Honourary Life Member – Call for Nominations

Honourary Life Member – Call for Nominations

Through designation of Honourary Life Membership, CANS wishes to honour individuals who, through their deeds and actions, have significantly contributed to the betterment of the Association and/or the industry and attainment of its goals and visions.

Nominations are due by Friday, May 10, 2019. Please submit your nomination forms to Sheryl Farrington by email sfarrington@cans.ns.ca

For more information and to download the Nomination Form, click HERE

Sincerely,

Duncan Williams
President & CEO, Construction Association of Nova Scotia

WCB/Return to Work Info Session

Are you currently on a surcharge list or have a demerit with your WCB assessment rate?

Do you understand the importance of return to work after an incident in a workplace?

Do you want to learn how to reduce your WCB Costs?

Come and participate in a Construction Industry Safety Partnership (CISP) /Construction Association of Nova Scotia (CANS) Lunch and Learn/webinar that will outline how you can facilitate return to work in your workplaces.

In preparation of the session please visit CANS website to review the tools to created by industry. https://www.cans.ns.ca/construction-industry-safety-partnership/

  • Date April 29,2019
  • Time 11:30 am to 1:00 pm
  • Location-CANS office and CANS Connect

Click HERE to register

CANS 2019 Toromont Cat and Battlefield Equipment De-Icer

  • CANS DE-ICER – FRIDAY, APRIL 26, 2019 at the CUNARD CENTRE, HALIFAX, NS
  • The CANS 2019 Toromont Cat and Battlefield Equipment De-Icer is Nova Scotia’s largest construction networking event and kicks off the upcoming construction season.
  • It’s a great way for attendees to celebrate the industry, expand your network, reward your employees and enjoy live entertainment.
  • 1,800 attendees | 250 construction-related companies | GREAT FOOD and GREAT PRIZES
  • Tickets are over 80% sold out.
  • Join Us: https://bit.ly/2FzzJET

 

 

On March 26, the Province introduced the 2019-20 Nova Scotia Budget.

  • Our population is at a historic high. For the first time in a generation, population growth is nearing the national average.
  • Employment grew, on average in 2018, at the most substantial annual rate since 2004. As of February 2019 (which had the lowest unemployment rate on record since 1976 when the current Labour Force Survey was first published), Nova Scotia had eight straight months of employment gains.
  • For the first time in three decades, more youth are moving to Nova Scotia than are moving out.
  • Disclosed raised venture capital increased by 347 per cent from 2013 to 2018, a higher growth rate than the national average.
  • Record numbers of new immigrants have made Nova Scotia home, and more international students are choosing to stay than at any time in our history.
  • Exports have diversified to new destinations and products. Non-energy exports have risen 40.4 per cent (2010–2017), enough to offset the decline in oil and gas, while exports to the growing Chinese market have increased by 118 per cent (since 2014).
  • Government has balanced the budget since 2016. The net debt to GDP ratio continues to decline. As a result of strong fiscal management, Nova Scotia has among the top four credit ratings in Canada.

ECONOMIC GROWTH GOALS

  • $500,000 increase for incubators and accelerators that support start-up companies, for a total of $1.5 million
  • $3 million as part of the three-year Building Tomorrow Fund to promote innovation and new product development for fisheries, aquaculture, and agriculture producers
  • $850,000 additional funding for NSBI to expand and enhance export development programming that supports Nova Scotia businesses, including the Export Growth Program
  • $1 million to continue to offer ACCESS-Ability grants for businesses to make accessibility-related improvements and work toward a barrier-free province
  • Within its existing budget, the Nova Scotia Apprenticeship Agency will increase its START Program grant by $5,000 to employers who hire apprentices from underrepresented groups, bringing the total amount available to $30,000 over the term of an apprentice’s training
  • $350,000 provided to Clean Foundation to support 73 internships across the province this summer to do research, manage events, develop leadership skills and innovative ideas, and take on projects that help the environment
  • $800,000 to support the on-going operation of post-secondary sandboxes
  • $200,000 increase for the Productivity and Innovation Voucher program to connect Nova Scotia companies with local universities to drive innovation and global competitiveness
  • $3 million to create the Venture Capital Tax Credit to encourage Nova Scotian businesses and individuals to support funds that invest in new and growing businesses in the province
  • $12 million for the Innovation Equity Tax Credit to allow individuals and Nova Scotia companies to make direct equity investments in small and medium-sized Nova Scotia businesses
  • $2.5 million increase to Develop Nova Scotia’s budget to deliver on its new provincial mandate, including managing a plan to deliver better access to high-speed internet in underserviced areas
  • $5 million to double the Innovation Rebate Program to encourage private sector investments in innovation and productivity projects
  • $60 million for an accelerated capital cost allowance tax incentive to allow Nova Scotia businesses to recover the cost of capital investments more quickly, which will help them remain competitive with the United States
  • $2 million increase for Invest Nova Scotia to fund projects that will increase economic competitiveness and productivity in sectors and communities, for a total of $6 million

 GOVERNANCE AND SUSTAINABILITY

  • 4th year of balanced budgets
  • Projected $33.6 million surplus
  • “The One Nova Scotia Commission set a goal of 30 per cent net debt to GDP ratio by 2024. We are trending in the right direction and moving toward that goal. We reduced our ratio from 38.2 per cent in March 2014 to 35 per cent last year, and now project it to fall to 33.8 per cent by the end of 2019–20.” (Budget Address 2019-20)
  • $7 million in provincial contributions for green infrastructure funding to help transition communities to a clean economy as part of the Investing in Canada Infrastructure Plan

 

2019 Nova Scotia Construction Guide is now online

The Nova Scotia Construction Guide is published annually for the Construction

Association of Nova Scotia’s members and industry partners.

In addition to your company listing, we have included valuable information within the

NS Construction Guide to assist you in your daily operations: information about CANS

programs and services; a list of standard construction contracts and documents; and lists

of industry partner associations.

Copies of the NS Construction Guide are circulated to approximately 1,700

construction-related businesses and buyers of construction services throughout Nova

Scotia.

Your company listing in the NS Construction Guide is seen by thousands of people in the

construction industry. We encourage you to review your company listing from time to

time to ensure your company profile is properly listed both in the A – Z section and the

Sources section.

Please note: We have exercised great care in compiling the listings contained in the 2019

NS Construction Guide and attempted to verify the information as accurately as possible

through email campaigns. Nevertheless, with the many changes which occur every year,

each listing cannot be 100 per cent guaranteed correct.

We encourage you to bring all inaccuracies and/or omissions to our attention in order

for the changes to be made the following year.

Please email these corrections to: cfiske@cans.ns.ca

Click HERE to view.

How to keep cash flowing from one project to the next.

For many contractors, financing existing jobs while investing in new work is a big balancing act that forces them to constantly weigh one financial obligation — i.e. payroll, taxes, subcontractors, material suppliers — against another.

Click here to read more.

Canadian economy posts surprise growth in January; reverses two monthly declines.

OTTAWA (Reuters) – The Canadian economy grew by a surprise 0.3 percent in January, reversing recent declines as the construction and manufacturing sectors picked up, and likely leaving the Bank of Canada on the sidelines over the coming months. Click HERE to read more.

$100-million Steel and Aluminum Initiative for small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) announced by the Government of Canada.

For more information and more details on program eligibility, click here and here.

A variety of federal programs are available that may assist qualifying business, employees, and stakeholders impacted by Canadian safeguards on global imports of certain steel goods. Click here.

There have been several revisions to the list of products that were initially under tariff as of July 1, 2018. Click here.

For reference, the original July 1, 2018 list of products included under Canadian countermeasures may be found here.

2019 Budget

On March 19, Finance Minister Bill Morneau introduced the federal government’s fourth and final budget prior to the election, titled “Investing in the Middle Class”. Budget 2019 earmarks $22.8 billion in new spending with a year-end deficit of $19.8 billion. Read more here.

“I feel like I would be intimidated”: New Australian study probes why girls don’t go into construction.

Despite the wide diversity of roles in construction, the industry is invisible to teenage girls considering career options, a year-long study in Australia has found. Click here to read more.