Take Care: Pandemic is Sask. s best chance for change in long-term care “But after the pandemic finally goes away is everything going to just go back to the way it always was?”
Author of the article: Arthur White-Crummey, Lynn Giesbrecht
Publishing date: Mar 06, 2021 • March 6, 2021 • 11 minute read • Top from L to R: Rob Coleman looks at his mother-in-law Joan Moore outside of Extendicare Parkside care home in December 2020 after Joan tested positive for COVID-19. MICHAEL BELL / Regina Leader-Post; Beverley Hartnell, left, stands with her father Bernard Hartnell, a Santa Maria resident who died after testing positive for COVID-19. (Photo courtesy of Beverley Hartnell); Everett Hindley, Saskatchewan minister of mental health and addictions, BRANDON HARDER/ Regina Leader-Post. Bottom L to R: Pam Moore poses for a photo on March 1, 2021 at Extendicare Parkside. MICHAEL BELL / Regina Leader-Post; A sign declaring a COVID-19 outbreak hangs on the door at
Take Care: Pandemic is Sask s best chance for change in long-term care
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Take Care: Pandemic is Sask s best chance for change in long-term care
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Saskatoon-based uranium producer Cameco Corp. is celebrating another win in a drawn-out legal dispute with the Canada Revenue Agency (CRA). It all began 13 years ago when the CRA reassessed Cameco for $2 billion in unpaid taxes and penalties over multiple tax years for alleged offshore “profit shifting.” The federal agency has since failed successive attempts to make that case in court. The Supreme Court of Canada denied the CRA’s request for leave to appeal a June 26, 2020 decision by the Federal Court of Appeal last Thursday, upholding a Sept. 2018 ruling by the Tax Court of Canada in Cameco’s favour. Cameco’s marketing and trading structure involving foreign subsidiaries, related transfer pricing for uranium sales and purchases were found to be in compliance with Canadian law for the 2003, 2005 and 2006 tax years while 2007 through 2014 remain disputed.