has been since September, 2010. This was not a surprise at all but there were some different
messages contained in Governor Mark Carney’s commentary and in the Bank’s Monetary Policy
Report published the same day as the rate announcement was made.
results of the combination of survey data from both consumer and industry participants are
interesting, provocative and, in some areas, a little sobering.
In construction, weekly earnings increased 5.3% to $1,133.09, and growth was widespread across all industries in this sector.
mortgages, some expected and some not, rocked the Canadian mortgage world last week.

PARIS - International Monetary Fund chief Christine Lagarde faced hours of questioning at a special Paris court Thursday over her role in the 400 million euro ($520 million) pay-off to a controversial businessman when she was France's finance minister.
The court hearing threatens to sully the reputations of both Lagarde and France. The payment was made to well-connected entrepreneur Bernard Tapie as part of a private arbitration process to settle a dispute with state-owned bank Credit Lyonnais over the botched sale of Adidas in the 1990s. It is seen by many in France as an example of the cozy relationship between big money and big power in France.

WASHINGTON - Dismissing a veto threat from President Barack Obama, lawmakers in the Republican-led House approved legislation that links student loan rates to the ups and downs of the financial markets.
The Republican-backed bill would allow students to dodge a scheduled rate hike for students with new subsidized Stafford loans next month, but rates could rise in coming years. Democrats largely opposed the measure — which they branded the "Making College More Expensive Act" — while the Republican chairman of the Education Committee labeled the legislation a starting point for negotiations with the Senate and White House.

Struggling wireless carrier Mobilicity has taken the first step in the process of being acquired by Telus in a $380-million deal that will ultimately need federal government approval.
Debtholders of Mobilicity approved a plan on Thursday to sell the company to Telus Corp., which will go to court for approval of the deal early next week.

CHICAGO - An 87-year-old grandmother took on billionaire Donald Trump. And on Thursday — she lost.
Jurors sided with the real estate mogul-turned-TV showman in a weeklong civil trial focused on Jacqueline Goldberg's claim that Trump cheated her in a condo bait-and-switch scheme.
NEW YORK, N.Y. - McDonald's once again faced criticism that it's a purveyor of junk food that markets to children at its annual shareholder meeting Thursday.
The world's biggest hamburger chain has been looking to keep up with changing tastes as people increasingly opt for foods they feel are fresh or healthy. Customers can now order egg whites in its breakfast sandwiches, for example. McDonald's also recently introduced chicken wraps to go after people in their 20s and 30s looking for better-for-you options.
Leonard Marsh, the co-founder of the Snapple beverage brand, has died at age 80.
The Dr. Pepper Snapple Group Inc. of Plano, Texas, which now owns Snapple, on Thursday confirmed Marsh's death. He died Tuesday at his home in Manhasset, N.Y., The New York Times reported.
OTTAWA - The federal government is threatening "retaliatory measures" against the United States in a dispute over meat-labelling rules that Ottawa and the World Trade Organization consider discriminatory.
The U.S. government has announced new regulations on so-called country of origin labelling that would track beef and hogs through the meat processing and distribution systems.
MONTREAL - The Business Development Bank of Canada and the Caisse de depot et placement du Quebec are investing a total of $12 million in Revision Military Inc., a developer and manufacturer of ballistic eyewear and other protective equipment.
BDC, which offers financing and consulting services to small and medium-sized companies, will invest $7 million while the Caisse, one of the country's largest pension fund managers, will invest $5 million.

WASHINGTON - The Republican leaders of the House of Representatives are pledging to act to fix the nation's immigration system but making clear that they will not simply accept legislation passed by the Senate.
Republican House Speaker John Boehner of Ohio and his top lieutenants issued a statement Thursday saying that the House will produce its own legislation aimed at addressing the broken immigration system.

CALI, Colombia - Canada's many forays into free-trade talks across the globe are not the ineffective scatter-gun approach described by critics, but an effort to set up "gateways" to the world's biggest trading blocs, says International Trade Minister Ed Fast.
"There's a lot of misunderstanding of what we're doing," Fast said in an interview in a cool and quiet corridor at the lush country club where he and Prime Minister Stephen Harper are observing Latin American economic integration talks.
WASHINGTON - The chairman of the Senate Energy Committee says a website partially funded by the oil and gas industry is a constructive tool that could be used by federal regulators in requiring public disclosure of the chemicals used in hydraulic fracturing operations.
Sen. Ron Wyden of Oregon stopped short of endorsing FracFocus.org but said it could be helpful as lawmakers and federal agencies consider ways to regulate hydraulic fracturing, also known as fracking.
WASHINGTON - A prominent firm in the business of advising big shareholders on how to vote in elections for company directors is paying a $300,000 fine to settle federal civil charges of failing to protect clients' confidential voting information.
Institutional Shareholder Services agreed to the penalty in a settlement announced Thursday with the Securities and Exchange Commission. Its clients are institutional investors such as large mutual funds and pension funds. The firm, based in Rockville, Md., didn't admit or deny the SEC's allegations.

TORONTO - Toronto and U.S. stock markets racked up losses Thursday amid a contraction in Chinese manufacturing that drove the Japanese market down to levels not seen in more than two years.
The S&P/TSX composite index fell 98.14 points to 12,654.36, while the Canadian dollar rose 0.58 of a cent to 96.99 cents US.
NEW YORK, N.Y. - Kerry Kennedy has joined farmworkers protesting outside Wendy's shareholder meeting in New York City.
The protesters said Thursday they want Wendy's to sign an agreement to safeguard working conditions for Florida tomato pickers.
TORONTO - About a year and a half after the first model was released in the U.S., Amazon is finally bringing its Kindle Fire tablet to Canada.
The company announced Thursday that it had begun taking pre-orders for two versions of the Kindle Fire HD in Canada.
MONTREAL - Dorel Industries is dipping its toe in the retail bicycle business by opening a concept store on the outskirts of New York City.
The maker of Cannondale, Schwinn and other bicycle brands will open a Long Island store in two weeks to test its product and marketing initiatives with consumers.
DENVER - Hobby Lobby Stores Inc. is challenging the part of the federal health care law that requires for-profit companies to offer employees health coverage that includes products the business owners find morally objectionable, such as certain types of contraception.
The arts-and-crafts chain is the best-known company challenging the contraception mandate, but more than two dozen other companies have made similar claims. Among the companies with live claims challenging the contraception mandate:

SAN FRANCISCO - Few have explored the remote volcanic islands of the Galapagos archipelago, an otherworldly landscape inhabited by the world's largest tortoises and other fantastical creatures that inspired Charles Darwin's theory of evolution.
Soon it will take only the click of a mouse or finger swipe on a tablet to explore some of the Galapagos Islands' most remote areas, surrounding waters and unique creatures.

WASHINGTON - President Barack Obama's nominee for secretary of commerce is facing scrutiny in the Senate for her ties to a subprime mortgage lender that failed in 2001 and as a beneficiary of family offshore trusts in the Bahamas.
Billionaire business executive Penny Pritzker of Chicago is a longtime Obama friend who raised hundreds of thousands of dollars for both of his presidential campaigns.

TORONTO - Canada's privacy commissioner Jennifer Stoddart says she's tried naming and shaming some of the world's largest companies into respecting the privacy of Canadians.
But, she admits, it hasn't really worked.

TROIS-RIVIERES, Que. - A woman is recovering following a bizarre accident in which she was run over three times by her own car.
Trois-Rivieres, Que., police say the newspaper delivery woman was making her rounds this week and jumping in and out of her car frequently to drop copies of Le Nouvelliste on subscribers' doorsteps.

TORONTO - The chief of staff to embattled Mayor Rob Ford was escorted by security from city hall premises Thursday as allegations the mayor had been caught on videotape smoking crack cocaine continued to swirl.
Mark Towhey, one of Ford's closest advisers, refused to explain his sudden departure.
MONTREAL - A huge boil-water advisory, affecting 1.3 million people in Montreal, will be maintained until at least later Thursday evening.
City officials say the advisory will be in effect until after 9:30 p.m., to allow for the completion of tests. An update will be issued later.
OTTAWA - The federal government is threatening "retaliatory measures" against the United States in a dispute over meat-labelling rules that Ottawa and the World Trade Organization consider discriminatory.
The U.S. government has announced new regulations on so-called country of origin labelling that would track beef and hogs through the meat processing and distribution systems.

OTTAWA - The Senate has turned over documents to the Mounties to help their investigation into improper expense claims.
Senate Speaker Noel Kinsella says the RCMP's sensitive and international investigations unit is examining the claims of senators Mike Duffy, Mac Harb and Patrick Brazeau.
Note to readers: CORRECTS name of RCMP unit

CALI, Colombia - Canada's many forays into free-trade talks across the globe are not the ineffective scatter-gun approach described by critics, but an effort to set up "gateways" to the world's biggest trading blocs, says International Trade Minister Ed Fast.
"There's a lot of misunderstanding of what we're doing," Fast said in an interview in a cool and quiet corridor at the lush country club where he and Prime Minister Stephen Harper are observing Latin American economic integration talks.

TORONTO - A man charged in an alleged plot to attack a Via Rail passenger train says he wants to be represented by a lawyer who agrees the Qu'ran should be used as a "reference" in his case.
Chiheb Esseghaier appeared in a Toronto court by video link from jail Thursday morning and said he has made an application for representation by legal aid, but is seeking a lawyer who can co-operate with his need to use the Muslim religious text in his defence.
Note to readers: This is a corrected story. An earlier version indicated the allegations specified a plot involving a bomb, but police have not provided such specific details of the alleged plot.

TORONTO - A new study suggests incentives like free T-shirts and gift cards could boost blood donation rates without compromising blood safety.
Canadians are not paid cash for blood and rolling up one's sleeve to donate is seen as an altruistic act.
SASKATOON - The Health Council of Canada says the federal government isn't doing enough to keep pace with changing health-care needs in the country.
The council released its 2013 progress report on health-care renewal in Saskatoon on Thursday.

NELSON, B.C. - We will find out later today what the Regional District of Central Kootenay plans for the landslide-devastated community of Johnsons Landing, on the shores of Kootenay Lake, in southeast B.C.
A final report will be released at 3 p.m., examining the causes of the landslide and any continuing danger in the region.

CALGARY - A Calgary agency named after a one-time NHL player who brought to light the sex crimes of former junior hockey coach Graham James has officially opened.
The Sheldon Kennedy Child Advocacy Centre offers all kinds of support services to young abuse victims to save them from having to deal with several different agencies.

MONTREAL - Three people have been arrested and charged in an ongoing RCMP investigation into a multimillion-dollar corruption scheme at the Canada Revenue Agency.
The charges are being laid against a chartered accountant and two former employees at the federal agency's Montreal office.

HAMILTON - A second suspect in the death of Tim Bosma, a Hamilton father who took two men on a test drive and never returned, appeared briefly in court Thursday and was charged with first-degree murder.
Mark Smich, 25, of Oakville, Ont., was led in shackles into a Hamilton courtroom Thursday morning and turned his back to the public gallery for the duration of his appearance.
Note to readers: This is a corrected story. An earlier version had an incorrect date for one of Smich's previous convictions.
OTTAWA - Importers of popular electronics such as big-screen TVs and MP3 players are ramping up their fight against federal tariff changes, accusing the government of misleading them by offering tariff breaks that it planned to claw back later.
Importers of televisions are already on the hook for about $16 million in retroactive duties from 2011 after last year's crackdown on a particular tariff exemption that has become a political football.

OTTAWA - A Japanese-based forestry company has won a long-running tax battle with Ottawa over how reforestation obligations should be handled when harvest rights are sold.
The Supreme Court of Canada ruled 9-0 on Thursday that passing on future liabilities for land reclamation cannot be considered taxable at the time of the sale.

OTTAWA - The Supreme Court of Canada won't hear an appeal from a former lieutenant-governor of Quebec who claimed royal immunity from criminal charges.
Lise Thibault, who held the provincial vice-regal post between 1997 and 2007, is charged with fraud and breach of trust in relation to hundreds of thousands of dollars in expense claims.

BRIDGEWATER, N.S. - A 48-year-old man pleaded guilty Thursday to kidnapping, confining and sexually assaulting a 16-year-old boy at a cabin in rural Nova Scotia last fall.
David James LeBlanc appeared in Nova Scotia Supreme Court in Bridgewater, where he entered guilty pleas to charges of kidnapping, forcible confinement, sexual assault, uttering threats and breach of conditions.

TORONTO - Toronto police say no charges will be laid in the case of a woman whose purse was taken after she jumped to her death at a subway station.
Police say they interviewed the suspect they had been seeking and it became clear she was dealing with mental health issues. She had been seen on security video.

OTTAWA - Statistics Canada says the number of people receiving regular employment insurance benefits continued to trend down for a fifth consecutive month in March.
It says the number of recipients declined by 1.0 per cent or 5,200 people, to 523,700.

TORONTO - The family and friends of a Canadian missing in Australia's Snowy Mountains region for more than a week are calling for additional manpower to search for the hiker.
The calls came as hopes briefly rose Wednesday of finding Prabhdeep Srawn when "voices" were heard in the search area in the Kosciuszko National Park.

Dan Ralph, The Canadian Press
at 17:57 on May 01, 2013, EDT.
TORONTO - Linden Gaydosh and Mike Edem haven't performed for CFL officials in months, but that hasn't prevented their draft stock from skyrocketing.
The Calgary Dinos defensive stalwarts have emerged as favourites to go first overall in the CFL draft Monday. The Hamilton Tiger-Cats, who were tied with Winnipeg at 6-12 for the league's worst record last year, have the top pick.
The Blue Bombers select second, followed by Montreal, Saskatchewan, Montreal again, B.C., Calgary and Grey Cup-champion Toronto before expansion Ottawa completes the first round.
Edmonton opens the second round at No. 10 overall. Ottawa will take four players returning to school in the U.S. but participate fully in the 2014 draft ahead of its scheduled CFL return.
This year's draft will offer a different twist as Monday the CFL expanded its format from six rounds to seven.
Gaydosh, a six-foot-four, 314-pound defensive lineman, and Edem, a six-foot-one, 200-pound linebacker, are both blue-chip prospects. The CFL's scouting bureau listed Gaydosh third in its final list of the top-15 ranked players and Edem at No. 10.
Further helping their cause, though, is six of the seven top-ranked prospects are either returning to school or heading to NFL camps. For CFL executives like Winnipeg GM Joe Mack, that means having to re-evaluate their draft strategy.
"That's happening more and more the last few years because the NFL is being more thorough in the scouting of Canadian kids," Mack said. "I also think Canadian players and the CIS have both really stepped up their game.
"But it makes things a little more problematic because not only must you evaluate whether players coming up will be good CFL players but also if a) you think they might get an NFL shot and b) you think they have a shot to stick because if they do, you might be better off looking at somebody else."
Oregon linebacker Bo Lokombo was ranked No. 1 but is returning to school. Regina defensive tackle Stefan Charles (No. 2) and McMaster offensive lineman Matt Sewell (No. 4) both signed with Tennessee as free agents following the NFL draft.
Eastern Michigan offensive lineman Andy Mulumba (No. 5) signed with the NFL's Green Bay Packers while offensive lineman Nolan MacMillan (No. 6) will play at Iowa this fall.
McMaster defensive lineman Ben D'Aguilar (No. 7) is attending Tampa Bay's mini-camp this weekend and has also been invited to the New York Jets camp as well as that of another unspecified NFL team. C.O. Prime, an unranked linebacker at Wagner College who's also draft eligible, signed with the Indianapolis Colts.
The six-foot-five, 324-pound Charles was the overwhelming favourite to go first overall Monday before signing with Tennessee. What's more, a source told The Canadian Press the deal included a five-figure signing bonus that could further delay Charles' return to Canada.
The bonus is an indication of Tennessee's interest in Charles. The native of Oshawa, Ont., could spend up to three years on the Titans' practice roster before either being promoted to the active roster or released.
"That definitely makes you re-evaluate his particular situation," Mack said. "I wouldn't be surprised if he dropped to the second round (of CFL draft) because of that."
Many CFL teams prefer their early draft picks to join them at training camp rather than midway through the season following a failed NFL tryout or the next year after completing school. Gaydosh and Edem could certainly fit that bill.
Gaydosh impressed at the CFL combine in March, finishing second in the bench press (36 repetitions) before dominating in the 1-on-1 drills. Edem showed his athleticism with a 38.5-inch vertical jump and 40-yard dash time of 4.57 seconds (both tops among linebackers).
Both are also Canadians capable of developing into starters at a position usually reserved for Americans. That would give a CFL team — which is allowed to have a 42-man active roster — some lineup flexibility.
Gaydosh might be ranked higher by the CFL's scouting bureau, but Edem does present some enticing value as a No. 1 pick. He could contribute immediately on special teams while learning the nuances of Hamilton's defence.
Also as a native of Brampton, Ont., Edem would be playing close to home and more likely to re-sign with Hamilton after completing his rookie deal. In 2009, the Ticats took Alberta offensive lineman Simeon Rottier first overall but lost the native of Westlock, Alta., when he signed with Edmonton as a free agent after three seasons.
Last year, slotback Andy Fantuz, a native of Chatham, Ont., cited playing closer to home as a reason for signing as a free agent with Hamilton after starting his CFL career with Saskatchewan.
Gaydosh has the potential to become a dominant presence inside. But there's also a chance of the Alberta native wanting to play closer to home when he signs his second CFL deal.
Mack knows all about this. In 2008, Winnipeg selected offensive lineman Brendon LaBatte sixth overall but lost the native of Weyburn, Sask., as a free agent to Saskatchewan following the 2011 season.
"I've found, particularly in my second stint in the CFL, that's a much bigger factor than it was," Mack said. "You've seen it many times players wanting to get back to their home province or their home city and it is something we definitely take into consideration."
Each year teams at the top of the draft receive trade offers from those wanting to move up. Mack figures that will again be the case leading up to the draft Monday even with many of the top prospects being tied up by the NFL.
While he'll definitely listen to offers for the No. 2 pick, Mack fully expects to be on the clock when it's time for the second selection to be made.
"I know everyone could have their draft boards evaluated differently and they could vary slightly based upon need," Mack said. "But we have four or five (prospects) who are definitely on a higher plateau and so we'd be hesitant to trade out of that plateau.
"That's because we don't think, at least for our needs, there are players we feel could be starters longterm."
