Close X
Friday, November 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

Bombardier: Navdeep Bains Focused On Jobs, R&D And Head Office

The Canadian Press, 06 May, 2016 10:53 AM
    LONGUEUIL, Que. — The federal economic development minister is suggesting Bombardier must keep jobs and its head office in Canada as well as maintaining R&D if it is to get US$1 billion from Ottawa.
     
    Navdeep Bains says negotiations are continuing between the government and the aerospace giant with regard to the Montreal-based company's request for the money.
     
    "For us the No. 1 priority is to advance the public interest and the public interest is about good-quality jobs, about R & D and keeping the head office here," Bains said in Longueuil, Que., as he visited the Canadian Space Agency on Thursday.
     
    Bains refused to discuss Bombardier's voting structure — an issue that is an apparent sticking point with Ottawa in its talks with the aerospace giant.
     
    Bombardier's founding family reiterated last week it has no intention of changing the voting structure that allows it to maintain control of the company.
     
    Pierre Beaudoin, the executive chairman of the board, said the current setup allows Bombardier (TSX:BBD.B) to invest long term and prevents the company from being dismantled.
     
    Beaudoin is a member of the Beaudoin-Bombardier family that controls the company with 53.23 per cent of the voting rights through its multiple voting shares.
     
     
    Bains again noted that Bombardier has 950 suppliers and that the aerospace sector employs 180,000 people and contributes $29 billion to the national economy.
     
    "The aerospace sector has a significant impact in Ontario, in British Columbia, in Atlantic Canada," he said. "It truly has national implications. Bombardier is not only a Quebec company, a Montreal company, but it is a strong Canadian brand."
     
    Bains said protracted negotiations are not abnormal given the circumstances.
     
    "It's not something we can automatically announce on our own," he said. "We have to engage the company in a way they accept and work with us as well on that solution...They understand we want to advance the public interest.
     
    "We don't want to cut any corners. We don't want to make any shortcuts. We want to be thoughtful, we want to be responsible and, again, the timing is really coming to a solution. We want to be part of a solution that sets the company up for success in the long term."
     
    The Quebec government announced last October it would invest US$1 billion in Bombardier to help its CSeries program and challenged Ottawa to match.
     
     
    Bains noted the federal government has contributed $1.3 billion to Bombardier over the last five decades in either grants or loans.
     
    The company last week signed a lucrative deal with Delta Air Lines for 75 CS100 aircraft with options for another 50 planes. The order for the 75 planes is worth US$5.6 billion, though that's based on the list price and Delta is expected to have received a discount.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Syrian refugees helping victims of Fort McMurray fire

    Syrian refugees helping victims of Fort McMurray fire

    A group of Syrian refugees have come forward to help Fort McMurray evacuees. Almost tens of thous...

    Syrian refugees helping victims of Fort McMurray fire

    WATCH: Dash Cam Videos Show Terrifying Drive Out Of Fiery Fort McMurray For Evacuees

    WATCH: Dash Cam Videos Show Terrifying Drive Out Of Fiery Fort McMurray For Evacuees
    The video shows orange embers raining down on his pickup truck as towering flames line the side of the road.

    WATCH: Dash Cam Videos Show Terrifying Drive Out Of Fiery Fort McMurray For Evacuees

    Police Warn People In Nova Scotia About Sex Offender Dubbed The 'Pants Puller'

    Police Warn People In Nova Scotia About Sex Offender Dubbed The 'Pants Puller'
    ANTIGONISH, N.S. — RCMP in Nova Scotia are warning people about the release of a high-risk offender dubbed the "pants puller."

    Police Warn People In Nova Scotia About Sex Offender Dubbed The 'Pants Puller'

    B.C. Woman Who Killed Friend Gets Life And Must Serve 11 Years Before Parole

    B.C. Woman Who Killed Friend Gets Life And Must Serve 11 Years Before Parole
    Trudy Hunter was found guilty of killing Christina Docherty by stabbing her more than 20 times with a steak knife from the victim's own kitchen in November 2013.

    B.C. Woman Who Killed Friend Gets Life And Must Serve 11 Years Before Parole

    Liberals Expect To Sign Funding Agreement With Provinces By Next Month: Amarjeet Sohi

    Liberals Expect To Sign Funding Agreement With Provinces By Next Month: Amarjeet Sohi
    OTTAWA — Canada's infrastructure minister says he expects Ottawa and most of the provinces to sign agreements in the next month to allow new infrastructure money to flow to cities.

    Liberals Expect To Sign Funding Agreement With Provinces By Next Month: Amarjeet Sohi

    Chilliwack, B.C. Man, 63, Charged With Second-Degree Murder In Fatal Stabbing

    Chilliwack, B.C. Man, 63, Charged With Second-Degree Murder In Fatal Stabbing
    Police say officers responded to reports of a stabbing Tuesday afternoon and found one man dead and another with a knife.

    Chilliwack, B.C. Man, 63, Charged With Second-Degree Murder In Fatal Stabbing