Close X
Monday, November 11, 2024
ADVT 
National

Trailer Park Boys, Cathy Jones Protest Outside Nova Scotia Legislature

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 15 Apr, 2015 12:05 PM
    HALIFAX — Members of Nova Scotia's film and television industry including actors from the Trailer Park Boys are rallying outside the provincial legislature today to protest a proposed cut to a tax credit.
     
    People in the film and TV sector say the $24 million annual incentive should be left untouched because it is vital to their industry.
     
    The Liberal government has proposed cutting the tax credit to $6 million as of July 1, saying it can't afford to keep it as it is.
     
    The entertainment industry would also have access to a $6 million creative sector fund under changes announced in last week's budget.
     
    Some people working in the industry met with Finance Minister Diana Whalen on Tuesday and said they felt a compromise can be reached to resolve the dispute.
     
    At the rally today in Halifax, actor Jonathan Torrens — who co-hosted Street Cents and has starred as the character J-Roc in the Trailer Park Boys — called on the government to change course.
     
    "We are here as taxpayers, we are here as voters and we are here as skilled labourers who want to stay in this place we love," Torrens told hundreds of people at the demonstration.
     
    Comedian Cathy Jones also spoke on a stage before supporters, some of whom were carrying placards reading "We support #NSFilmJobs" and "We want to stay."
     
    "This film industry is massive and beautiful and to mess with it is a major mistake," said Jones as people clapped and cheered.
     
    Eight police officers blocked the entrance of the legislature.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Surrey Man Bleeding From Gunshot Wounds Takes Skytrain To Surrey City Centre Mall Food Court

    Surrey Man Bleeding From Gunshot Wounds Takes Skytrain To Surrey City Centre Mall Food Court
    Mounties received a call at around 4:45 p.m. Friday about a man in the Surrey City Centre mall food court who had apparently been shot.

    Surrey Man Bleeding From Gunshot Wounds Takes Skytrain To Surrey City Centre Mall Food Court

    Future Shop Stores Closing, Some Converting To Best Buys, 1,500 Jobs Lost

    Future Shop Stores Closing, Some Converting To Best Buys, 1,500 Jobs Lost
    Best Buy Canada, a subsidiary of Best Buy Co. Inc. that owns and operates both Best Buy and Future Shop stores, said in a statement Saturday that it will be closing 66 Future Shops for good, while 65 others will be converted into Best Buys.

    Future Shop Stores Closing, Some Converting To Best Buys, 1,500 Jobs Lost

    Suspect In Alleged Vancouver Sex Assault Charged, Remains In Custody

    Suspect In Alleged Vancouver Sex Assault Charged, Remains In Custody
    VANCOUVER — A man has been charged after a Vancouver woman was allegedly tied up and sexually assaulted by an intruder in her home.

    Suspect In Alleged Vancouver Sex Assault Charged, Remains In Custody

    B.C. Homeless Won't Have To Pay Thousands Of Dollars For Police Documents: Court

    VANCOUVER — Legal advocates for a group of homeless people in B.C.'s Fraser Valley say they won't have to pay tens of thousands of dollars to access police documents after a court ruling.

    B.C. Homeless Won't Have To Pay Thousands Of Dollars For Police Documents: Court

    B.C. Introduces New Legal Centre For Parents In Child Protection System

    VANCOUVER — The B.C. government is hoping to reduce the number of child-protection cases going to court by opening a new legal centre for parents.

    B.C. Introduces New Legal Centre For Parents In Child Protection System

    B.C. Court Of Appeal Sides With Provincial Court Judges On Pay And Pension

    B.C. Court Of Appeal Sides With Provincial Court Judges On Pay And Pension
    VANCOUVER — Provincial court judges in British Columbia have won a round in a long-standing battle against the government over pay and pension.

    B.C. Court Of Appeal Sides With Provincial Court Judges On Pay And Pension