Great news out of Calgary – and news we hope is replicated in B.C. – as the $39M Marian and Jim Sinneave Centre for Youth Resilience, opened Monday. This facility will help 8,000 kids a year deal with mental health issues. The centre, which will augment the work being...
CALGARY – The Independent Contractors and Businesses Association (ICBA) is expanding in Alberta, and Mike Martens, one of the province’s top advocacy leaders, has been selected to head up ICBA Alberta, ICBA president Chris Gardner announced today. Building on the...
Kerry and Jordan discuss ICBA’s latest training featured course, the ICBA Gala, and the future of one Aaron Rodgers with the NFL team Jordan co-owns, the Green Bay Packers. Leadership Foundations for Women in Construction Starts March 20; 4 weeks...
Our friend Corey Hirsch retweeted a video from former TSN host Michael Landsberg, one of Canada’s most important mental health advocates. Michael tore his ACL recently, and he has posted a short video comparing it to the depression he has battled for decades. He had...
Kerry and Jordan discuss ICBA Training’s latest featured course – and Kerry’s literal run in Las Vegas. Introduction to Delay Claims (Live online) Thursday, March 9, 2023 | 9-11AM 2 BC Housing CPD Points Register at...
In our work at ICBA Benefits, we work with a number of insurance carriers, including Desjardins. Last week, Desjardins put out a new report, Building workplace mental health strategies for a healthy tomorrow – 3 challenges and how to overcome them, which includes the...
When 70% of Canadians tell a pollster that "everything is broken," one expects the government to take that seriously.Justin Trudeau didn't. And Budget 2024 will make things worse, says ICBA President Chris Gardner. Check out his op-ed 👇 ... See MoreSee Less
The following op-ed, written by ICBA President and CEO Chris Gardner, was first published in Business in Vancouver on April 16, 2024. Earlier this year, public opinion research company Leger published...
Trudeau Government Can’t Tax-and-Spend its Way to Canadian Prosperity: ICBA (News Release)The 2024 federal budget continues the Trudeau Government’s legacy of excessive spending, bloating bureaucracy, high taxes, and doing nothing to reverse Canada’s withering economic productivity and competitiveness, says the Independent Contractors and Businesses Association (ICBA), one of Canada’s largest business associations.“The torrid pace of spending by Ottawa and the growth of government is simply breathtaking,” said Chris Gardner, ICBA President and CEO. “The Trudeau Liberals are doubling-down on a very bad idea – that government is the centre of everything and that there is no challenge facing Canada that billions and billions in new spending, ever-higher taxes, and overregulation will not solve.”Housing was a prime political focus of Budget 2024, but ICBA – Canada’s largest construction association – remains highly skeptical that the Trudeau Government’s spending will do much to move the needle on housing affordability. The supply shortage is so acute that government cannot simply spend its way out of it – it must unleash private sector builders.“A federal go-it-alone approach to housing will not work,” said Gardner. “The sheer volume of pre-budget announcements on housing and the billions committed by Ottawa reveals the sense of panic that has gripped the federal government. The policies are disjointed, ill-conceived, confusing, and often conflict with those of not only other levels of government but also of Ottawa itself. None of this is going to deliver any meaningful relief to Canadians being crushed by the weight of the affordability crisis.”The Trudeau Government missed its opportunity to address the inherent systemic problems holding back Canadian prosperity.“Canada faces a trifecta of closely linked economic problems: stagnant productivity, a pattern of weak business investment, and declining global competitiveness. Unfortunately, there is little in Budget 2024 that tackles these problems in a meaningful way,” said Jock Finlayson, ICBA Chief Economist. “Expanding the size and cost of government won’t reverse the negative trends that are weighing on living standards and sapping Canada’s economic vitality.”Running massive, ongoing deficits to try and pay for the government’s wild spending is especially concerning to ICBA and will further hamper economic growth.“What Canada desperately needs is more private sector investment in productive assets such as machinery, equipment, buildings and other structures, advanced process technologies, intellectual property products, and transportation, communications and engineering infrastructure,” said Finlayson. “Budget 2024 suggests the federal government falls short of addressing this enormous challenge.” ... See MoreSee Less
💰 GDP per capita flatlines.💸 Productivity stagnates. 📉 Output per hour has fallen in 11 of the past 14 quarters – an unprecedented development, and one not replicated in the U.S. or most other advanced economies.It's a grim situation for the Canadian economy, and one next week's federal budget must address, says ICBA Chief Economist Jock Finlayson.Read his budget preview blog at www.icbaindependent.ca/2024/04/11/icba-economics-thoughts-on-canadas-productivity-crisis/. (WARNING: the stats may cause heartburn and heartache for those wanting to see Canadian prosperity grow.) ... See MoreSee Less
WELLNESS WEDNESDAY #145: Thank a Construction Worker!April is Construction Month in B.C., and as gratitude is an important part of practicing mental wellness, we’d like to take this opportunity to thank all of our construction professionals across B.C., Alberta and the rest of Canada.Your hard work, dedication, expertise and knowledge are appreciated – thanks for building the homes, roads, hospitals, schools, infrastructure, shops, bridges, and all the other things that make our communities better.And you do it every day, rain or shine (let’s face it – mainly rain in much of B.C.), creating the spaces where our lives unfold. Your efforts contribute a lot to our community’s growth, safety, and well-being.Thanks for everything you do! ----------Each week, ICBA’s Jordan Bateman reflects on what we’ve learned as we participate in ICBA’s Workplace Wellness Program. ICBA’s Workplace Wellness Program is helping more than 100 companies and more than 10,000 construction professionals better understand mental health. This program is free for all ICBA members – check out icba.ca/wellness for details. ... See MoreSee Less
WELLNESS WEDNESDAY #145: Thank a Construction Worker!
April is Construction Month in B.C., and as gratitude is an important part of practicing mental wellness, we’d like to take this opportunity to thank all of our construction professionals... More at https://www.icbaindependent.ca/2024/04/10/wellness-wednesday-145-thank-a-construction-worker/
ICBA Chief Economist Jock Finlayson looked into B.C.'s head office numbers and found worrying signs:
"B.C. can ill afford to see its already feeble head office sector shrink. While B.C. is home to 14% of Canada’s population, we host only 12% of the country’s head offices and…