Poker face: The online gambling company formerly known as Amaya Inc. will face questions Monday at a hearing in front of the Ontario Securities Commission, which is investigating allegations of insider trading.
Political death by taxes?: Finance Minister Bill Morneau will meet with small business owners Tuesday in Vancouver as he continues to make the rounds in the hopes of winning over entrepreneurial types who are vocally opposed to the Liberal plan end tax provisions they say unfairly benefit the wealthy.
No pension for you: Insolvent Sears Canada will file a petition to terminate its pension plan on Tuesday. The chain has met with vocal opposition and Twitter rage over its decision to pay millions of dollars in bonuses to keep executives while forgoing retirement benefits and severance pay to former employees.
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Local businesses face hiring obstacles due to immigration pullback, flawed screening
In his 39 years of practicing immigration law, Warren Creates (a rare Law Society Certified Specialist) has never seen an environment so challenging for employers looking to hire workers from

Ottawa businesses critically important to ending youth homelessness across the city
Local businesses joining United Way East Ontario’s effort to prevent and end youth homelessness not only helps build a stronger, safer, and healthier community, but gives a boost to Ottawa’s
Payday: Statistics Canada releases data from the 2016 census Wednesday that will look at trends in household income including where we stand on everything from retirement savings to whether women are taking home more of the bacon.
Not to burst your bubble, but: The Canadian Real Estate Association issues its monthly housing data for August on Friday. Sales in the Greater Toronto area, Canada’s biggest housing market, dropped nearly 35 per cent year-over-year in August, which could have a dramatic effect on the national number of homes sold last month as well as its quarterly update to its forecast for the year.


