5 Priorities to Achieve Free Trade Success within Canada

July 6, 2017

– The CFIB is Canada’s largest association of small and medium-sized businesses with 109,000 members across every sector and region.

CANADA – As Canada’s federal, provincial and territorial governments have now implemented the Canadian Free Trade Agreement (CFTA) as a birthday gift for the nation on July 1st, the Canadian Federation of Independent Business (CFIB) has identified five immediate priority areas for the newly-formed Regulatory Reconciliation and Cooperation Table (RCT) to tackle.

Provincial, territorial and federal officials will use the RCT to tackle the obstacles to doing business inter-provincially across Canada, one by one. 

CFIB has sent a letter to each of Canada’s premiers and the Prime Minister, congratulating them for this historic agreement and urging them to quickly address key areas identified by small business owners as being the most significant impediments to interprovincial trade when the RCT group convenes:

  1. Simplify corporate registration – Small businesses wanting to do business in another province that does not recognize their existing registration need to pay hundreds of dollars in order to do so and complete extra, often duplicative paperwork, just to get their goods across the border. CFIB calls for a common corporate registry, or mutual recognition between jurisdictions.
  2. Mutually recognize food inspections – Some food products are easier to import from other countries than from other provinces. CFIB calls for mutual recognition of food inspections and related regulations. If a food product is deemed safe to consume in one province, it should be considered safe to consume in another.
  3. Align transportation regulations – Getting a product from one end of the country to the other is unnecessarily expensive in Canada and adds to up to real costs for consumers, sometimes in the thousands of dollars. CFIB urges all parties to consider aligning wide-load regulations, implementing single-trip fuel permits and recognizing commercial vehicle registrations, among other suggestions.
  4. Create common professional and trade licensing – A worker certified in one province is still not able to easily work in another. It should be much simpler for professionals and skilled tradespeople to go where the work is, but regulations often get in the way. CFIB calls for further cooperation and mutual recognition of certifications and professional designations.
  5. Improve mutual recognition of Worker’s Compensation and Occupational Health and Safety – Each jurisdiction mandates different types of fall protection even though the force of gravity does not change by province. The rules vary considerably between jurisdictions and businesses with workers in multiple jurisdictions needing to register with each Worker’s Compensation Board and/or safety body. CFIB calls for better alignment of rules and mutual recognition of provincial and territorial registration.

CFIB looks forward to participating in the RCT stakeholder group, and urges the federal, provincial and territorial governments to remain focused on reducing red tape and other governmental barriers to small business trade.

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