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  #901  
Old Posted Dec 9, 2009, 9:16 AM
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Originally Posted by hexrae View Post
That's a lot jobs, albeit low paying. All I remember of this place is that it had exceptionally high turnover. I had a job here for 4 weeks a few years ago.

EDIT: In regards to the economic conditions, I doubt it's due to less call volume and more likely due to offshoring.
they had been threatning to pull out for ages good ridence
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  #902  
Old Posted Dec 10, 2009, 9:22 PM
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Canadian Western Bank Buys National Leasing Group

CJOB

12/10/2009

In local business news, the Canadian Western bank is buying Winnipeg-based National Leasing Group for 130-million dollars.
National Leasing has become Canada's largest independent leasing company. The CEO of Canadian Western Bank Larry Pollock refers to National Leasing as "a jewel" with considerable growth potential. Pollock says National Leasing will have lower borrowing costs as part of the bank, and will see an increase in market share.
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  #903  
Old Posted Dec 10, 2009, 9:24 PM
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they had been threatning to pull out for ages good ridence
True, the place wasn't anything special. But still, that's 500 unemployed people. Hopefully they can all find something.
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  #904  
Old Posted Dec 11, 2009, 12:42 AM
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mis quote
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TOP 800 -Winnipeg: 32 + 3 subsidiaries = 35
----------Edmonton: 25 + 1 subsidiary = 26
----------Quebec City: 16 + 2 subsidiaries = 18
----------Ottawa: 15 + 1 subsidiary = 16
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  #905  
Old Posted Dec 11, 2009, 7:50 PM
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Hydro wants PUB hearings to await probes

A new review beforehand not 'appropriate': lawyer

By: Mary Agnes Welch
11/12/2009 1:00 AM | Comments: 0

Manitoba Hydro says a bevy of investigations into the power company's financial risks ought to be completed before the Public Utilities Board weighs in, an approach the Manitoba Tories condemned.It's the latest twist in what's become a confusing mess of overlapping investigations into the Crown electricity company's finances, computer modelling systems and its drought plan, all sparked by a confidential whistleblower complaint filed a year ago by a New York risk management consultant.
The PUB is slated to hold weeks of hearings next year to determine what Hydro can charge Manitobans for power, and it's those hearings that many hoped would shine a public light on the whistleblower complaint and Hydro's risk.
The PUB met Thursday morning with Hydro and a handful of intervenors to hash out two preliminary issues: whether to have a separate hearing on Hydro's risks and how to handle the "blue papers."
Those are the documents Hydro files in confidence with the PUB because they contain sensitive corporate information about export prices and contracts.
Last month, after many requests from the PUB, Hydro filed a series of 16 risk reports, including the ones drafted by the whistleblower. Most of them were on blue paper, indicating Hydro would like parts of them kept confidential, though Hydro lawyer Patti Ramage said the company is willing to work with the intervenors to keep secrecy to a minimum.
But Ramage said the PUB ought to wait for the ombudsman, the auditor general and KPMG to finish their reviews of Hydro risks before wading into the issue.
"Manitoba Hydro is firmly of the view that the existing reviews should be completed before a duplicative review is contemplated by the PUB," Ramage wrote in her speaking notes.
"The timing is not appropriate for yet another stand-alone review to be initiated by the PUB."
In question period Thursday, Tory Leader Hugh McFadyen accused Hydro of "stonewalling."
The PUB will decide early in the new year how it will handle the risk hearing and how much confidential information it can share with the public.
maryagnes.welch@freepress.mb.ca
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  #906  
Old Posted Dec 23, 2009, 6:10 AM
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Provincial economy down in 2009, but it could have been worse
CJOB News Team reporting
12/22/2009

A decline in core government revenue, lower energy prices and dealing with the H1 N1 flu are among the reasons Manitoba will fall short of its fiscal expectations this year.

Finance Minister Rosann Wowchuk released a pair of economic reports today and says the province's summary net income for 2009 will fall 592 million dollars short.

Wowchuk says 60 percent of the shortfall is directly attributable to the recession and unanticipated emergencies.

The economy is forecast to contract by 0.2 percent for 2009, the smallest decrease among all provinces and significantly less than the national decrease of 2.4 percent.
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  #907  
Old Posted Dec 23, 2009, 6:16 AM
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Winnipeg Free Press - ONLINE EDITION
Manitoba posts major payroll earnings increase

By: Murray McNeill
22/12/2009 11:21 AM | Comments: 8



WINNIPEG — Manitoba had one of the biggest year-over-year increases in average weekly earnings in the country in October, according to new Statistics Canada figures released today.
Manitoba’s payroll employees — people who work for someone else as opposed to being self employed — were earning an average of $789.85 during the week, the figures show. That was an increase of 4.7 per cent from October of last year, when they were taking home an average of $754.40.
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It was the second biggest year-over-year gain among the 10 provinces. Prince Edward Island led the way with a 5.2 per cent improvement, while the national average increase was only 1.6 per cent.
Despite the increase, Manitoba’s average earnings were still only fourth best among the provinces. Albertans had the highest, at $953.69 per week, while the national average was $831.17.
Although they were earning more money, Manitoba had fewer workers on payrolls in October of this year than in October 2008 — 552,600 compared to 567,600. That was a year-over-year decline of 2.6 per cent, while the month-to-month (September to October) drop was a more modest 0.5 per cent.
Nationally, the number of payroll employees in Canada increased by 0.2 per cent from September to October, but was still down 2.6 per cent from a year earlier, the figures show.
Average weekly earnings are considered important because higher salaries make it easier for employers to attract and retain workers. And payroll employment figures are monitored because they include the majority of workers.
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  #908  
Old Posted Dec 29, 2009, 1:19 PM
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Winnipeg Free Press - PRINT EDITION
Downturn wallops McNally

Tough market shuts stores

By: Morley Walker
29/12/2009 1:00 AM | Comments: 0



[IMG]http://media.winnipegfreepress.com/images/578*386/1757781.jpg[/IMG] WAYNE GLOWACKI / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS ARCHIVES Enlarge Image
McNally Robinson at Polo Park to close.


McNally Robinson Booksellers has entered bankruptcy protection and is closing two of its four stores.
The locally based company's Polo Park location in Winnipeg is being shuttered on Sunday and its Toronto store in the new Shops at Don Mills big-box centre is being closed today.
"It's a painful thing, mostly because of the jobs being lost," co-owner Paul McNally said Monday night.
The result of the economic downturn combined with a difficult climate in general for bookselling, the move means 170 people, 100 of whom are in Winnipeg, will lose full- and part-time jobs. The company has 425 employees here, in Saskatoon and Toronto.
McNally said staff in Winnipeg were told of the closings Monday night. Toronto staff, he said, were to be informed this morning.
The Prairie Ink Restaurant & Bakery in the Polo Park location will cease operations today.
McNally insisted the two remaining stores, the flagship location at Winnipeg's Grant Park Shopping Centre and the other in Saskatoon, will remain open for business, as long as the company's bankruptcy application is approved.
"They make money," he said. "They have a loyal following."
Holiday gift cards and all reader reward cards will be honoured online and at the surviving stores.
"We'll still follow through on all special orders," McNally said. "Apart from the disruption in physical space, we plan to maintain customer service."
He said the company, which was started in 1981 by his wife, Holly, has filed a bankruptcy proposal under the trusteeship of auditors Ernst & Young. He expects the company will apply to the court for sanctioning of a reorganization in the coming weeks.
If all goes well, he said, a smaller company comprising the e-commerce website www.mcnallyrobinson.com and the wholesale division Skylight Books, as well as the two surviving stores, will emerge from bankruptcy protection.
The proposed restructuring, he said, will save approximately 250 jobs.
McNally refused to talk financial specifics.
"The new stores absolutely did not perform," he said. "Business at our other stores was flat, but it was a matter of us taking on huge new costs and not getting the commensurate new business."
The company opened its Polo Park location in April 2008 in the wake of closing its store in the downtown Portage Place mall. It also closed a store in downtown Calgary in August 2008 after operating it for five years.
Last April, it opened a much-hyped big box in Toronto's new upscale Shops at Don Mills. On Monday night, Paul McNally blamed that mall's developer, Cadillac Fairview, for failing to secure sufficient tenants and to even erect proper signage so consumers could find the mall.
"Obviously you buy a pig in a poke when you go into a new place," McNally said. "But one would think that Canada's biggest retail developer might have done a better job."
McNally Robinson is considered Canada's largest independently owned bookstore chain. Its major competitor, the vastly larger Chapters Indigo chain, operates three stores in Winnipeg.
McNally admitted opening two new outlets during a recession proved a costly error.
"It was bad timing, that's for sure," he said. "Bookselling has been struggling in general."
The difficult climate, he said, is the result of stagnant book prices, steep discounting and increasing competition from Internet sales and electronic text formats.
The American online bookseller Amazon announced on the weekend that it sold more e-books on Christmas Day than it did paper books. This was seen as the buoyant consumer response to the company's new Kindle electronic reader, a top-selling Christmas gift.
Earlier in the fall, Amazon and the Wal-Mart chain went head-to-head, selling new hardcover books for as little as US$9.
"There was very aggressive, reckless discounting," McNally said.
In 2004, the McNallys' daughter Sarah opened a McNally Robinson store in Manhattan, where she had been working as an editor in the publishing business.
That store operates as a separate company and, in fact, changed its name to McNally Jackson Books in 2008 to reflect its co-ownership by Sarah's American husband, Chris Jackson.
morley.walker@freepress.mb.ca

Republished from the Winnipeg Free Press print edition December 29, 2009 A3
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  #909  
Old Posted Dec 29, 2009, 3:48 PM
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that's horrible news about mcnally! the polo location was great!

on the other side of the coin, maybe this is the more high-profile location h&m was holding-out for?
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  #910  
Old Posted Dec 29, 2009, 6:47 PM
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^ That's a real shame. I would be so upset if our McNally closed down here in S'toon. It seems to do pretty well though.
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  #911  
Old Posted Dec 29, 2009, 10:45 PM
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This is very unfortunate. I honestly did believe that the Polo Park location, in spite of monster rent, would be able to make a go of it. I suppose with the incoming wake of Kindle, prospects moving forward while already were not enticing.

The Polo Park space that McNally occupied is very large. It would make for quite the H&M location. With that said, it is said that the largest shopping centre between Toronto and Edmonton won't have a book store. Yuck.
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  #912  
Old Posted Dec 29, 2009, 10:58 PM
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You mean this country has bookstores that aren't owned by Indigo?
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  #913  
Old Posted Dec 29, 2009, 11:39 PM
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Oh wow! That's crazy about McNally
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  #914  
Old Posted Dec 30, 2009, 1:13 AM
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RIP Mcnally Polo Park
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  #915  
Old Posted Dec 30, 2009, 7:02 PM
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Tax relief for small businesses in 2010
CJOB News Team reporting
12/30/2009


Planned tax cuts for small businesses are about to take effect.

The province will eliminate the small business tax in Manitoba in the coming year.

Finance Minister Rosann Wowchuk says the general corporation capital tax will be fully phased out in 2010 as well.

Wowchuk says the changes will make Manitoba the first income-tax-free zone for small corporations.
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  #916  
Old Posted Dec 30, 2009, 9:51 PM
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Tax relief for small businesses in 2010
CJOB News Team reporting
12/30/2009


Planned tax cuts for small businesses are about to take effect.

The province will eliminate the small business tax in Manitoba in the coming year.

Finance Minister Rosann Wowchuk says the general corporation capital tax will be fully phased out in 2010 as well.

Wowchuk says the changes will make Manitoba the first income-tax-free zone for small corporations.
The savings will assist small businesses in paying increased minimum wage that will take effect in 2010, Wowchuk added.
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  #917  
Old Posted Dec 30, 2009, 10:35 PM
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HaHa! That's funny, rgalston. I don't generally laugh on here, but I got a chuckle out of that.

Minimum wage is getting very steep, indeed.
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  #918  
Old Posted Dec 31, 2009, 12:19 AM
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The Polo Park space that McNally occupied is very large. It would make for quite the H&M location.


Now would H&M want a basement location, they would seriously have to open up that entrance alot to make some kind of design impact.

Anyone know the reason why H&M put a hold on a Winnipeg store.

Right now I would take a J.Crew and a Zara over H&M.
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  #919  
Old Posted Dec 31, 2009, 3:08 AM
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HaHa! That's funny, rgalston. I don't generally laugh on here, but I got a chuckle out of that.

Minimum wage is getting very steep, indeed.
hows it compare to anywhere els?
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  #920  
Old Posted Dec 31, 2009, 3:08 AM
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Now would H&M want a basement location, they would seriously have to open up that entrance alot to make some kind of design impact.

Anyone know the reason why H&M put a hold on a Winnipeg store.

Right now I would take a J.Crew and a Zara over H&M.
perhaps because of speculation on some tenit movement
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