Business
Downtown shoppers could win $1,000.00 a week



Support local
businesses in
Capstone &
Downtown Red Deer

Save receipts of $25 or more
(including taxes)

Upload photos of all
your receipts weekly
Digital receipts, third party delivery app receipts and Google reviews are all acceptable entries.






Business
Canada Revenue Agency found a way to hit “Worse Than Rock Bottom”
From Conservative Part Communications
Last month, Carneyās Minister responsible for the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) debuted their new slogan: āIt canāt get much worse than it is now.ā Today, the Auditor General reported that under the Liberals, it has.
Over the 2024/25 period, only 18 per cent of callers were able to reach a CRA agent within 15 minutes, a far cry from the target of 65 per cent of callers. In June, the numbers plunged to just 5 per cent of callers able to get through within the service standard of 15 minutes.
The average wait time took over half an hour, double what it was the year prior. And that was if you were even given the option of getting help. Nearly nine million calls were ādeflectedā by an automated voice telling Canadians to figure it out themselves, with no option to speak with an agent.
Wait times are so bad that over 7.6 million calls were disconnected before callers were able to reach an agent or be provided automated service. As wait times continue to get worse and worse, Canadians have just given up, evidenced by 2.4 million more abandoned calls over the previous year.
Even when Canadians manage to get hold of an agent, employees regularly fail to provide correct information about personal and business taxes. Auditors found the call centre gave incorrect information 83 per cent of the time when asked general individual tax questions.
Non-specific questions about benefits, including about eligibility, were wrong 44 per cent of the time. Meanwhile, the CRAās automated chatbot āCharlieā, meant to relieve the call centre, answered only two of six tax-related questions correctly.
āHow is it that an organization so important to the smooth functioning of the country is failing to serve Canadians and, as the Auditor General notes, places greater importance on adhering to shift schedules and breaks than on the accuracy and completeness of the information provided?ā asked GĆ©rard Deltell, Conservative Shadow Minister for Revenue.
Itās no surprise that complaints about the CRAās contact centre increased 145 per cent from 2021/22 to 2024/25. Despite this, the Liberals announced they will begin auto-filing taxes for 5.5 million Canadians, automatically enrolling people in benefits the CRA is regularly unable to provide accurate information about.
Worse of all, the cost of the CRAās call centre has ballooned from $50 million over 10 years in 2015 to $190 million. The total cost is projected to continue rising to $214 million over the next two years, a more than 320 per cent increase from the original contracted amount.
Meanwhile, Auditors found āthere was no process documented or followed to ensure that amounts invoiced ⦠were accurate and reflected the services received,ā and that there was ālittle evidence that invoice details were appropriately reviewed and approved by ⦠the Canada Revenue Agency prior to issuing payment.ā
The Liberals have delivered higher taxes and higher costs with worse service for Canadians. We deserve better than continued Liberal failures. Conservatives will continue holding Carney accountable and fight to cut taxes and waste so Canadians keep more of what they earn.
Alberta
Petition threatens independent school funding in Alberta
From the Fraser Institute
Recently, amid the backdrop of a teacher strike, an Alberta high school teacher began collecting signatures for a petition to end government funding of independent schools in the province. If she gets enough people to signā10 per cent of the number of Albertans who voted in the last provincial electionāElections Alberta will consider launching a referendum about the issue.
In other words, the critical funding many Alberta families rely on for their childrenās educational needs may be in jeopardy.
In Alberta, the provincial government partially funds independent schools and charter schools. The Alberta Teachersā Association (ATA), whose members are currently on strike, opposes government funding of independent and charter schools.
But kids are not one-size-fits-all, and schools should reflect that reality, particularly in light of todayās increasing classroom complexity where different kids have different needs. Unlike government-run public schools, independent schools and charter schools have the flexibility to innovate and find creative ways to help students thrive.
And things arenāt going very well for all kids or teachers in government-run pubic school classrooms. According to theĀ ATA, 93 per cent of teachers report encountering some form of aggression or violence at school, most often from students. Additionally, 85 per cent of unionized teachers face anĀ increaseĀ in cognitive, social/emotional and behavioural issues in their classrooms. In 2020,Ā one-quarterĀ of students in Edmontonās government-run public schools were just learning English, andĀ immigrationĀ to Canadaāand Alberta especiallyāhas exploded since then. Itās not easy to teach a classroom of kids where a significant proportion do not speak English, many have learning disabilities or exceptional needs, and a few have severe behavioural problems.
Not surprisingly, demandĀ for independent schools in Alberta is growing because many of these schools are designed for students with special needs, Autism, severe learning disabilities and ADHD. Some independent schools cater to students just learning English while others offer cultural focuses, expanded outdoor time, gifted learning and much more.
Which takes us back to the new petitionāyet the latest attempt to defund independent schools in Alberta.
Wealthy families will always have school choice. But if the Alberta government wants low-income and middle-class kids to have the ability to access schools that fit them, too, itās crucial to maintaināor better yet, increaseāits support for independent and charter schools.
Consider a fictional Alberta family: the Millers. Their daughter, Lucy, is struggling at her local government-run public school. Her reading is below grade level and sheās being bullied. Itās affecting her self-esteem, her sleep and her overall wellbeing. The Millers pay their taxes. They donāt take vacations, they rent, and they havenāt upgraded their cars in many years. They canāt afford to pay full tuition for Lucy to attend an independent school that offers the approach to education she needs to succeed. However, because the Alberta government partially funds independent schoolsāwhich essentially means a portion of the Miller familyās tax dollars follow Lucy to the school of their choiceātheyāre able to afford the tuition.
The familiar refrain from opponents is that taxpayers shouldnāt pay for independent school tuition. But in fact, if youāre concerned about taxpayers, you should encourage school choice. If Lucy attends a government-run public school, taxpayers pay 100 per cent of her education costs. But if she attends an independent or charter school, taxpayers only pay a portion of the costs while her parents pay the rest. Thatās whyĀ researchĀ shows that school choice saves tax dollars.
If youāre a parent with a child in a government-run public school in Alberta, you now must deal with another teacher strike. If you have a child in an independent or charter school, however, itās business as usual. If Albertans are ever asked to vote on whether or not to end government funding for independent schools, they should remember that students are the most important stakeholder in education. And providing parents more choices in education is the solution, not the problem.
-
MAiD1 day agoDisabled Canadians increasingly under pressure to opt for euthanasia during routine doctor visits
-
Alberta1 day agoPetition threatens independent school funding in Alberta
-
Courageous Discourse2 days agoNo Exit Wound – EITHER there was a very public “miracle” OR Charlie Kirk’s murder is not as it appears
-
Business1 day agoCanada Revenue Agency found a way to hit “Worse Than Rock Bottom”
-
Digital ID1 day agoToronto airport requests approval of ādigital IDsā for domestic airport travel
-
Media1 day agoCarney speech highlights how easily newsrooms are played by politicians
-
Economy2 days agoTop Scientists Deliberately Misrepresented Sea Level Rise For Years
-
Opinion1 day agoA Nation of Announcements: Canadaās Government of Empty Promises






