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Todayville At The Home Show With Canadian Closet

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The Home Show is a great place to see hundreds of interesting ideas for your new home, or renovation.  Canadian Closet is one of many must sees!

After 15 years as a TV reporter with Global and CBC and as news director of RDTV in Red Deer, Duane set out on his own 2008 as a visual storyteller. During this period, he became fascinated with a burgeoning online world and how it could better serve local communities. This fascination led to Todayville, launched in 2016.

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Trump’s first jobs report: Manufacturing roars back, reversing Biden-era losses

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Quick Hit:

America’s manufacturing sector is roaring back under President Donald Trump, reversing the steep job losses of the Biden era. February’s jobs report shows a surge in auto industry hiring, a major turnaround from Biden’s final year in office. White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt credited Trump’s pro-growth policies, declaring, “The American economy is soaring back to greatness.”

Key Details:

  • The U.S. added 10,000 manufacturing jobs in February, a sharp reversal from Biden’s final year, which saw an average loss of 9,000 per month.

  • The auto industry gained 8,900 jobs, the highest increase in 15 months, after shedding 27,300 jobs under Biden in 2023.

  • Private sector job growth accounted for 93% of February’s gains, showing strong business confidence in Trump’s economic policies.

Diving Deeper:

America’s manufacturing sector is making a swift comeback under President Donald Trump, with February’s jobs report showing significant growth in the industry. The sharp turnaround follows a year of manufacturing decline under Joe Biden, who oversaw the loss of 111,000 jobs in the sector.

The auto industry has been a major driver of this resurgence, adding nearly 9,000 jobs in February—the most in over a year. This growth stands in stark contrast to 2023 when the sector shed tens of thousands of jobs under Biden’s economic policies. White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt credited Trump’s leadership, stating, “The American economy is soaring back to greatness after the economic calamity left by Joe Biden.”

Economic confidence is also on the rise. S&P Global’s U.S. manufacturing survey reached its highest level since mid-2022, while the Manufacturing ISM Report on Business entered expansion territory after more than two years of contraction. These indicators suggest businesses are ramping up production, hiring workers, and responding favorably to Trump’s economic agenda.

With private sector growth leading the way and key economic indicators showing strength, the Trump Administration is setting the stage for continued economic momentum. As White House put it, “President Trump is just getting started.”

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Taxpayers Federation demands government cancel automatic beer tax hike

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By Carson Binda 

The Canadian Taxpayers Federation is calling on the federal government to cancel the automatic tax hike on beer, wine and spirits scheduled for April 1 and end the alcohol escalator tax for good.

“Canadian businesses and job creators like restaurants and breweries can’t afford a tax hike from the feds right now,” said Carson Binda, British Columbia Director for the CTF. “With an emerging tariff war, businesses need tax cuts, not undemocratic, automatic tax hikes from Ottawa that make it even harder to keep the doors open.”

The escalator tax was brought in by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in 2017. It automatically increases the taxes on alcoholic beverages every year on April 1 without a vote in Parliament.

Alcohol taxes already make up about 50 per cent of the price of a drink when charges from all levels of government are included. The federal excise tax on alcohol is set to increase by two per cent on April 1. The hike will cost taxpayers about $40 million.

Since being imposed, the alcohol escalator tax has cost taxpayers more than $900 million, according to Beer Canada.

“Automatic tax hikes are undemocratic and wrong,” Binda said. “Instead of making life even harder for struggling small businesses, the government needs to end the automatic tax hikes on beer, wine and spirits.”

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