Close X
Tuesday, November 26, 2024
ADVT 
National

Justin Trudeau Makes Funding Announcement In Charlottetown

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 04 Mar, 2019 06:33 PM

    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is warning that some politicians will try to sow division and fear among voters to win the federal election slated for this fall.


    "And that's why, as a party in 2015 and again in 2019, we are going to pick the other path — given people's worries and anxieties — which is allaying those fears," Trudeau told supporters at a fundraising event Monday in Charlottetown.


    The prime minister also said his government is planning for the future of work in Canada by investing heavily in artificial intelligence and robotics.


    "We're going to make sure we're investing in skills, in jobs, in training, in education, in research right across the country so that Canadians can be empowered by the changes we're going through."


    Trudeau and Veterans Affairs Minister Lawrence MacAulay later met with P.E.I. Premier Wade MacLauchlan.


    Heading into the meeting, MacLauchlan noted the announcement last week by the Conference Board of Canada that P.E.I. is expected to lead the country with 3.2 per cent growth this year.


    Later in the day, the prime minister announced his Liberal government will spend $37.5 million to help a pharmaceutical company expand in Atlantic Canada.


    Trudeau made the announcement at BioVectra Inc. in Charlottetown, which plans to spend $144 million over five years to expand its operations in Charlottetown and Windsor, N.S.


    Trudeau issued a statement saying BioVectra is a leader in producing life-saving treatments for serious illnesses that affect millions of people around the world.


    The project is expected to create 150 full-time jobs over five years in P.E.I. and Nova Scotia.


    BioVectra President Oliver Technow said the company has spent $25 million per year since 2015 to expand the business.


    The company's clients include most of the world's top 20 biopharmaceutical companies, he said in a statement.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Researchers See Possible Link Between Opioids, Birth Defect

    Researchers See Possible Link Between Opioids, Birth Defect
    NEW YORK — Health officials are looking into a possible link between prescription opioids and a horrific birth defect.

    Researchers See Possible Link Between Opioids, Birth Defect

    Saudi Women Runaways Rebel Against System Of Male Control

    Identified only as Nojoud al-Mandeel on Twitter, her case differs from that of al-Qunun. She has not fled the kingdom, has not revealed her face and has only made her pleas for help on Twitter in Arabic.

    Saudi Women Runaways Rebel Against System Of Male Control

    'Hurricane Hazel' McCallion Appointed Adviser To Premier Doug Ford

    'Hurricane Hazel' McCallion Appointed Adviser To Premier Doug Ford
    TORONTO — Ontario Premier Doug Ford has appointed former Mississauga mayor Hazel McCallion as a special adviser.

    'Hurricane Hazel' McCallion Appointed Adviser To Premier Doug Ford

    Freed By Court, Pakistani Christian Woman Aasia Bibi Still A Prisoner

    Freed By Court, Pakistani Christian Woman Aasia Bibi Still A Prisoner
    ISLAMABAD — Aasia Bibi still lives the life of a prisoner, nearly three months after the Pakistani Christian woman was acquitted of blasphemy and released from death row.

    Freed By Court, Pakistani Christian Woman Aasia Bibi Still A Prisoner

    Ex-Mountie Investigating 'Surrey Six' Murders Pleads Guilty To Obstruction

    Ex-Mountie Investigating 'Surrey Six' Murders Pleads Guilty To Obstruction
    VANCOUVER — A lead investigator in the largest-ever gang-related mass murder in British Columbia has pleaded guilty to breach of trust and obstruction of justice involving a witness.

    Ex-Mountie Investigating 'Surrey Six' Murders Pleads Guilty To Obstruction

    Less Beef, More Beans. Experts Say World Needs A New Diet

    Less Beef, More Beans. Experts Say World Needs A New Diet
    Eggs should be limited to fewer than about four a week, the report says. Dairy foods should be about a serving a day, or less.

    Less Beef, More Beans. Experts Say World Needs A New Diet