The World This Hour - The World This Hour for 2025/02/14 at 03:00 EST
Episode Date: February 14, 2025The World This Hour for 2025/02/14 at 03:00 EST...
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It's in the hearts of our neighbors.
The eyes of our nurses.
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It's what makes Scarborough, Scarborough.
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We've less than anyone could imagine.
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From CBC News, the world this hour.
I'm Claude Fague.
The two month tax holiday on federal
and provincial taxes ends on Saturday.
But while some businesses say
they didn't love the tax break,
others want it extended.
Philipp Lee Shanick has more.
So I had to go in manually and just turn off all the taxes.
Toronto gift shop owner Trin Ngo put in extra hours prepping for the tax break just before Christmas.
Ngo says it didn't help her sales due to the short time frame and limited number of products exempt from the tax. So is she looking forward to
reversing her work this weekend? No, but at least it's a quiet time so that's fine.
Statistics Canada data on the impact of the tax holiday won't be out for a while
but Dan Kelly of the Canadian Federation of Independent Business says it wasn't
worth the bother. So it didn't move the dial very much with respect to sales, but did add a lot in terms
of administrative complexity.
But Kelly Higginson of Restaurants Canada disagrees.
So really the GST holiday is doing what it was supposed to do.
She credits the tax holiday for pushing hiring to pre-pandemic highs.
And she says with the threat of U.S. tariffs, it should be permanent.
Phil Tshanok, CBC News, Toronto.
Donald Trump's finger pointing over fentanyl has put Canada on the defensive, even though
the facts don't support his claims.
New data from Canada's Border Services Agency actually shows a spike in drugs and guns coming
here from the U.S.
JP Tasker takes us through it.
The amount of drugs seized has doubled since 2022, spiking from roughly 4,000 kilograms
to 8,000 in 2024. Cannabis, hashish, heroin, cocaine and crack, it's all up. And there's
a lot more than the 5,000 grams of drugs the Americans nabbed on their side of the 49th parallel last year.
We live next door to the largest weapons market
in the world.
Christian Luprecht is a professor
at the Royal Military College
and an expert on border security.
He says Mexican drug cartels move some of their production
to the U.S. during the pandemic.
Now it's easier than ever to smuggle illicit goods
over the border into Canada.
It's worked really well for transnational organized crime.
And it's not just drugs.
CBSA pulled in 839 firearms at the border last year, a 30% increase over the year before.
The CBSA says it hasn't lost focus on Canadian priorities.
It just got a $1.3 billion cash infusion to take on the flow of fentanyl.
But it promises some of that money will be set aside to rein in the flood of American
drugs and guns.
JP Tasker, CBC News, Ottawa.
And Trump has repeated his threat to impose sweeping taxes on imports from other countries,
saying that America's allies are often worse than its enemies on trade.
He singled out the European Union, citing the value-added tax and charges on all goods,
as well as restrictions on U.S. agricultural products.
We think the European Union is wonderful.
We all love Europe, the countries in Europe, but the European Union has been absolutely
brutal on trade.
Canada has been very bad to us on trade, but now Canada is going to have to start paying
up.
Trump said he'd ordered officials to come up with new tariffs that could be quickly
withdrawn for countries that modified their restrictions on American goods.
To South Korea.
Where officials are confirming at least six people were killed following a fire that ignited at a resort construction site today.
The site is located in the port city of Busan.
Reports also say about 100 people were evacuated, with several injured.
There are fears the death toll could climb much higher.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky confirms an overnight Russian drone attack damaged
the former Chernobyl
nuclear power plant.
The explosion, which ignited a fire, hit the new safe confinement, which protects the remains
of a reactor at the Chernobyl plant north of Kiev.
According to reports, fire safety personnel and vehicles responded within minutes and
no casualties were reported, with radiation levels inside and out remaining normal and stable.
And that is your World This Hour.
For CBC News, I'm Claude Fague.
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