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Trudeau says he will help keep jobs local for EV projects

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 29 Apr, 2024 03:26 PM
  • Trudeau says he will help keep jobs local for EV projects

Trudeau spoke to a crowd of 500 construction union leaders from all provinces today at the Canada's Building Trade Unions annual conference.

CBTU wrote to Trudeau earlier this month asking him to intervene because they said Canadian workers were being sidelined in favour of foreign employees at the NextStar EV battery plant in Windsor, Ont.

Both Trudeau and NextStar, which is owned by Stellantis and LG Energy Solution, deny that is happening, saying a select few positions have gone to foreign workers for equipment installation.

At the conference today Trudeau made a commitment to protect local jobs and said these investments have been about creating work for generations to come.

The Conservatives are demanding he make public the contracts for six electric vehicle projects including what they do to protect local union jobs.

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Cold warnings cover much of the West, chilling even the sturdiest Canadians

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Cold warnings cover much of the West, chilling even the sturdiest Canadians

B.C. police agencies tout rollout of body worn cameras

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B.C. police agencies tout rollout of body worn cameras

Former federal NDP leader Ed Broadbent dead at 87

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Former federal NDP leader Ed Broadbent dead at 87

Indo-Canadian charged for trying to transport cocaine worth $4.86 mn

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Indo-Canadian charged for trying to transport cocaine worth $4.86 mn

Government was warned two years ago high immigration could affect housing costs

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Government was warned two years ago high immigration could affect housing costs

Bitter cold from Arctic intrusion hits B.C., much of Western Canada

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Bitter cold is descending on Western Canada, with Prairie cities already seeing -30 C temperatures and southwestern British Columbia bracing for an Arctic outflow and an overdue blast of winter. Temperatures in Calgary and Edmonton have dipped to -29 C and -31 C respectively with lows of -38 C possible Friday.

Bitter cold from Arctic intrusion hits B.C., much of Western Canada