Canada
column for Sunday, Feb. 23/14
THE CANADIAN REPORT
(c) By
Jim Fox
Door-to-door mail delivery will end this year in 11 cities including neighborhoods
in Oakville, Calgary, Winnipeg, Halifax and Repentigny, Quebec.
Canada Post announced the centers where people will have their mail
delivered instead to community boxes this fall in a cost-cutting move.
It’s the first phase of the postal service’s five-year changeover and will
affect about 100,000 addresses.
Canada
Post said the changes are necessary with costs rising and mail volumes dropping
and since just one-third of Canadian are still getting five-day-a-week home
delivery.
The initial neighborhoods affected are in areas that have nearby
community mail boxes and the infrastructure is already in place, the post
office said.
In
the larger cities, mail will continue to be delivered to businesses while in
smaller cities, most households and a larger number of businesses will switch
to group boxes.
Also affected by the change this year will be Fort McMurray, Alberta; Kanata,
Ontario; Bois-des-Filion, Charlemagne, Lorraine and Rosemere, all in Quebec.
---
Prime Minister Stephen Harper still doesn’t have an answer from U.S.
President Barack Obama whether he will approve the controversial Keystone XL
pipeline.
When
asked about the fate of the project to ship Canadian oilsands crude to the U.S.
by pipeline, Obama instead called on Harper to work with him to reduce
greenhouse gas emissions.
“I
said previously that how Keystone impacted greenhouse gas emissions would
affect our decision,” Obama said at the “Three Amigos” summit in Mexico.
There is a “shared concern” about climate change, Harper said, noting a
recent U.S. State Department report gave the Alberta oilsands a good grade on
environmental impact.
---