Tag: rules

  • Rules Changing from 1st March 2023: Big news! These big rules

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    Rules Changing from 1st March 2023: After about five days, the new month of March is going to start. With every new month, the rules related to money change.

    These changes will have an impact on your household budget. Sometimes you benefit from these rules and sometimes more money comes out of your pocket. The prices of LPG, CNG and PNG are fixed on the first of every month. Banks are also going to remain closed for 12 days next month. Let us know the details of these new rules.

    LPG, CNG and PNG prices will be fixed

    The prices of LPG, LPG, CNG and PNG cylinders will be fixed on the first of every month. Last time on February 1, companies did not increase the prices of domestic LPG cylinders, but this time it is expected that the prices of gas cylinders may increase due to festivals.

    Baba’s aarti will be expensive in Kashi Vishwanath temple

    Baba’s aarti has become expensive in Kashi Vishwanath temple in Varanasi. Devotees will have to pay Rs 150 more than before for Mangala Aarti. Earlier, 350 rupees had to be paid for the aarti here, but now it will cost 500 rupees. Apart from this, Rs 120 more will have to be paid for the tickets for Sapta Rishi Aarti, Shringar Bhog Aarti and Midday Bhog Aarti. Earlier it used to cost Rs 180 but now Rs 300 will have to be paid. This new ray will be applicable from 1 March 2023.

    Banks will remain closed for 12 days in March

    There are also Holi and Navratri in March due to which banks are going to remain closed for 12 days. This includes weekly bank holidays. Get your bank related work done instantly without any delay. Banks in India remain open on the first and third Saturdays of the month. While there is a holiday in banks on the second and fourth Saturdays. According to the calendar of the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) in March 2023, private and government banks will be closed for 12 days.

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    ( With inputs from : kashmirpublication.in )

  • House GOP presses agencies on small business rules

    House GOP presses agencies on small business rules

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    House GOP lawmakers are launching a sweeping oversight effort aimed at ferreting out how agencies across the federal government weigh the potential impact on small businesses when crafting regulations.

    House Small Business Republicans, led by Chair Roger Williams of Texas, Rep. Blaine Luetkemeyer of Missouri and Rep. Beth Van Duyne of Texas, sent letters to 25 agencies Wednesday about their compliance with laws that require them to analyze the effects of new rules on small employers and to produce compliance guides for those firms. The committee’s push is designed to shield small businesses from burdensome regulation.

    The targets include the EPA, the DOL, the IRS and the CFPB. In the letters, committee Republicans cite examples where they said agency regulatory work has fallen short when it comes to small business impact.

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    #House #GOP #presses #agencies #small #business #rules
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Flight Ticket Cancellation Refund Rules! Now full money will be

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    Flight Ticket Cancellation Refund Rules! Now full money will be returned in case of flight cancellation, booking will have to be done like this


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    Flight Ticket Cancellation Refund: If you are planning to travel by air, now you can get full money back even if the flight is cancelled. But for this you have to book flight tickets online through online payment service Paytm.

    Because this facility is available only for Paytm users. Therefore, with the help of Paytm, you can get full refund on cancellation of flight or bus tickets. In this plan of Paytm, you do not get any cancellation charge on any flight or bus ticket. That’s why this facility can prove to be very helpful for you.

    Please tell that the name of this plan of Paytm is Cancel Protect Premium. Which is different for booking tickets from flights to buses. Talking about the price of Cancel Protect Premium, customers can buy ‘Cancel Protect’ at a premium of Rs 149 for flight tickets and Rs 25 for bus tickets.

    Paytm Cancel Protect will work like this

    Paytm’s Cancel Protect premium plan enables customers to claim 100% refund for trips canceled through Paytm at least 24 hours before the scheduled departure time of flights and at least 4 hours before the scheduled departure time of buses will do The company claims that with ‘Cancel Protect’ there is no cap on the refund amount and on cancellation the fare will be credited immediately to the account from which the money was paid for booking the ticket.

    Customers will be helped in saving

    A Paytm official says that many customer-friendly product features have been introduced on the app by the company, which has simplified travel booking and catered to the needs of Indian travelers. ‘Cancel Protect’ is the perfect solution for customers looking for a flexible and convenient way to protect their travel plans. With the convenience of tickets, users are being given great deals and discounts on travel bookings, which will help customers save more.

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    ( With inputs from : kashmirpublication.in )

  • J&K admin unveils Rules for levy, assessment and collection of property tax in limits of municipal councils and committees

    J&K admin unveils Rules for levy, assessment and collection of property tax in limits of municipal councils and committees

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    Srinagar, Feb 21: The administration of Jammu & Kashmir Union Territory on Tuesday unveiled Rules for levying, assessment and collection of property tax in the limits of municipal councils and committees of the UT.

    The Housing & Urban Development Department today notified “The Jammu and Kashmir Property Tax (Other Municipalities) Rules, 2023 “.

    According to the notification, a copy of which is in possession of news agency—Kashmir News Observer (KNO), these rules, which would be applicable within the limits of municipal councils and municipal committees, shall come into force from April 01, 2023.

    The Rules define the procedure for calculation of property tax.

    According to the Rules, the Taxable Annual Value (TAV) of a property under the Municipal Act-2000 and the property tax due thereon for a financial year shall be calculated in accordance with a formula given in schedule-I to these rules.

    The Rules state that the property tax on residential property would be 5% of Taxable Annual Value (TAV) while that of non-residential property be 6 % of Taxable Annual Value (TAV).

    The property tax calculated in respect of a building shall hold for a block of three years unless any change to such calculation is necessitated on account of the circumstances envisaged in the Act for allowing revision in such calculation, the Rules state.

    “The first block shall commence from 1ST April 2023, and shall continue to remain in force till 3 1 March 2026. The blocks shall be similarly calculated thereafter, “read the Rules.

    According to the Rules, new buildings coming up after the commencement of the block shall have their property tax liability calculated with reference to the 1st day of the relevant block, and irrespective of their having completed three years, their liability to tax shall be calculated anew from the date of commencement of the new block of three years for the Corporation as a whole.

    “Where a building is liable to property tax for only a part of the year, the tax due shall be proportional to the number of completed months and parts of month not completed shall be ignored,” the Rules state.

    According to the Rules, vacant lands, not appurtenant to a structure/building shall be exempt from property tax if there is a Master Plan in force in the area, under which any construction/development on such vacant land is disallowed or if they have been put to agricultural use.

    “Similarly, all the properties of the municipality and all places of worship, including temples, masjids, Gurdwaras, Churches, Ziarats, etc. and cremation and burial grounds shall be exempt from payment of property tax,” the Rules state.

    The Rules state that all properties owned by the Government of India / UT government shall be exempted from payment of property tax.

    “However, service charge at the rate 3% of the taxable annual value shall be payable to the Municipality in respect of such properties,” the Rules state—(KNO)

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    ( With inputs from : roshankashmir.net )

  • Toxic train derailment due to greed and weakened rules, Sherrod Brown says

    Toxic train derailment due to greed and weakened rules, Sherrod Brown says

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    Ohio Sen. Sherrod Brown, in discussing this month’s toxic train derailment in his state, said Sunday that Congress needs to stand firm when corporate lobbyists use their influence to weaken safety rules and regulations.

    “Congress has got to do its job better,” the Ohio Democrat said on CNN’s “State of the Union” while also urging President Joe Biden and Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg to “re-strengthen” pertinent regulations that have been weakened in recent years.

    “Every time there’s a new administration,” Brown explained, “particularly a more conservative one that’s more pro-corporate, they put all these regulations on the table about safety, about worker safety, community safety, the environment, consumer protections, and, at the behest of lobbyists, far too often, they weaken those laws.”

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • How India’s Fiscal Rules Strike A Balance Between Two Extremes?

    How India’s Fiscal Rules Strike A Balance Between Two Extremes?

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    by Arshid Hussain Peer and Munshir C

    The current budget has allocated a higher share to capital expenditure which is a step in the right direction. Besides, the recent budget is optimistic about meeting its fiscal target in the coming year.

    Union Finance Minister
    Union Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman along with Jammu and Kashmir Lt Governor Manoj Sinha lit a lamp during the inauguration of the new Income Tax Office ‘Chinar’, in Srinagar on Monday, November 22, 2021. KL Image by Bilal Bahadur

    In a developing country like India, the role of the state is more nuanced. On one hand, the state must meet the development aspirations of the diverse population, but it also has to ensure macroeconomic stability to avoid situations like the 1991 crisis or the more recent 2013 fragile five. Striking a balance between the two remains not only a critical question but also imperative for a state like India.

    After the disintegration of the USSR, there emerged a kind of consensus that markets are the primary drivers of prosperity and economic growth. This, however, does not mean that there is no role for the government, which continues to play its role through regulatory, monetary, and fiscal policies. But the government’s intervention in the monetary sphere should be transparent. In light of this view, rule-based policies started gaining traction in both monetary and fiscal aspects.

    In the fiscal sphere, broadly four main types of rules exist- the expenditure rule, the revenue rule, the budget balance rule, and the debt rule. The countries either adopt all four rules or a few among them. While the budget balance rule focused on the balance between total revenues and expenditures, the debt rule imposed an explicit limit on public debt. The expenditure rule placed a limit on overall spending. The revenue rules are primarily concerned with the appropriate use of excess revenues.

    India adopted the Fiscal Deficit and Budgetary Management (FRBM) Act, 2003  (balance budget rule) on the recommendations of the Sarma committee.  The act specified three main objectives- ensure intergenerational equity, fiscal sustainability and transparency in fiscal operations.

    To achieve these objectives, the act proposed that the fiscal deficit be progressively reduced to 3 per cent of GDP for each central and state government. The rule did indeed help to contain the fiscal deficit, which was  6.2 per cent of GDP in 2002-03 but decreased to 4 per cent (of which the central government deficit was 2.54 per cent) at the end of 2007-08. The global financial crisis disrupted the fiscal consolidation plan and subsequently, the fiscal rules were suspended until 2011–12. As a result, the combined fiscal deficit in 2009-10 increased to 9.3 per cent. In  2010–11, it declined to 4.8 per cent but again increased in the next year to 5.91 per cent.

    The Vijay Kelkar committee(2012) was constituted to recommend mid-term corrections and reforms for medium-term fiscal consolidation. The committee recommended the fiscal deficit of 4.8, 4.2, 3.6 and 3 per cent targets for the next four years starting from 2013-14 onwards.  In 2013-14, the fiscal deficit was within the target as laid down by the fiscal consolidation plan. But a closer look reveals that it was more of an arithmetic trick than actual consolidation. The fiscal deficit target was achieved by reducing planned expenditures and deferring the payment for oil subsidies to the next fiscal year.

    From 2014-15 to 2017-18, the fiscal position improved considerably due to improvements on the revenue side also. The income tax-to-GDP ratio witnessed an increase from 2.1 to 2.6 per cent. Moreover,  the sharp decline in crude oil prices enabled the government to find a new way to raise money by raising the excise taxes on petrol and diesel. Further, the subsidies, on diesel were reduced. It was due to these measures that the fiscal deficit in 2017 declined to 3.46 per cent as reported to Parliament. However, the Comptroller and Auditor General (CAG) notified the Finance Commission that the fiscal deficit (centre) in 2017-18 was 5.85 per cent. The government has relied on off-budget borrowings to contain the fiscal deficit.

    The fiscal rules have also undergone changes as it was felt that a single rule cannot help to achieve various objectives like fiscal sustainability, economic stabilisation and size of government debt. To keep pace with best international practices, Finance Minister in 2016,  while presenting the budget, informed the parliament that there was a need for a review of the FRBM Act, saying, “While remaining committed to fiscal prudence and consolidation, a time has come to review the workings of the FRBM Act, especially in the context of the uncertainty and volatility that have become the new norms of the global economy. I, therefore, propose to constitute a committee to review the implementation of the FRBM Act and give its recommendations on the way forward”.

    Subsequently, the committee under NK  Singh was constituted. The committee recommended using debt as the primary target of fiscal policy, with a debt-to-GDP ratio of 60 per cent (40 per cent for the centre and 20 per cent for states) to be achieved by 2022-23. It also suggested reducing fiscal and revenue deficits to 2.5 per cent and 0.8 per cent, respectively, by the same period, with an escape clause for temporarily relaxing or suspending the target, but with clear specifications and restrictions on government notifications.

    Then, the COVID-19 pandemic struck, and governments all across the world adopted expansionary fiscal policies, including India. The fiscal deficit (centre) again increased and reached an all-time high of 9.18 per cent in 2020–21; it is now on a declining trend but still higher than the combined target of 6 per cent. The government is mentioning the much-touted “glide path”. Yet, throughout the past two decades, such a glide path has been nowhere in sight. Instead, the path looks more erratic, like the snake and ladder game, except that here the snake (bad times) takes you higher and the ladder (good times) helps you to come down, but nowhere to the target.

    Similarly, the unequal targets for states and the centre for debt but with a similar target for deficit are creating tensions, as highlighted by Roy and Kotia. This has made the debt sustainability of states an issue. This is evident from the current debt levels.  Except for Maharashtra (17.9 per cent), Gujarat (19.0 per cent) and Odisha (which is 18.8 per cent), every state has a higher than 20 per cent debt-GDP ratio, with the highest ratio in Punjab (53.3 per cent ). The current central government Debt-GDP ratio is 56.7  per cent and that of the general government  (centre and state combined) debt-GDP ratio is 84 per cent. Therefore, there is a need to address this anomaly on an urgent basis and in consultation with states.

    Conclusion

    The containment of fiscal deficit targets can be achieved by cutting unnecessary expenditures. Also, fiscal consolidation can be realistic and meaningful only when revenues are increased. Otherwise, as stressed by the Sarma Committee (2000), without this golden rule, fiscal consolidation could lead to a disproportionately large compression of capital assets.

    The under-reporting of the fiscal deficit needs to avoid, as it gives a false sense of security. Additionally, it conveys the wrong message to foreign investors for being uncertain and opaque on key policy measures. The current budget has allocated a higher share to capital expenditure which is a step in the right direction. Besides, the recent budget is optimistic about meeting its fiscal target in the coming year. Only time will tell whether these targets are overly optimistic or achievable.

    (Authors are research scholars at the Department of Economics, Jamia Millia Islamia, New Delhi. The opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not purport to reflect the opinions or views of TheNewsCaravan.)

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    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )

  • Cash Deposit & Withdrawal New Rule: Big news! New rules

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    If you do transactions up to 20 lakh without Aadhaar card and PAN card, then be careful because the Income Tax Department is keeping an eye on you.

    Without PAN Aadhaar (PAN-AADHAR), it will be very difficult to do financial transaction. The government has made the rule of cash transaction without PAN and Aadhaar very strict. The new rule made by the Income Tax Department will affect those who do financial transactions without PAN and Aadhaar. According to the new rules, it will be necessary to give PAN and Aadhaar for cash deposit or withdrawal of Rs 20 lakh or more in a bank or post office in a financial year.

    New rules of the tax department on cash deposit, withdrawal

    Actually, the Central Board of Direct Taxes (CBDT) has issued new rules under the Income Tax (Fifteenth Amendment) Rules, 2022, whose notification has been issued on May 10, 2022. According to the new rule, it will be necessary to give PAN Aadhaar when such transactions are done. in which

     

    1. It will be necessary to provide PAN Aadhaar for making cash deposits of Rs 20 lakh or more in the account of one or more people in a banking company, cooperative bank or post office in a financial year.

    2. Apart from this, it will be necessary to provide PAN and Aadhaar for cash withdrawal of Rs 20 lakh or more from one or more bank accounts or cooperative banks or post offices in a financial year.
    3. And if a person opens a current account or cash credit account with any bank or cooperative bank or post office, then he will have to give PAN and Aadhaar number.

    It will help in preventing tax evasion.

    In fact, through this step, the government wants to bring more and more people under the tax net, who do huge cash transactions but do not have a PAN card, nor do they file income tax returns. . The information is available with the tax department that there are many people who deposit and withdraw more than 20 lakhs in a bank account within a year but do not file income tax returns.

    Now, if PAN is made mandatory for transactions of 20 lakhs or more, whenever someone is found doing transactions of more than this amount, the Income Tax will be able to easily trace such transactions and this will also help in preventing tax evasion.

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    ( With inputs from : kashmirpublication.in )

  • ATM Cash Withdrawal Rules: Big news for customers

    ATM Cash Withdrawal Rules: Big news for customers

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    SBI Change ATM Withdraw Process: State Bank of India has now changed the method of withdrawing cash from ATM. Now SBI has started OTP service to withdraw cash from ATM.

    The bank has made this big change to protect its customers from fraud. Soon this rule will be seen applicable on SBI ATMs. This rule will act as an additional safeguard against unauthorized transactions.

    According to the bank, while completing the transaction, the bank customers will have to share the OTP while withdrawing cash from the ATM, so that it is ensured that the ATM user is the right user. OTP is a system-generated four-digit number that the bank will send to the customer’s registered mobile number. This OTP will authenticate the cash withdrawal and will be valid for only one transaction.

    OTP cash withdrawal started from January 1, 2020

    The country’s largest lending bank SBI had started OTP-based cash withdrawal services from January 1, 2020. SBI has been creating awareness about ATM frauds through social media and other platforms from time to time. It is appealing to all its customers to avail the service.

    OTP will be required in transactions of 10 thousand or above

    Now this service will come in handy for SBI customers at the time of withdrawing cash from ATMs. SBI made these rules in view of the increasing fraud, cyber crime. Let us tell you that customers withdrawing Rs 10,000 or more in a single transaction from SBI ATMs will require OTP to complete the transaction.

    Withdraw cash using OTP

    You must have your Debit Card and Mobile Phone while withdrawing cash from SBI ATM OTP will come Enter the OTP received on your phone on the ATM screen After entering the valid OTP, the transaction will be completed.

    1623466742 atm1

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    ( With inputs from : kashmirpublication.in )

  • RBI issues draft rules for lending, borrowing of govt securities

    RBI issues draft rules for lending, borrowing of govt securities

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    New Delhi: The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) on Friday issued draft guidelines for lending and borrowing government securities. It is aimed at improving liquidity and price discovery in the market.

    The central bank had first announced the borrowing and lending of government securities earlier this month while announcing the monetary policy.

    “Comments on the Draft Directions are invited from banks, market participants, and other interested parties by March 17, 2023,” the RBI said in a statement on Friday.

    RBI Governor Shaktikanta Das on February 8 proposed the borrowing and lending of government securities to improve liquidity and price discovery in the securities market.

    “This will provide investors an avenue to deploy their ideal securities, enhance portfolio returns, and facilitate wider participation,” he had said at that time.

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    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Trudeau’s ‘Freedom Convoy’ shutdown was justified, inquiry rules

    Trudeau’s ‘Freedom Convoy’ shutdown was justified, inquiry rules

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    The commissioner highlighted lapses in policing, intelligence and federalism, as well as “the failure to anticipate such a moment and to properly manage the legitimate protests that emerged, especially the protest in Ottawa.”

    Trudeau said his government didn’t want to invoke the Emergencies Act a year ago, but the longer the protests dragged on, concerns about violence, potentially spurred by ideologically motivated violent extremism, grew.

    “It was unfortunate, it was undesirable, we didn’t want to do it,” he told reporters Friday afternoon on Parliament Hill. “But we’d gotten to a place where there was no other choice.”

    Rouleau’s government-friendly conclusion wasn’t a slam dunk.

    “I do not come to this conclusion easily, as I do not consider the factual basis for it to be overwhelming and I acknowledge that there is significant strength to the arguments against reaching it,” he wrote.

    Still, Rouleau agreed with the federal government’s arguments on most points of contention that arose during six weeks of public hearings.

    The government shielded the legal opinion that guided Cabinet’s decision to invoke by citing solicitor-client privilege. Lawyers who represented civil rights groups at the commission insisted Cabinet should waive that privilege and reveal that key legal guidance.

    Rouleau sided with the government. “I do not need to see the legal advice itself in order to accept the evidence that [Cabinet] believed their conclusion to be justified in law.”

    Convoy organizers have always maintained that protests were largely peaceful. Rouleau accepted that reports of “serious, widespread violence” never materialized at protest sites, and acknowledged violent acts “might have been avoided” without a declaration of emergency.

    “That it might have been avoided does not, however, make the decision wrong,” Rouleau countered, writing that “substantial grounds” supported Cabinet’s concern based on “compelling and credible” information.

    Trudeau’s Cabinet also took heat for its interpretation of a national security threat.

    At the height of the protests, the Canadian Security Intelligence Service did not conclude the protests posed a threat to the security of Canada, according to the threshold set out in the CSIS Act that guides the agency.

    Cabinet came to a different conclusion, even though the same definition of a national security threat appears in the Emergencies Act. CSIS director David Vigneault testified at the hearings that he agreed with Cabinet’s invocation of emergency powers.

    In his own testimony, Trudeau insisted the same definition appears in two places — but what matters most is “who is doing the interpretation, what inputs come in, and what is the purpose of it?”

    Rouleau agreed with the prime minister’s view. “Two different decision makers, each interpreting the same words in the context of different statutes, can reasonably come to different conclusions as to whether the threshold is met,” he wrote.

    The commissioner also agreed that most of the powers invoked were appropriate and effective, including most of the controversial measures that allowed financial institutions to freeze protesters’ assets.

    Trudeau said his government would respond to Rouleau’s report, and its 56 recommendations, within six months.

    Here are six takeaways from Rouleau’s landmark report:

    There were communication failures

    In a televised address ahead of the convoy’s arrival, Trudeau referenced a “small fringe minority,” comments that energized protesters, Rouleau says.

    Opposition Conservatives have accused the prime minister of using the pandemic to divide Canadians.

    On Friday, Trudeau expressed rare contrition. “I wish I had phrased it differently,” he said, reflecting on how protesters were a “small subset of people who were just hurting and worried and wanting to be heard.”

    Government leaders at all levels should have worked harder to acknowledge that most protesters were exercising their democratic rights, the report concludes.

    “Messaging by politicians, public officials and, to some extent, the media, should have been more balanced, and drawn a clearer distinction between those who were protesting peacefully and those who were not.”

    Ottawa’s police chief was scapegoated

    Although the inquiry spotlight was on Ottawa Police Chief Peter Sloly, Rouleau says it would be inconsistent with evidence to blame him alone for policing failures.

    “Some errors on Chief Sloly’s part were unduly enlarged by others to a degree that suggests scapegoating,” the report concludes. “He was rarely given the benefit of the doubt as to his intentions.”

    Sloly’s decision to resign during the occupation did remove an obstacle to resolution, Rouleau notes.

    Ontario was missing in action

    Ontario Premier Doug Ford and his government did not fully engage during the crisis, the report concludes. “Many witnesses saw the province as trying to avoid responsibility for responding to a crisis within its borders,” Rouleau writes.

    The justice notes that it was the blockade of the Ambassador Bridge in Windsor — “the single most important commercial land crossing in Canada” — that spurred the province to action. Only after a Feb. 9 conversation between Trudeau and Ford did collaboration “become the name of the game,” he says.

    Ford and his solicitor general, Sylvia Jones, refused to be interviewed by the Commission counsel.

    Asset freezing had pros and cons

    Rouleau concludes the emergency measures that allowed the assets of protesters to be frozen was an effective measure that helped to shorten their stay in Ottawa.

    “The absence of a delisting mechanism is more troubling,” Rouleau writes, criticizing the absence of one for sowing confusion among the financial institutions tasked with freezing the assets.

    “If one of the objectives of the freezing regime was to convince people to leave protests sites, the regime should have had a mechanism to unfreeze accounts once people complied,” he wrote.

    Rouleau called one aspect of the asset-freezing regime — the suspension of vehicle insurance — “inappropriate in principle.” Though it wasn’t enforced, the report raised alarm over its safety implications if protesters had their insurance suspended and were to get in an accident after leaving Ottawa in an uninsured vehicle.

    Concerns about American involvement were “reasonable”

    The protests found an audience in the United States willing to donate to the Canadian cause.

    Roughly 59 percent of the donors who gave money to the Freedom Convoy’s campaign on GiveSendGo, a Christian fundraising site, came from the United States, with 35 percent of the donations originating from Canada.

    Americans also joined from afar with interference campaigns to jam essential services.

    “Calls originating from the United States had flooded emergency 911 call centres in Ottawa,” Rouleau writes in his report. The situation came up during calls between Trudeau and President Joe Biden.

    “It was reasonable to consider that individuals would come to Canada to physically join the protests, and it was appropriate to take measures to prevent this.”

    Misinformation and disinformation played a complicated role

    The report says social media played a critical role in shaping the Freedom Convoy.

    “False beliefs that Covid-19 vaccines manipulate DNA, social media feeds rife with homophobic or racist content, and inaccurate reporting of important events all features in the evidence before me,” Rouleau writes. “Some views were outright conspiratorial.”

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    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )