I've never seen ads inserted into an infographic before.
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Just because a car is cheaper than the average new car doesn't make it affordable. Lots of people can only afford used cars. I'm not suggesting we need new EVs to compete with used car prices, but we need the prices to come down so that the prices of current used EVs become more affordable and/or these cheaper new EVs become affordable when they're resold in several years.
Honestly I'm not 100% sure. For context I'm in a much smaller union for a different essential service. Decades ago we (not me personally, I was a kid) were legislated back to work and the arbitrator decided to slip in a binding arbitration clause to our contract. The point is, we aren't allowed to strike and from my understanding of an illegal strike there could be fines for the union, fines for the members striking, and possibly jail time for union leadership. Obviously they could likely fire everyone with cause, but that would be a terrible decision when they're already struggling with retention of qualified people. Everyone could decide to quit at the same time, it's not a strike if you aren't employed, but that won't really help anyone, especially if you have specialized skills. In this case you can't really just go get a job as a railway engineer somewhere else.
Maybe check back with me in 2026, depending if our relationship with management gets better or worse I might have some more relevant first hand experience.
A friend of mine went to get a vasectomy after his second kid was born and the doctor either talked him out of it or refused. He now has a 3rd kid and went to a different doctor.
No, it is binding, just neither of the parties agreed to send it to arbitration. Which I'd say is worse but arbitration always ends with an outcome that's shitty for both sides.
The law just changed to 4 months notice for landlord/family use (3 months if it's for a new buyer) and the landlord/new buyer/family must live there for 12 months (actually live there, not just keep it off the rental market).
Temporary foreign workers are supposed to fill skill gaps in the economy when not enough qualified workers exist, not to supply cheap labour when employers want to improve their bottom line.
Even then it seems like the "temporary" part gets ignored. There should be some requirement to invest in local training for any specialized position that's needed long term/multiple times.
So if/when rates go back down the tenants can apply to have their rent lowered back, right?
Is 22 years like a "baker's decade" or something?
I'm in a small town and transit currently sucks, with all the planning and extra hours it would take to get anywhere, it's not worth it. If it was free, I'd definitely take it more often and spontaneously. Back when it was free in 2020 I hopped on a few times when I didn't feel like walking home.
Man, Montreal sounds super affordable! I live about an hour outside Victoria and rent here for a 1 bed starts around $1600. If I could easily find a nice 2 bedroom for around $1500 it would make my life so much better, I could actually afford to risk being rennovicted so my landlord can fix all the issues in my suite.
I think you nailed one of the biggest but least talked about factors in mass adoption. I'd love to get an EV, but the only used ones I could reasonably afford would require daily charging as I'd use well over half a charge per workday and I have nowhere to charge at home or work.