFCW and more broadly."

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Jan. 10, 2023.

Ontario launches public consultations on budget, focused on transportation, jobs

Ontario is asking residents for their input on the upcoming budget, and questions in a public survey indicate major themes will be health-care staffing, transportation, jobs and the cost of living.

The provincial government plans to table its budget by March 31, and is now starting the process of public consultations, with a legislative committee travelling the province and an online survey that launched Wednesday.

The survey asks respondents what steps the government should take amid the current economic uncertainty, giving options such as infrastructure spending; tax incentives for small businesses; supporting families, workers and seniors through the increased cost of living; and eliminating the deficit.

In Ontario's most recent fiscal update in November, the province projected a deficit of $12.9 billion in this fiscal year, followed by $8.1 billion the following year and a deficit of just $700 million in 2024-25.

Premier Doug Ford, speaking after an unrelated health-care announcement Wednesday, said he will "continue finding ways to put money back into people's pockets," citing previous steps to eliminate licence plate renewal fees and temporarily cutting the gas tax.

"We'll continue making sure we have an economy that's thriving and prospering," Ford said. 

"That's the key area - if you have a strong economy, you're creating great-paying jobs, companies and people, they pay up to the provincial coffers. That allows us to reinvest into the $150 billion of infrastructure."

Finance Minister Peter Bethlenfalvy said in a statement that it is a critical time for the government to consider new ideas.

"Supporting people, workers and businesses in Ontario and setting up our economy to recover in the longer term will remain top priorities," he wrote.

Bethlenfalvy also wrote that he is glad the budget consultations will have an in-person element this year. The legislative committee started hearings in Kenora, Ont., on Monday and is set to travel through eight other communities, before holding a final day of in-person presentations in Toronto on Feb. 14.

One survey question says Ontario is looking for ways to build a stronger health-care system and workforce, and asks for thoughts on priorities, including building hospitals, hiring more staff, better home care supports and upgrading long-term care beds.

The survey also indicates that transportation will continue to be a priority of Ford's government, with a question asking what is most important, between areas such as "highways that cut down on commute time," improving congestion in urban areas and cycling infrastructure.

As well, one question says the government is working to address labour shortages, and asks what areas should be prioritized, including employer incentives, apprenticeship and skills training, improving child-care access and supporting skilled newcomers. 

On a question of how to keep costs down for people, the government wants to know if residents think the best way to do that is through increasing the affordability of essential goods, increasing options for rental and affordable housing, introducing or expanding tax credits, or keeping commuter costs down.

But the survey responses may not necessarily be taken into account.

Former Liberal cabinet minister John Milloy wrote in a recent column for iPolitics that the timing - these consultations go to mid-February with a budget expected in late March - leaves him skeptical that they will have much of an impact.

"Anyone who has spent any time in government understands that budgets are planned many months in advance," he wrote in the column.

"Although there is occasionally some last-minute tinkering, most of the heavy lifting has often been done before the consultations even begin."

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Jan. 11, 2023.

Teck Resources subsidiary fined $2.2M for spill into Columbia River

Environment and Climate Change Canada says Teck Metals Ltd., a subsidiary of Teck Resources Ltd., has been ordered to pay $2.2 million in federal and provincial fines for an effluent spill into the Columbia River.

The government department says in a release that Teck earlier pleaded guilty to two charges laid under the federal Fisheries Act and one charge under British Columbia's Environmental Management Act.

The charges stem from a February 2019 release of effluent into the Columbia River, which the government says was caused by a leak from the company's fertilizer operations in Warfield, B.C.

The government says the low-pH effluent was harmful to fish.

Environment and Climate Change Canada investigated the spill and found that the 2.5-million-litre discharge resulted from numerous operational errors.

They say that Teck will be added to the Environmental Offenders Registry and the federal fine of $2 million will go to the government's Environmental Damages Fund

World Bank warns of a global recession

The World Bank slashed its growth forecasts for most countries and regions, and warned that new adverse shocks could tip the global economy into a recession. 

Global gross domestic product will probably increase 1.7 per cent this year, about half the pace forecast in June, the Washington-based lender said Tuesday. That would be the third-worst performance in the last three decades or so, after the contractions of 2009 and 2020. 

The bank, which also cut its growth estimates for 2024, said persistent inflation and higher interest rates are among the key reasons. It also cited the impact of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, and a decline in investment. 

“The crisis facing development is intensifying” and the setbacks to global prosperity will likely persist, World Bank President David Malpass wrote in a foreword to the bank’s semi-annual Global Economic Prospects report. He said GDP in emerging-market and developing economies at the end of next year will be about 6 per cent below the level expected on the eve of the Covid-19 pandemic.

Spillovers from a period of pronounced weakness in the US, China and the European Union are exacerbating other headwinds faced by poorer nations, the lender said. While inflation is moderating, there are signs that pressures are becoming more persistent, with central banks having to raise interest rates faster than expected. 

“The combination of slow growth, tightening financial conditions, and heavy indebtedness is likely to weaken investment and trigger corporate defaults,” the World Bank said. “Urgent global action is needed to mitigate the risks of global recession and debt distress.”

The lender, which is reviewing its operational model, said a focus on the following areas is critical given limited policy space: 

  • National policymakers must ensure that any fiscal support is focused on vulnerable groups
  • Inflation expectations need to remain well anchored
  • Financial systems must continue to be resilient

The World Bank called for a “major increase” in investment for developing nations, including new financing from the international community and from the repurposing of existing spending, such as inefficient agricultural and fuel subsidies.

“Even though the world is now in a very tight spot, there should be no room for defeatism,” Malpass said. “There are significant reforms that could be undertaken now to strengthen the rule of law, improve the outlook and build stronger economies with more robust private sectors and better opportunities for people.”

Coinbase eliminates 20% of staff in latest round of layoffs FIRINGS

COINBASE GLOBAL INC -CLASS A (COIN:UN)

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Coinbase Global Inc. is firing about 950 employees, or 20 per cent of its workforce, as the worsening crypto slump spurs another round of layoffs at the biggest US digital-asset exchange. 

Co-founder and Chief Executive Officer Brian Armstrong announced the job reductions in a blog post Tuesday, saying the steps were needed to weather the industry downturn. In June, Coinbase announced it would lay off 18 per cent of its workforce, the equivalent of roughly 1,200 employees. It eliminated another 60 positions in November. It will now shut down several projects.

“This is the first time we’ve seen a crypto cycle coincide with a broader economic downturn,” Armstrong wrote in the blog. “We also reduced headcount last year as the market started to correct, and in hindsight, we could have cut further at that time.” 

The company expects to book US$149 million to US$163 million of restructuring charges, according to a statement on Tuesday. The overhaul will be “substantially complete” by the end of the second quarter, it said. As a result, adjusted EBITDA for the full year ended Dec. 31 is expected to be around negative US$500 million, within its guidance. 

“Coinbase is doing another round of cut because trading volume remains very weak, especially after the FTX fallout,” said Owen Lau, analyst at Oppenheimer. While rising rate helps its interest income, the company is trying to maintain a certain loss guardrail so that it can survive through this period and emerge stronger on the other side, he said. 

Crypto’s bear market is entering its second year, and the industry has suffered a series of meltdowns that hurt its outlook, most lately the bankruptcy of rival exchange FTX. With revenues falling and profits evaporating, companies across the sector have resorted to steep cost cuts in past months. 

Genesis, the troubled crypto brokerage under Barry Silbert’s Digital Currency Group, also made another round of job cuts this month, cutting about 30 per cent of workforce. Crypto exchange Huobi is cutting 20 per cent of jobs, while Silvergate Capital Corp., a crypto-friendly bank, laid off 40 per cent of its staff. 

Coinbase’s shares tumbled 86 per cent last year, dropping more than the market bellwether Bitcoin, which slumped 64 per cent. The stock rose 1.4 per cent on Tuesday. The company ended the third quarter with US$5 billion in cash and cash equivalents.  

“Our preliminary view is that the announcement today will help soften the impact of the challenging environment,” Kyle Voigt, an analyst at Keefe Bruyette & Woods, wrote in a note. But this “likely will not move the company into profitable territory yet.”     

Union prepares strike votes for 35,000 tax workers in Canada

Federal workers are launching nationwide strike votes for more than 35,000 employees at Canada Revenue Agency after talks broke down over wages and remote work.

Votes will be held from Jan. 31 to April 7, and the union will be in a legal strike position if its members approve a strike mandate, according to a joint statement from the Public Service Alliance of Canada and the Union of Taxation Employees. 

“Workers’ wages have stalled while the cost of living has continued to rise,” PSAC President Chris Aylward said. “We’ve been clear negotiating wages that keep up with inflation and a sensible remote work policy are critical to reach a deal, but the Agency has refused to respond to our wage offer.” 

The strike votes will occur ahead of Canada’s April 30 tax filing deadline. They highlight the persistence of union demands for bigger pay increases even as consumer price gains begin to retreat from a four-decade high.

High inflation has historically led to increased work stoppages as employees try to catch up with prices, and unions in Canada have been ramping up their demands over the past several months. The taxation workers, for example, demanded a 30 per cent wage increase over three years.

“A strong strike mandate is the best way to ramp up pressure to reach a fair contract for our members,” said Marc Brière, president of the tax workers union.

Light-driven CO2 assimilation by photosystem II and its relation to photosynthesis

Peer-Reviewed Publication

DALIAN INSTITUTE OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS, CHINESE ACADEMY SCIENCES

Figure Abstract 

IMAGE: PHOTOSYNTHESIS IS THE GREATEST NATURAL PROCESS ON EARTH. IT HAS BEEN WIDELY ACCEPTED THAT CO2 ASSIMILATION TAKES PLACE IN LIGHT-INDEPENDENT REACTIONS, FOR EXAMPLE, THROUGH THE CALVIN-BENSON CYCLE IN THE STROMA. HERE, AN UNUSUAL LIGHT-DRIVEN CO2 ASSIMILATION (INTO METHANOL) BY THE PSII CORE COMPLEX IN PHOTOSYNTHESIS WAS REPORTED. THE EXTRAORDINARY FINDING IS LIKELY TO BE A SIMULTANEOUS EVENT ALONG WITH THE USUAL ELECTRON TRANSFER OCCURRING IN NORMAL LIGHT-INDEPENDENT ASSIMILATION. view more 

CREDIT: CHINESE JOURNAL OF CATALYSIS

Photosynthesis is the greatest natural process converting sunlight into chemical energy on a massive scale and maintaining the life on Earth. There are basically two successive stages of oxygenic photosynthesis, of which the light-dependent reactions in photosystem II (PSII), and in photosystem I (PSI), enable the oxidation of H2O into molecular oxygen, and production of reducing power (NADPH and ATP), while CO2 assimilation is generally known to take place long after oxygen evolution and NADP+ reduction, via light-independent reactions in the stroma.

Meanwhile, there is wide consensus that during light dependent reactions CO2 (or bicarbonate) is not reduced as a substrate, but plays a unique stimulatory role in O2 evolution, namely the so-called “bicarbonate effect”. The role of bicarbonate effect as well as the bicarbonate binding sites in PSII have been intensively studied since the 1970s, with some important conclusions reached thus far. However, CO2 (or bicarbonate) in PSII is thought to only play supporting roles during water oxidation, rather than being “assimilated” by PSII.

Recently, a team of researchers from Dalian University of Technology, Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, China, and University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA, for the first time reported a light-driven CO2 assimilation by PSII core complex, where the formation of methanol (CH3OH), along with the oxygen evolution, is validated by in-situ mass spectrometry, gas chromatography and isotopic labeling experiments. Such an unusual CO2 assimilation is likely to be a simultaneous event along with the usual electron transfer occurring in normal light-independent assimilation. This discovery is extraordinary and is of great significance as it may substantially modify our understanding of the mechanism of photosynthesis. The results were published in Chinese Journal of Catalysis (https://doi.org/10.1016/S1872-2067(22)64170-6).

###

About the Journal

Chinese Journal of Catalysis is co-sponsored by Dalian Institute of Chemical Physics, Chinese Academy of Sciences and Chinese Chemical Society, and it is currently published by Elsevier group. This monthly journal publishes in English timely contributions of original and rigorously reviewed manuscripts covering all areas of catalysis. The journal publishes Reviews, Accounts, Communications, Articles, Highlights, Perspectives, and Viewpoints of highly scientific values that help understanding and defining of new concepts in both fundamental issues and practical applications of catalysis. Chinese Journal of Catalysis ranks among the top two journals in Applied Chemistry with a current SCI impact factor of 12.92. The Editors-in-Chief are Profs. Can Li and Tao Zhang.

At Elsevier http://www.journals.elsevier.com/chinese-journal-of-catalysis

Manuscript submission https://mc03.manuscriptcentral.com/cjcatal

Molecular mechanism behind nutrient element-induced plant disease resistance discovered

Peer-Reviewed Publication

AMERICAN PHYTOPATHOLOGICAL SOCIET

Gupta et al. 

IMAGE: BACK ROW, LEFT TO RIGHT: URI YERMIYAHU, MAYA BAR, YIGAL ELAD FRONT ROW, LEFT TO RIGHT: GAUTAM ANAND, DALIA RAV-DAVID, RUPALI GUPTA, MEIRAV LEIBMAN-MARKUS view more 

CREDIT: MAYA BAR

Just like humans can’t subsist on a diet of only French fries and brownies, plants must also consume a balanced diet to maintain optimal health and bolster their immune responses. Nutrient element uptake is necessary for plant growth, development, and reproduction. In some cases, treatment with essential elements has been shown to induce plant disease resistance, but conclusive research on the molecular basis of this remedy has been limited.

In one of the few studies to directly investigate the mechanism underlying the effect of essential elements on plant disease resistance, Rupali Gupta of Volcani Institute and colleagues demonstrate that nutrient elements activate immune responses in tomato plants through different defense signaling pathways.

Their paper, recently published in Phytopathology, outlines the molecular mode of action that potassium, calcium, magnesium, and sodium take to minimize both fungal and bacterial plant diseases. Using straightforward laboratory methods, the authors demonstrate that essential element spray treatment sufficiently activates immune responses in tomato—including defense gene expression, cellular leakage, reactive oxygen species production, and ethylene production—leading to disease resistance. Their results suggest that different defense signaling pathways are required for induction of immunity in response to different elements.

Understanding the genetic mechanism underlying this process may provide new insights into crop improvement. Corresponding author Maya Bar comments, “We are excited to probe the molecular basis of this phenomenon, define another facet of induced resistance, and provide data that will assist in applying this principle to agricultural systems in a more purposeful, reproducible manner.”

The tenets of mineral nutrient-induced disease resistance discovered in this study can be exploited in agricultural practices—benefiting growers/farmers and protecting valuable crops.

 

For additional details, read Nutrient Elements Promote Disease Resistance in Tomato by Differentially Activating Immune Pathways published in Vol. 112, No. 11 November 2022 of Phytopathology.
 

Follow one of the corresponding authors on Twitter

Maya Bar, @MayaPifff

 

Follow us on Twitter @PhytopathologyJ and visit https://apsjournals.apsnet.org/journal/phyto to learn more.