Close X
Wednesday, December 11, 2024
ADVT 
National

Quebec Suspends Anti-Uber Bill 90 Days To Negotiate With Ride-hailing Company

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 08 Jun, 2016 10:53 AM
    QUEBEC — The Quebec government will suspend the implementation of an anti-Uber bill for 90 days in order to have more time to negotiate with the ride-hailing company.
     
    Transport Minister Jacques Daoust said Tuesday the suspension gives company representatives time to come up with a pilot project that satisfies the government and which would allow Uber to operate legally in the province.
     
    The Quebec taxi industry lobby said it was a "satisfactory compromise," but still demanded Uber stop all its operations in the province until an agreement on the pilot project can be reached with the government.
     
    In response, taxi drivers said they were ready to cancel all planned protests during the Canadian Grand Prix weekend in Montreal.
     
    Daoust said he still wanted his anti-Uber bill passed by Friday, but his amendment would delay the bill's implementation by three months.
     
    The bill would force Uber drivers to obtain taxi permits and licences in order to operate, something the company said would force it to leave Quebec.
     
    "Uber is maybe the way of the future," Daoust told reporters. "But at the end of the day they have to be respectful of Quebec."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Saskatchewan Premier Brad Wall Not Interested In Becoming Federal Tory Leader

    A group called Brad Wall For Prime Minister is circulating an open letter to Tories meeting in Vancouver for the party's annual convention

    Saskatchewan Premier Brad Wall Not Interested In Becoming Federal Tory Leader

    Liberal MP Arnold Chan Struggles To Slow Down For Cancer Treatments

    "Oh, damn," Chan said he thought to himself that night in February as he realized the cancer had resurfaced.

    Liberal MP Arnold Chan Struggles To Slow Down For Cancer Treatments

    Newfoundland And Labrador Rejects $32,000 Judges' Pay Hike Amid Fiscal Crisis

    Newfoundland And Labrador Rejects $32,000 Judges' Pay Hike Amid Fiscal Crisis
    An independent tribunal recommended a 14 per cent salary increase for provincial court judges over four years ending this fiscal year.

    Newfoundland And Labrador Rejects $32,000 Judges' Pay Hike Amid Fiscal Crisis

    Ban On Fracking In New Brunswick Will Continue Indefinitely: Minister

    Donald Arseneault was responding to a report from the commission on hydraulic fracturing which was released in February.

    Ban On Fracking In New Brunswick Will Continue Indefinitely: Minister

    Health Canada Clears Saskatchewan Cyclotron To Produce Medical Test Isotopes

    SASKATOON — The Saskatchewan Centre for Cyclotron Sciences will soon be able to provide material for medical tests that can detect diseases such as cancer.

    Health Canada Clears Saskatchewan Cyclotron To Produce Medical Test Isotopes

    Ministers Defend Assisted Dying Bill Amid Push Back From Grassroots Liberals

    Ministers Defend Assisted Dying Bill Amid Push Back From Grassroots Liberals
    Justice Minister Jody Wilson-Raybould says the federal government considered referring its proposed assisted dying law to the Supreme Court to see if it's constitutional.

    Ministers Defend Assisted Dying Bill Amid Push Back From Grassroots Liberals