Thursday, April 29, 2021

NOT QUITE UBI 
Sudan's basic income scheme aims to ease economic pain

By Nafisa Eltahir and Eltayeb Siddig 
4/29/2021

© Reuters/EL TAYEB SIDDIG Sudan's basic income scheme aims to ease economic pain

KHARTOUM (Reuters) - For Intisar Altayib, who ekes out a living drawing henna tattoos in Khartoum, soaring prices in Sudan mean running up tabs at local stores and cutting back on evening feasts during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan.

She is one of millions struggling through an economic crisis that has deepened as Sudan tries to emerge from decades of isolation and conflict. Inflation has risen to more than 340% and there are shortages of everything from power to medicines

.
© Reuters/EL TAYEB SIDDIG Sudan's basic income scheme aims to ease economic pain

To ease the pain of reforms the government is introducing a donor-funded scheme that aims to provide a temporary $5 basic monthly income to 80% of its population of 43 million.

The roll-out, which began in February, is a test for the transitional civilian-military partnership that is due to govern Sudan until 2023. Many Sudanese complain they have not seen the benefits of an uprising, triggered by the deteriorating economy, that overthrew former President Omar al-Bashir two years ago.

© Reuters/EL TAYEB SIDDIG Sudan's basic income scheme aims to ease economic pain

Altayib, who has registered for the welfare programme but is yet to receive money, says that in her neighbourhood of Al Kalakla, prices are four or five times higher than a year ago and her family has all but stopped buying meat.

Fuel price increases have put public transport beyond reach. "Ramadan is expensive, we have to rely on God," she said.

The family support programme came about as the government pursues an aggressive economic reform programme monitored by the International Monetary Fund, hoping to win relief on at least $50 billion dollars in debt and access funding from international lenders.

The ongoing reforms have included a sharp currency devaluation in February and fuel subsidy cuts over the second half of last year. The IMF said in an October report on the reforms that they could lead to economic contraction, higher inflation and social tensions in the short term.

© Reuters/MOHAMED NURELDIN ABDALLAH FILE PHOTO: Women sit together as they prepare food for their families in Khartoum north

The basic income scheme, known as Thamarat (fruits) or the Sudan Family Support Programme, is an effort to soften the blow, officials say.

A survey of more than 3,000 families across Sudan from November to January showed that 30% were unable to buy staples like bread and milk, with price increases worsened by the COVID-19 pandemic, said Milena Stefanova, country manager for the World Bank
.

PAYMENTS

The start of the support programme was pushed back to late February because donors conditioned the release of funds they had pledged last year on the closing of the gap between the official and black market exchange rates.

"The delay in implementing the programme reduces its impact because of the racing inflation in Sudan," said Mohammed al-Jak, a University of Khartoum economics professor.

Sudan has received $820 million from the World Bank and donor countries for the programme's first two phases, which aim to cover 24 million people in 12 states for six months, the World Bank says.

The programme is not yet funded to reach the remainder of the targeted 32.5 million, or for a potential extension of payments to a year.

Some beneficiaries told Reuters they would use the money to pay off debts, or cover rent or home maintenance. Intisar, however, said the money wouldn't make a huge dent in daily expenses and would be more useful for her family if she saved it up and started a business.

"This amount has an impact, especially in Ramadan," said Mohamed Aldai, a day laborer
living in the Id Hussein area who said his family of six received 11,400 Sudanese pounds ($30).

Payments were made to 84,028 families in March and April, the World Bank says. The government estimates family size at about five, and each member is entitled to a local currency monthly payment worth $5.


The government hopes to use the programme to facilitate a permanent social safety net for the poorest million families, said Magdi Amin, senior advisor at Sudan's Finance Ministry.

Amin Saleh, undersecretary at the Finance Ministry, says delays in payments so far are due to issues with verifying data and setting up transfers.

"People are struggling, we can't afford to buy anything," said Arafa Mohamed, a housewife in Al Kalakla.

"We've been waiting since they told us about this money, we've been waiting all Ramadan."

($1 = 380.0002 Sudanese pounds)

(Additional reporting by Khalid Abdelaziz; Writing by Nafisa Eltahir; Editing by Aidan Lewis and Frances Kerry)



BATTLEFIELD BAND ANTHEM FOR THE COMMON MAN

 

GM partners up to offer about 60,000 EV charging points across Canada, U.S


(Reuters) - General Motors on Wednesday announced deals with major electric vehicle charging networks to offer its customers access to nearly 60,000 charging points across the United States and Canada.



The No. 1 U.S. automaker said it had signed agreements with seven companies including Blink Charging, ChargePoint and EV Connect.

"EV customers will soon be able to easily see real-time information from nearly 60,000 charging plugs...find stations along a route and initiate and pay for charging," GM said in a statement.

The automaker also introduced "Ultium Charge 360", a platform which integrates charging networks, GM vehicle mobile apps and other services to simplify the charging experience for its electric-vehicle owners.

GM's next generation of Ultium batteries will be used in its new EVs including the Hummer EV and the Cadillac Lyriq.

Wall Street has been increasingly focusing on GM's strategy to roll out electric vehicles, as it slowly aims to catch up with EV market leader Tesla Inc.

The automaker previously announced a $27 billion investment in EV and autonomous vehicles (AV) through 2025 and the launch of 30 new EVs by 2025-end.

GM's longer-range target also includes halting sales of light-duty gasoline and diesel-powered vehicles by 2035.

(Reporting by Sanjana Shivdas in Bengaluru; Editing by Devika Syamnath)

GM expands Canadian charging network to nearly 5,000 public plugs

Andrew McCredie 
 Driving.ca
4/28/2021

Infrastructure. Infrastructure. Infrastructure. Now that most every automaker on the planet is producing electric vehicles, and many of those committing to rolling out dozens of such models in the coming years, for EV adoption to ramp up in Canada, it’s all about the charging station infrastructure.

General Motors is one of those companies all-in on EVs — launching 30 all-new EVs by the end of 2025 — and today it announced Ultium Charge 360, a customer charging program that will integrate charging networks across North America, GM vehicle mobile apps, and other products and services.

As part of the program, GM has signed agreements with several charging providers, including Blink Charging, ChargePoint, EV Connect, FLO, Greenlots, and SemaConnect. According to GM, that represents nearly 60,000 charging plugs in North America, including 4,800 in Canada, or nearly half the 9,900 plugs currently included in the MyChevrolet, MyCadillac, and MyGMC apps. All of those chargers will be tied into the existing GM vehicle mobile apps, providing real-time information for finding stations along a route, and initiating and paying for charging.
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The creator of GM's Ultium battery tech talks towing, cold, and the future

GM will update the apps to provide more intuitive mobile experience that makes navigating to a charging station, plugging into a charger and paying for charging simple.

“Ultium Charge 360 simplifies and improves the at-home charging experience and the public charging experience — whether it’s community-based or road-trip charging,” said Travis Hester, GM’s chief EV officer.

The ‘Ultium’ in the new program refers to the Ultium platform, GM’s EV chassis architecture that the automaker estimates could provide a full-charge range of up to 724 kilometres. That platform is the underpinning of many of GM’s coming-soon EVs, including the Cadillac Lyriq, GMC Hummer EVs, BrightDrop EV600 and the Chevrolet Silverado electric pickup truck.


United Auto Workers presses GM, Ford on unionizing battery pla
nts


By David Shepardson and Joseph White 
4/28/2021
© Reuters/REBECCA COOK United Auto Workers (UAW) acting president Rory Gamble speaks to Reuters from his office in Southfield, Michigan,

DETROIT/WASHINGTON (Reuters) - United Auto Workers President Rory Gamble told Reuters the union is in talks with General Motors about representing workers at joint venture battery plants, and voiced opposition to proposals for Washington to impose a firm deadline to end use of gasoline- and diesel-powered vehicles.

Gamble said the UAW has raised concerns with GM and Ford Motor Co about joint venture and potential electric vehicle operations set up by the automakers and supplier partners that so far are not represented by the union. GM is building two U.S. battery production plants with South Korean battery partner LG Chem. Ford is considering investments in battery manufacturing.

"We've got to make sure that work stays at a livable wage and those workers can organize," Gamble said in an interview. "We're having some discussions developing with General Motors."

General Motors said in a statement that its Ultium EV battery facilities "are part of a joint venture and are a separate company – Ultium Cells LLC. The workforces at those locations will determine whether or not the facility is represented by a union."

The automaker also said that top management "meets with the UAW regularly" and that "those discussions are private -- we don’t comment on those conversations in the media."

The UAW, with nearly 1 million active and retired members, is a key player in the debate in Washington and U.S. state capitals over regulating gasoline-powered vehicles as President Joe Biden shapes his administration's policies on climate change.

Many UAW autoworkers earn their livings building Detroit-brand, petroleum-burning pickup trucks and SUVs or assembling engines and other components for those vehicles in Midwestern states such as Michigan.

Gamble compared the technological challenge presented by electric vehicles to the disruption caused by the oil price shocks of the 1970s, and government policies to demand rapid fuel efficiency improvements in response. The struggles of Detroit automakers to comply opened the door to Japanese and later European automakers to establish a parallel, non-union auto industry in the United States.

California and 11 other mostly coastal and Democratic-leaning states have called on Biden to set a deadline of 2035 to phase out sales of new CO2-emitting, internal combustion vehicles. Biden has not agreed to endorse a deadline.

"We don't like these hard deadlines you're hearing. We don't think a lot of them are fully achievable," Gamble said. "We should not put all our eggs in one basket."

"When autoworkers hear about zero emission by a certain date they get very uncomfortable because they feel it's a challenge to their very employment," Gamble said. "We see a blending" of electric vehicles and internal combustion engines "for some years to come."

He said the United States should "ease into this full 100% EVs at the appropriate time, when everything is in place."

He praised Biden and the White House for extensive engagement with the union. "He understands the challenges our members face," Gamble said.

Pointing to the administration's upcoming decision to revise fuel efficiency requirements, Gamble said Biden should adopt a "fair standard that doesn't put a lot of burden on the auto companies" or cost jobs.

Biden wants $174 billion to boost the EV market, including $100 billion for consumer rebates. Gamble also expressed concern about that plan, fearing much of the money could go to subsidize EVs built abroad.

"We don't have a lot of American EVs on the road right now to choose from," Gamble said, saying any new rebate program should ensure it "increases American manufacturing."

Gamble wants the administration to make sure workers at plants producing electric vehicles, batteries and components can unionize. U.S. workers at the No. 1 electric vehicle manufacturer, Tesla, are not represented by a union.

The United States needs to do more to ensure a lot of component work tied to EVs are manufactured domestically and that workers get good wages, he said.

"We don't need another service sector in this country," Gamble said. "That's what I am fearful of. If these jobs are low wage minimal benefit jobs its not going to benefit the economy."

Gamble said he personally does not plan to buy an electric vehicle -- and is skeptical that many Americans will buy EVs.

"I have no interest at all in an electric vehicle," he said. "I am just dyed-in-the-wool, 'Give me my V-8 and my pickup truck.'"

(Reporting by Joseph White and David Shepardson; Editing by David Gregorio)

COVID outbreak closes Simcoe auto parts plant leaving 1,000 people out of work


More than 1,000 people are off work after Toyotetsu Canada shut down its auto parts plant in Simcoe due to a COVID-19 outbreak.

The company told employees on Monday about 10 active cases at the plant, and on Tuesday Toyotetsu officials decided to suspend operations at the sprawling 530,000-square-foot facility.


“Toyotetsu Canada has agreed to voluntarily shut down operations and close the plant out of an abundance of caution and will reopen when it is safe to do so,” the company said in a media release issued Tuesday evening.

“Toyotetsu Canada will continue to work very closely and co-operatively with public health on any and all necessary outbreak measures to open as quickly and safely as possible.”

The plant — a major industrial employer in Norfolk County — makes a variety of car parts for regional Toyota and Lexus production lines.

Toyotetsu said 25 workers have tested positive for COVID-19 since the pandemic began.

The company did not respond to an email from The Spectator Wednesday asking if the affected workers will continue to be paid during the shutdown or will get help accessing employment insurance, and if the 10 workers who have tested positive are currently on paid sick leave.

Haldimand-Norfolk Health Unit spokesperson Kyra Hayes said the health unit has been “actively working with Toyotetsu to implement a public health management plan.”

The health unit did not order the closure, Hayes said.

“As per Toyotetsu’s public statement, they voluntarily agreed to cease production,” she said.

Down the road in Port Dover, popular snack shack The Arbor is closed after several staff members were identified as close contacts of confirmed COVID cases.

The century-old eatery closed for at least two weeks as of Monday to give affected employees time to self-isolate.

The temporary closure affects some two dozen employees, who are usually kept busy supplying locals and day-trippers with foot-long hotdogs, French fries and Golden Glow drinks.

The health unit is also monitoring a COVID-19 outbreak at the Hagersville location of gypsum wallboard manufacturer CGC.

There were 285 active cases of COVID-19 in Haldimand-Norfolk as of Wednesday morning.

J.P. Antonacci, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter, The Hamilton Spectator
UNION DRIVES NEVER FAIL FOR WORKERS
Amazon will raise pay by up to $3 per hour for 500,000 workers

insider@insider.com (Allana Akhtar) 4/24/2021

© Provided by Business Insider Amazon will raise pay by $0.50 to $3 an hour for 500,000 employees. Ina Fassbender/AFP via Getty Images


Amazon will raise pay by up to $3 an hour for 500,000 employees.

The company announced the change in a statement on Wednesday.

Amazon is hiring for tens of thousands of jobs across the US.

Amazon will raise pay by up to $3 an hour for 500,000 employees, the company announced Wednesday
.

The pay increases, which will range between $0.50 and $3 hourly, will affect workers across four teams: fulfillment, delivery, package sortation, and specialty fulfilment, the company said.

The increases represent an investment of over $1 billion in incremental pay, according to Amazon vice president Darcie Henry.

Henry said the pay increase is to incentivize hiring for tens of thousands of jobs across the US.

"These jobs come with a range of great benefits, like medical, dental, and vision coverage, parental leave, ways to save for the future, and opportunities for career advancement-all in a safe and inclusive environment that's been ranked among the best workplaces in the world," Henry said in a release.

Amazon claims the median worker earned $29,007 in 2020, a $159 increase from the year prior. The e-commerce giant raised its minimum wage to $15 an hour in 2018.

Amazon workers in Alabama recently lost their bid to form what would have been the company's first-ever union in the US. Amazon told Insider it already offered "industry-leading pay" the union was pushing for, but labor activists and experts argue collective bargaining can increase wages further.

MORE IMPORTANTLY IS THAT UNIONS GIVE WORKERS WORKPLACE RIGHTS A GRIEVANCE PROCEDURE TO LIMIT MANAGEMENTS ARBITRARY ACTIONS
YOU BARGAIN NOT BEG.

The firm roughly tripled its net profit to $6.33 billion and grew sales by 37% - to $96.1 billion - in the last quarter. The COVID-19 pandemic fueled a rise in online shopping and a need for cloud storage on Amazon Web Services as people spent more time at home.

Amazon did not have additional statement to add.

This story is developing. Please check back for updates.

Council hears CUPW call for postal banking, EVs, & wellness


ADELAIDE-METCALFE - A presentation about postal banking and Canada Post service expansion piqued the interest of councillors, but not enough to garner official support during a recent council Twp. council meeting.

Derek Richmond, Ontario Region Coordinator for the Canadian Union of Postal Workers (CUPW), was on-hand to share the union’s vision for the future of postal services in rural communities. He suggests that post office locations could become community hubs in rural centres, complete with drop-in resources for youth and seniors, access to the internet, tourist information, hunting and fishing licenses, and other government services. Postal carriers could provide wellness checks on seniors.


Postal banking is a large part of his vision. As national banks focus on digital services and shutter unprofitable locations - often in rural communities - CUPW argues that reinstating a postal banking system would benefit those in rural communities. For farmers, who are often busy, or seniors, who may be less mobile, banking at a nearby Canada Post may save time and effort. Canada Post provided postal banking until 1968; postal banking systems exist in other countries including France, Italy, Germany, Brazil, and New Zealand.

“We have to look at innovative ways to move forward,” said Richmond. His is a green vision, including the gradual replacement of current delivery vehicles with electric vehicles. He suggested that Canada Post locations could host a country-wide network of vehicle charging stations for public use, facilitating the transition from gas-powered cars to electric.

Despite the ambitious ideas, the township council chose to file the resolution during a Tuesday, 6 April 2021 meeting.

“I’m not sure that our municipality is big enough that it wouldn’t be covered off by an adjacent municipality, but we should definitely keep it on our radar,” suggested councillor Sue Clarke. Still, the presentation hit home for Mayor Kurtis Smith, who noted that Kerwood once had both a TD Bank, and a Canada Post location (which was located in a home); but now has neither.

McKinley Leonard-Scott, Local Journalism Initiative Reporter, The Middlesex Banner
WE NEED 10 PAID SICK DAYS
Ontario is launching paid sick leave. Should other provinces follow suit?

Emerald Bensadoun and Sean Boynton 
GLOBAL NEWS
4/29/2021

Following months of public pressure prompted by a surge in COVID-19 cases, the Ontario government has finally announced its paid sick leave program.

© Provided by Global News Workers manufacture partitions made from cardboard and chipboard material at TEC Business Solutions during the COVID-19 pandemic in Mississauga, Ont., on Wednesday, January 13, 2021. The company has made mask wearing and gloves mandatory along with providing hand sanitizing stations through out the factory. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Nathan Denette

The Ontario COVID-19 Worker Income Protection Program is retroactive, beginning April 19 and ending on Sept. 25. It includes access to three paid sick days, and the province has agreed to reimburse employers 100 per cent of the employee’s wage for up to $200 a day.


Read more: Ontario’s COVID-19 paid sick leave program to include 3 days for workers

For some, the announcement marks a victory for employees that has been a long time coming.

"It's a breakthrough to see this happening," said Dr. Kate Mulligan, a professor at the University of Toronto's Dalla Lana School of Public Health.

But many are wondering if it's time for other provinces to follow suit.

Video: COVID-19: Ontarians reacts to paid sick leave announcement

Currently, there are only two other provinces that provide paid sick leave in Canada: Quebec and Prince Edward Island (P.E.I).

Quebec offers two paid sick days per year after a worker has been employed for three months, while P.E.I. provides workers who have been employed for five continuous years with one paid sick day per year.

Canada's federal labour code also states that workers can take five unpaid sick days per year, and that federally-regulated employers must offer at least three days of paid sick leave a year.

Mulligan says it's a bit "mystifying" it took Ontario so long to follow suit.

"It really shouldn't be a big deal," she said. "It's a no-brainer from a public health perspective that people need support to be able to stay home (if they're sick), and that those most essential workers need the most support."

Read more: Paid sick days vs. federal benefit: Why advocates say both are needed to fight COVID-19

The federal government introduced the Canada Recovery Sickness Benefit last November, which provides $450 after taxes per week for up to four weeks for eligible workers who fall ill from COVID-19.

Many other provinces without paid sick leave plans have urged Ottawa to double that fund through unspent money from the Safe Restart program — something the Liberals have declined to do.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau told Global News earlier this month that it's up to the provinces to fill gaps in the benefit's coverage.

On Wednesday, British Columbia passed legislation that ensures workers get up to three hours of paid leave to get vaccinated against COVID-19, retroactive to April 19.

The province also ensures employees' jobs are protected if they take up to three unpaid days off. But the latest provincial budget made no mention of ensuring any of those days are paid.

"I am disappointed the federal government has not seen the importance of a comprehensive national paid sick leave program," Labour Minister Harry Bains said in a statement to Global News.

"In the light of that, I want to be clear, our government is building a made-in-B.C. program to continue our work in supporting British Columbians through this pandemic," he added, without specifying what that program could look like.


Manitoba Finance Minister Scott Fielding said in his own statement that his province is also looking at solutions.

"Many employees in Manitoba receive paid sick leave benefits through their employers or collective bargaining agreements, and we are currently considering ways to address gaps in federal programming and provide options to help Manitobans who aren’t currently covered under employee plans," he said.

Meanwhile, other provinces who responded to Global News made it clear they aren't looking at a provincial paid sick leave program.

A spokesperson for Alberta's labour and immigration ministry instead listed the existing programs that workers can take advantage of, including the Canada Recovery Sickness Benefit (CRSB) and up to three hours of paid leave to get vaccinated.

Alberta also offers up to 14 days of unpaid, job-protected leave for employees who fall ill.

Read more: Labour leaders, NDP call for paid sick and vaccine leave in Manitoba

Speaking to reporters Wednesday, Don Morgan, Saskatchewan’s minister of labour relations and workplace safety, said employers are "increasingly fragile" and could see "serious problems" under a paid sick leave program.

He also suggested money from the federal Safe Restart fund could help provinces pay for such a program.

A spokesperson for Morgan's ministry referred to his comments from earlier in the day.

But Mulligan said having employers pay their workers for sick days is a better financial move long-term than suffering through a COVID-19-related shutdown.

Trudeau accuses NDP of being ‘befuddled about division of powers’ over paid sick leave


"We know that employers have been really challenged during COVID, just like everyone has, and so I think the government has been reluctant to ask them to do this," she said.

"But the reality is that it's in the employers' interest to provide these sick days in order to avoid a shutdown ... that's much more costly for them. So really, it makes sense all around."

None of the Atlantic provinces or northern territories answered Global News' requests for comment before publication.

Mulligan says that while Ontario did the right thing by introducing the paid sick leave program, it falls short of what is needed to address self-isolation requirements for COVID-19.

"This is a positive step, but it is not sufficient to meet the public health needs right now," she said, noting those who test positive for the coronavirus must isolate for a minimum of 10 to 14 days.

"(Three paid days) will support people to get tested, to get vaccinated and to stay home with maybe some initial symptoms. But it doesn't help us to control the spread of COVID if people can't stay home for that longer period."

Read more: Sask. government marks National Day of Mourning amid pandemic, calls for paid sick leave

Mulligan says minimum wage workers and "those working in high-risk frontline roles" will feel the most pressure.

"You might decide that after those three days, you don't really have an option if you're making minimum wage and you feel that you don't have what you need to pay the bills between now and the several weeks that go by before you are reimbursed," she said.

"People do live with that level of precarity and those are the people who are not yet fully covered by this program."

Mikal Skuterud, a labour economist with the University of Waterloo, echoed Mulligan's comments.

"What is the objective of this policy? Well, it's to reduce workplace contagion," he said. "And I guess the really big question is whether or not this will do that."

He points to the outbreak at a Canada Post facility in Mississauga, Ont., where around 80 employees have been told to self-isolate after at least 12 workers tested positive.

Trudeau comments on Ontario’s federal benefit top-up for sick leave due to COVID-19

"They've been really struggling with workplace outbreaks and they have one of the most generous paid sick leave policies in Canada," he said.

Skuterud also wonders if the spotlight on paid sick leave has "distracted us from other efforts that might actually be more effective."

Getting COVID-19 vaccines into city hotspots, along with putting rapid tests and rapid antigen tests in the workplace, could be more effective ways to prevent the virus from spreading, he says.

Yet for now, Skuterud says seeing the Ontario government and others listen to people's demands for paid sick days is a positive development.

"It can't do anything but make things better," he said. "It's not going to make things worse — that's for sure."

— with files from Global News' Rachel Gilmore
WE NEED 10 PAID SICK DAYS
Ontario details plan for 3 paid sick days after a year of mounting pressure


Shanifa Nasser, Lucas Powers · CBC News · Posted: Apr 28, 2021 

A man holds up a sign as a group advocating for provincially mandated paid sick days for workers participates in a 'die-in' rally outside Queens Park earlier this year. The proposed Ontario COVID-19 Worker Protection Benefit Program will pay up to $200 per day, and will be retroactive to April 19. (Cole Burston/The Canadian Press)

After months of urgent calls about the need for paid sick leave by medical professionals, labour advocates, political leaders and even top doctors from some of the province's hardest-hit regions, the Ontario government has announced a plan to provide three paid sick days through a temporary program ending in September.

The proposed Ontario COVID-19 Worker Protection Benefit Program would pay up to $200 per day for workers who are sick, have symptoms, have a mental health issue or need to be vaccinated, and will be retroactive to April 19. The sick days would not need to be taken consecutively and no sick note is required.

If the legislation is passed, the program will be administered through the Workplace Safety and Insurance Board and employers will be reimbursed in full, the province says.

Speaking to reporters Wednesday, Ontario Labour Minister Monte McNaughton also said the province has offered to cover the cost of doubling the Canada Recovery Sickness Benefit payments, adding an additional $500 per week to eligible individuals, for a total of $1,000 per week.

Ottawa earlier this week rejected an offer by the province to top up the program, saying the federal benefit is designed to support workers who don't have a regular employer, or as a stop gap until their province mandates paid sick days.

WATCH | Trudeau responds to Ontario's offer to double sick leave payments:



Ontario calls on federal government to double sick leave payments: Minister of Labour2 days ago  
1:35
During Question Period at Queen’s Park Tuesday, Ontario’s Minister of Labour Monte McNaughton said the province is calling on the federal government to double payments under its sick leave program from $500 a week to $1,000 a week, with Ontario picking up the extra cost. Later, during a press conference, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said provinces need to look at delivering sick leave through employers, which he said Ottawa can’t do. 

Last week, Premier Doug Ford pledged that Ontario would soon unveil details of a paid sick leave program, claiming it would be "the best program anywhere in North America, bar none."

But as reported by CBC News, the Ford government initially sought to top up the federal program, rather than create its own. On the same day as Ford's emotional news conference, Ontario's finance minister wrote a letter to the federal government detailing the proposal.

Critics have long pointed out the federal benefit pays less than a full-time minimum wage job, involves days, if not weeks, of processing time and doesn't guarantee job security for workers who use it.

Accessible paid leave needed, science advisory table says


Following the announcement, Ontario's science advisory table responded with a brief that outlined the benefits of an effective sick pay program.

"Ontario workers need 10 days of adequate #PaidSickLeave that is easily accessible, immediately paid and supports them in following all public health measures," Dr. Nathan Stall, a member of the table, tweeted on Wednesday.



"In the United States, the introduction of a temporary paid sick leave resulted in an estimated 50 per cent reduction in the number of COVID-19 cases per state per day," the brief points out.

Asked if the province consulted with its own science advisory table on the plan, the labour minister did not answer definitively.

"We certainly had lots of advice from the medical community," McNaughton said, pivoting to the province's disappointment with the lack of additional sick leave measures in the federal budget.

McNaughton was also asked why it took the province so long to respond to the repeated calls for such a measure. On that, he replied, "We moved decisively when COVID-19 hit the province ... We advocated to the federal government to improve this program."

The province has argued repeatedly that the federal program was adequate as a reason not to implement a provincial program, with Ford saying earlier this year he didn't want to double-up on existing measures.

"We aren't going to duplicate and waste taxpayers' money, double dipping into their pockets," Ford told CTV's Your Morning on Feb. 16.
'3 days of paid sick leave will not cut it'

The cost of the proposal announced today was not included in the provincial budget, unveiled in March.

Unlike Quebec and Prince Edward Island, where sick days are in place permanently, Ontario's proposed program ends in just five months. The province has has passed legislation that protects workers' jobs if they can't work due to a COVID-19 diagnosis.

WATCH | Ontario announces plan for 3 paid sick days at up to $200 per day amid pandemic:


Ontario announces plan for 3 paid sick days at up to $200 per day amid pandemic
1:50 The Ontario government has announced a plan to provide three paid sick days through a temporary program ending in September. Lorenda Reddekopp has the details — and reaction to the announcement. 


Speaking to reporters after the announcement, NDP Leader Andrea Horwath said, "Three days of paid sick leave will not cut it."

"I don't know where the premier thinks this is the best program in North America. It certainly is not."

Horwath also said that with just three days of sick leave proposed, she fears workers may not be able to self-isolate for the required amount of time if exposed to the virus.

The NDP leader said her party will have to look at the details of the bill before committing to voting to pass it.

Liberal MPP John Fraser also said his party will need to see the legislation before deciding whether to support it.

"For 400 days people had to make the decision between going to work sick or putting food on the table. The government didn't have their backs and I would argue that they don't now," he said.

The Liberals had asked for Ontario to institute 10 paid sick days, Fraser said.

On Monday, the provincial government voted down a Liberal bill that would have required employers to provide workers with 10 paid days for medical emergencies.

According to the Opposition NDP, the vote marked the 25th time the Ford government has voted down a proposal for paid sick days in 2021 alone.

In a statement reacting to the announcement, CUPE Ontario president Fred Hahn said the Ford government had "chosen chaos and confusion" over delivering the type of program Ontarians truly need.

"Everyone engaged here needs to keep fighting for real paid sick days we need: permanent, universal, employer-paid, and accessible. That demand did not let up today. Today's announcement only makes it clearer we must fight to get what every worker so desperately needs."
DEFUND THE POLICE
NYPD cancels use of robotic dog after backlash


The New York Police Department (NYPD) will no longer be using the controversial "robot dog" following mounting uproar against the machine's use, officials confirmed Wednesday.

© Getty NYPD cancels use of robotic dog after backlash

John Miller, NYPD deputy commissioner for intelligence and counterterrorism, told The New York Times that the leasing contract valued at around $94,000 with the robot dog's maker, Boston Dynamics, had been ended early on April 22.

The action was taken in response to a subpoena issued by New York City Councilman Ben Kallos (D) and Council Speaker Corey Johnson (D) for records relating to the device.

Miller told the newspaper that the robot's lease had initially been scheduled to end in August, but the contract had been terminated earlier because it was being improperly used to fuel arguments about race and surveillance, saying it had become a "target."

"People had figured out the catchphrases and the language to somehow make this evil," Miller said.

The NYPD official did not rule out the possibility of the robot, dubbed Digidog, returning in the future.

"But for now, this is a casualty of politics, bad information and cheap sound bytes," he told the Times. "We should have named it 'Lassie.'"

Bill Neidhardt, spokesman for New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio (D), told the newspaper he was "glad the Digidog was put down," describing it as "creepy" and "alienating."

A spokesperson for Boston Dynamics stated Wednesday that the robot dogs were not designed to be used as weapons and were not meant to intimidate people, the Times reported.

"We support local communities reviewing the allocation of public funds, and believe Spot is a cost-effective tool comparable to historical robotic devices used by public safety to inspect hazardous environments," the spokesperson said.

In February, New York Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D) denounced the use of the robot, saying it was being used to target low-income communities of color. The congresswoman also took issue with the funds being used to keep the machine, arguing it should instead go toward schools or other issues.

"Please ask yourself: when was the last time you saw next-generation, world class technology for education, healthcare, housing, etc consistently prioritized for underserved communities like this?" Ocasio-Cortez tweeted at the time.