VANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA – (April 27, 2011) Clearlease Reports Apple Inc. (NasdaqGS: AAPL ) denied Wednesday that iPhones store a record of their users’ movements for up to a year and blamed privacy concerns partly on a misunderstanding.
A data file publicized by security researchers last week doesn’t store users’ locations, but a list of Wi-Fi hotspots and cell towers in their general area, the company said. It promised software fixes to address concerns over that file.
The data, downloaded from Apple, help the phone figure out its location without having to listen for faint signals from GPS satellites. That means navigation applications can present the phone’s location faster and more accurately, Apple said.
Apple said the data are stored for up to a year because of a software error. The company said there’s no need to store data for more than seven days, and a software update in the next few weeks will limit the amount of data in that file.
The iPhone will also stop backing up the file to the user’s computer, a practice that raised some concerns. Computers are much more vulnerable to remote hacking attempts than are phones.
A third planned fix is to stop downloading the data to phones that have all “Location Services” turned off, Apple said, and to encrypt the file on those where it’s on.
“Users are confused, partly because creators of this new technology (including Apple) have not provided enough education about these issues to date,” Apple said in its statement.
Wednesday’s statement was Apple’s first comprehensive response to the most recent allegations. Apple had revealed the nature of the location file in a letter to Congress last summer after an earlier round of questions about its location-tracking practices.
The file drew new attention last week, after a report from researchers Alasdair Allan and Pete Warden at a technology conference in Santa Clara, Calif.
Rep. Edward Markey, D-Mass., questioned whether the practice was legal under a federal law governing the use of location information for commercial purposes, if consumers weren’t properly informed.
In Wednesday’s statement, Apple reiterated that while iPhones regularly transmit their location to Apple, they do so only anonymously, and the company isn’t able to track users. It can also transmit a user’s location to companies that buy ads through Apple’s iAds advertising system, but only if the user approves giving the current location to a particular ad.
Apple shares fell $1.70, or 0.5 per cent, to $348.72 in morning trading Wednesday.
Video Link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tfX_T9BpIug
Dominion Lending Centres Clearlease Commercial (DLC Clearlease/Clearlease.com) is a fully diversified Lease Finance Mortgage Banking Brokerage Company specializing in Equipment Leasing, Automobile Leasing, Residential, Commercial Lending/Mortgage Financing. DLC Clearlease possesses the capability to accommodate financing needs ranging from a small second Home Mortgage to a Multi-Million Dollar Commercial Projects. No mortgage is too small or too large for this integrated Company.
Equipment Lease Financing in Vancouver, Surrey, Delta, Richmond, Langley, New Westminster, North Vancouer, West Vancouver, B.C. Also offering Automobile Lease Financing and Mortgage information. Founded by the Pidgeon brothers.
You may have recently seen a Dominion Lending advertisement on such media outlets as: Global News, CTV News, CBC Television, Rogers Sportsnet or possibly heard the great Don Cherry, a Canadian Sports legend, discuss Dominion Lending Centres.
VANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA – (April 27, 2011) Clearlease Reports Rogers Communications Inc. (TSX:RCI.B) says it’s rolling out an even faster wireless network this year to serve its mobile phone and mobile Internet users.
Chief executive Nadir Mohamed told the company’s annual meeting that the fourth-generation network will be three to four times faster than the telecom giant’s existing advanced network.
He says Rogers will roll out the network in Toronto, Ottawa, Montreal and Vancouver.
By the end of 2012, the network technology, called Long-Term Evolution or LTE, will be extended to Canada’s top 25 markets.
Mohamed says the network will significantly increase upload and download speeds, improve multi-player gaming and allow workers to be truly mobile.
Vancouver-based telecom operator Telus is planning to roll out its own LTE network in 2012.
Rogers will roll out the LTE network on radio spectrum that it already owns but Mohamed also called on the federal government to not put any conditions on the next auction for radio waves that cellphone networks use.
Video Link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tfX_T9BpIug
Dominion Lending Centres Clearlease Commercial (DLC Clearlease/Clearlease.com) is a fully diversified Lease Finance Mortgage Banking Brokerage Company specializing in Equipment Leasing, Automobile Leasing, Residential, Commercial Lending/Mortgage Financing. DLC Clearlease possesses the capability to accommodate financing needs ranging from a small second Home Mortgage to a Multi-Million Dollar Commercial Projects. No mortgage is too small or too large for this integrated Company.
Equipment Lease Financing in Vancouver, Surrey, Delta, Richmond, Langley, New Westminster, North Vancouer, West Vancouver, B.C. Also offering Automobile Lease Financing and Mortgage information. Founded by the Pidgeon brothers.
You may have recently seen a Dominion Lending advertisement on such media outlets as: Global News, CTV News, CBC Television, Rogers Sportsnet or possibly heard the great Don Cherry, a Canadian Sports legend, discuss Dominion Lending Centres.
TSX May Open Higher Amid Earnings, Firm Commodities – Dominion Lending Centres Clearlease
VANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA – (April 27, 2011) Clearlease Reports Canadian stocks are poised for higher open Wednesday amid firm commodities and mixed cues from the global equity markets. Global stocks were mixed overnight as traders were cautious ahead of the FOMC rate decision and the new projections awaited from Bernanke later today.
U.S. stock futures were pointing to a higher open amid encouraging earnings reports.
ConocoPhillips posted higher first-quarter earnings of $3.0 billion or $2.09 per share and aerospace giant Boeing Co. said its first quarter profit improved 13 percent from last year.
Global oil giant BP Plc posted first quarter profit of $7.12 billion or 37.42 cents per share, compared to $6.08 billion or 31.99 cents per share last year.
On Tuesday, the S&P/TSX Composite Index ended flat, adding 1.78 points or 0.01 percent to 13,909.10.
The price of crude oil edged down Wednesday morning as traders await cues from the official inventories data from the EIA, the FOMC rate decision and the new projections from Bernanke today. Today during trading hours, the EIA will release its U.S. crude oil inventories report for the week ended April 22. Analysts expect crude oil inventories to increase by 1.50 million barrels, while gasoline stocks are seen easing 1.00 million barrels last week.
Crude for June inched down $0.02 to $112.19 a barrel
The price of gold was hovering near its record peak as the dollar was trading mixed ahead of the U.S. Federal Reserve’s interest rate announcement. Gold for June bounced back $4.90 to $1,508.40 an ounce.
In corporate news from Canada, integrated transportation company CN Rail reported improved first-quarter net income of C$668 million or C$1.45 per share compared to C$511 million or C$1.08 per share in the prior-year period. On an adjusted basis, net income increased to C$414 million or C$0.90 per share from C$380 million or C$0.80 per share a year ago. Analysts were expecting the company to report earnings of $0.88 per share for the quarter.
Communications and media company Rogers Communications said its first quarter net income declined to C$335 million or C$0.60 per share from C$368 million or C$0.62 per share for the year-ago quarter. Nonetheless, adjusted net income rose to C$423 million or C$0.76 per share from C$397 million or C$0.67 per share for the year-ago quarter. Analysts were expecting the company to report earnings of $0.71 per share for the quarter.
Nexen Inc. reported first quarter net income of C$202 million or C$0.38 per share, higher than C$141 million or C$0.26 per share last year.
Oil sands producer Cenovus Energy reported a 91 percent drop in its first quarter profits as it booked higher after-tax hedging losses and faced other expenses. Net income dropped to $47 million or $0.06 from $525 million or $0.70 reported a year ago.
Gold miner Barrick Gold posted first quarter net income of $1 billion or $1.00 per share, compared to $820 million or $0.82 per share last year. Adjusted net earnings increased to $1.0 billion or $1.01 per basic share from $763 million or $0.78 per basic share last year.
In economic news from south of the border, the U.S. Commerce Department said durable goods orders surged up by 2.5 percent in March following a revised 0.7 percent increase in February. Economists had expected orders to increase by 1.9 percent compared to the 0.9 percent drop that had been reported for the previous month.
The FOMC is scheduled to release its post-meeting policy statement at 12:30 p.m.ET. Central bank Chairman Ben Bernanke is due to hold a press briefing at 2:15 p.m. ET to explain the FOMC’s latest quarterly economic projections.
Earlier today, rating agency Standard & Poor’s said that it had cut its outlook on Japan’s sovereign debt rating to ‘Negative’ from ‘Stable’ and warned of a possible downgrade if fiscal deterioration exceeds its estimates.
Video Link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tfX_T9BpIug
Dominion Lending Centres Clearlease Commercial (DLC Clearlease/Clearlease.com) is a fully diversified Lease Finance Mortgage Banking Brokerage Company specializing in Equipment Leasing, Automobile Leasing, Residential, Commercial Lending/Mortgage Financing. DLC Clearlease possesses the capability to accommodate financing needs ranging from a small second Home Mortgage to a Multi-Million Dollar Commercial Projects. No mortgage is too small or too large for this integrated Company.
Equipment Lease Financing in Vancouver, Surrey, Delta, Richmond, Langley, New Westminster, North Vancouer, West Vancouver, B.C. Also offering Automobile Lease Financing and Mortgage information. Founded by the Pidgeon brothers.
You may have recently seen a Dominion Lending advertisement on such media outlets as: Global News, CTV News, CBC Television, Rogers Sportsnet or possibly heard the great Don Cherry, a Canadian Sports legend, discuss Dominion Lending Centres.
Video Link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tfX_T9BpIug
VANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA – (April 27, 2011) Clearlease Reports Canadian stocks are poised for higher open Wednesday amid firm commodities and mixed cues from the global equity markets. Global stocks were mixed overnight as traders were cautious ahead of the FOMC rate decision and the new projections awaited from Bernanke later today.
U.S. stock futures were pointing to a higher open amid encouraging earnings reports.
ConocoPhillips posted higher first-quarter earnings of $3.0 billion or $2.09 per share and aerospace giant Boeing Co. said its first quarter profit improved 13 percent from last year.
Global oil giant BP Plc posted first quarter profit of $7.12 billion or 37.42 cents per share, compared to $6.08 billion or 31.99 cents per share last year.
On Tuesday, the S&P/TSX Composite Index ended flat, adding 1.78 points or 0.01 percent to 13,909.10.
The price of crude oil edged down Wednesday morning as traders await cues from the official inventories data from the EIA, the FOMC rate decision and the new projections from Bernanke today. Today during trading hours, the EIA will release its U.S. crude oil inventories report for the week ended April 22. Analysts expect crude oil inventories to increase by 1.50 million barrels, while gasoline stocks are seen easing 1.00 million barrels last week.
Crude for June inched down $0.02 to $112.19 a barrel
The price of gold was hovering near its record peak as the dollar was trading mixed ahead of the U.S. Federal Reserve’s interest rate announcement. Gold for June bounced back $4.90 to $1,508.40 an ounce.
In corporate news from Canada, integrated transportation company CN Rail reported improved first-quarter net income of C$668 million or C$1.45 per share compared to C$511 million or C$1.08 per share in the prior-year period. On an adjusted basis, net income increased to C$414 million or C$0.90 per share from C$380 million or C$0.80 per share a year ago. Analysts were expecting the company to report earnings of $0.88 per share for the quarter.
Communications and media company Rogers Communications said its first quarter net income declined to C$335 million or C$0.60 per share from C$368 million or C$0.62 per share for the year-ago quarter. Nonetheless, adjusted net income rose to C$423 million or C$0.76 per share from C$397 million or C$0.67 per share for the year-ago quarter. Analysts were expecting the company to report earnings of $0.71 per share for the quarter.
Nexen Inc. reported first quarter net income of C$202 million or C$0.38 per share, higher than C$141 million or C$0.26 per share last year.
Oil sands producer Cenovus Energy reported a 91 percent drop in its first quarter profits as it booked higher after-tax hedging losses and faced other expenses. Net income dropped to $47 million or $0.06 from $525 million or $0.70 reported a year ago.
Gold miner Barrick Gold posted first quarter net income of $1 billion or $1.00 per share, compared to $820 million or $0.82 per share last year. Adjusted net earnings increased to $1.0 billion or $1.01 per basic share from $763 million or $0.78 per basic share last year.
In economic news from south of the border, the U.S. Commerce Department said durable goods orders surged up by 2.5 percent in March following a revised 0.7 percent increase in February. Economists had expected orders to increase by 1.9 percent compared to the 0.9 percent drop that had been reported for the previous month.
The FOMC is scheduled to release its post-meeting policy statement at 12:30 p.m.ET. Central bank Chairman Ben Bernanke is due to hold a press briefing at 2:15 p.m. ET to explain the FOMC’s latest quarterly economic projections.
Earlier today, rating agency Standard & Poor’s said that it had cut its outlook on Japan’s sovereign debt rating to ‘Negative’ from ‘Stable’ and warned of a possible downgrade if fiscal deterioration exceeds its estimates.
Video Link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tfX_T9BpIug
Dominion Lending Centres Clearlease Commercial (DLC Clearlease/Clearlease.com) is a fully diversified Lease Finance Mortgage Banking Brokerage Company specializing in Equipment Leasing, Automobile Leasing, Residential, Commercial Lending/Mortgage Financing. DLC Clearlease possesses the capability to accommodate financing needs ranging from a small second Home Mortgage to a Multi-Million Dollar Commercial Projects. No mortgage is too small or too large for this integrated Company.
Equipment Lease Financing in Vancouver, Surrey, Delta, Richmond, Langley, New Westminster, North Vancouer, West Vancouver, B.C. Also offering Automobile Lease Financing and Mortgage information. Founded by the Pidgeon brothers.
You may have recently seen a Dominion Lending advertisement on such media outlets as: Global News, CTV News, CBC Television, Rogers Sportsnet or possibly heard the great Don Cherry, a Canadian Sports legend, discuss Dominion Lending Centres.
Video Link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tfX_T9BpIug
TSX May Open Higher Amid Earnings, Firm Commodities – Dominion Lending Centres Clearlease
VANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA – (April 27, 2011) Clearlease Reports Canadian stocks are poised for higher open Wednesday amid firm commodities and mixed cues from the global equity markets. Global stocks were mixed overnight as traders were cautious ahead of the FOMC rate decision and the new projections awaited from Bernanke later today.
U.S. stock futures were pointing to a higher open amid encouraging earnings reports.
ConocoPhillips posted higher first-quarter earnings of $3.0 billion or $2.09 per share and aerospace giant Boeing Co. said its first quarter profit improved 13 percent from last year.
Global oil giant BP Plc posted first quarter profit of $7.12 billion or 37.42 cents per share, compared to $6.08 billion or 31.99 cents per share last year.
On Tuesday, the S&P/TSX Composite Index ended flat, adding 1.78 points or 0.01 percent to 13,909.10.
The price of crude oil edged down Wednesday morning as traders await cues from the official inventories data from the EIA, the FOMC rate decision and the new projections from Bernanke today. Today during trading hours, the EIA will release its U.S. crude oil inventories report for the week ended April 22. Analysts expect crude oil inventories to increase by 1.50 million barrels, while gasoline stocks are seen easing 1.00 million barrels last week.
Crude for June inched down $0.02 to $112.19 a barrel
The price of gold was hovering near its record peak as the dollar was trading mixed ahead of the U.S. Federal Reserve’s interest rate announcement. Gold for June bounced back $4.90 to $1,508.40 an ounce.
In corporate news from Canada, integrated transportation company CN Rail reported improved first-quarter net income of C$668 million or C$1.45 per share compared to C$511 million or C$1.08 per share in the prior-year period. On an adjusted basis, net income increased to C$414 million or C$0.90 per share from C$380 million or C$0.80 per share a year ago. Analysts were expecting the company to report earnings of $0.88 per share for the quarter.
Communications and media company Rogers Communications said its first quarter net income declined to C$335 million or C$0.60 per share from C$368 million or C$0.62 per share for the year-ago quarter. Nonetheless, adjusted net income rose to C$423 million or C$0.76 per share from C$397 million or C$0.67 per share for the year-ago quarter. Analysts were expecting the company to report earnings of $0.71 per share for the quarter.
Nexen Inc. reported first quarter net income of C$202 million or C$0.38 per share, higher than C$141 million or C$0.26 per share last year.
Oil sands producer Cenovus Energy reported a 91 percent drop in its first quarter profits as it booked higher after-tax hedging losses and faced other expenses. Net income dropped to $47 million or $0.06 from $525 million or $0.70 reported a year ago.
Gold miner Barrick Gold posted first quarter net income of $1 billion or $1.00 per share, compared to $820 million or $0.82 per share last year. Adjusted net earnings increased to $1.0 billion or $1.01 per basic share from $763 million or $0.78 per basic share last year.
In economic news from south of the border, the U.S. Commerce Department said durable goods orders surged up by 2.5 percent in March following a revised 0.7 percent increase in February. Economists had expected orders to increase by 1.9 percent compared to the 0.9 percent drop that had been reported for the previous month.
The FOMC is scheduled to release its post-meeting policy statement at 12:30 p.m.ET. Central bank Chairman Ben Bernanke is due to hold a press briefing at 2:15 p.m. ET to explain the FOMC’s latest quarterly economic projections.
Earlier today, rating agency Standard & Poor’s said that it had cut its outlook on Japan’s sovereign debt rating to ‘Negative’ from ‘Stable’ and warned of a possible downgrade if fiscal deterioration exceeds its estimates.
Video Link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tfX_T9BpIug
Dominion Lending Centres Clearlease Commercial (DLC Clearlease/Clearlease.com) is a fully diversified Lease Finance Mortgage Banking Brokerage Company specializing in Equipment Leasing, Automobile Leasing, Residential, Commercial Lending/Mortgage Financing. DLC Clearlease possesses the capability to accommodate financing needs ranging from a small second Home Mortgage to a Multi-Million Dollar Commercial Projects. No mortgage is too small or too large for this integrated Company.
Equipment Lease Financing in Vancouver, Surrey, Delta, Richmond, Langley, New Westminster, North Vancouer, West Vancouver, B.C. Also offering Automobile Lease Financing and Mortgage information. Founded by the Pidgeon brothers.
You may have recently seen a Dominion Lending advertisement on such media outlets as: Global News, CTV News, CBC Television, Rogers Sportsnet or possibly heard the great Don Cherry, a Canadian Sports legend, discuss Dominion Lending Centres.
VANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA – (April 27, 2011) Clearlease Reports Stocks are seeing modest strength in early trading on Wednesday, adding to the substantial gains posted in the previous session. Buying interest has remained subdued, however, with traders reluctant to make significant moves ahead of the Federal Reserve’s monetary policy announcement.
While the Fed is not likely to announce any major policy changes, traders are likely to pay close attention to Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke’s remarks in his first accompanying news conference.
The modest strength in the markets is partly due to the release of a Commerce Department report showing a much bigger than expected increase in durable goods orders in March.
The report showed that durable goods orders surged up by 2.5 percent in March following a revised 0.7 percent increase in February. Economists had expected orders to increase by 1.9 percent compared to the 0.9 percent drop that had been reported for the previous month.
Excluding a 5.9 percent increase in orders for transportation equipment, durable goods orders still rose by 1.3 percent in March compared to a 0.6 percent increase in February.
On the earnings front, aerospace giant Boeing (BA) is trading higher after reporting first quarter earnings of $0.78 per share on revenues of $14.9 billion. Analysts had expected earnings of $0.72 per share on revenues of $15.13 billion. The company also reaffirmed its 2011 guidance.
Altera (ALTR) is also seeing early strength after the chip maker reported first quarter earnings that rose to $0.68 per share, exceeding the consensus estimate of $0.62 per share. While the company’s sales rose 33 percent to $535.8 million, sales missed the consensus estimate of $536.63 million.
In other corporate news, Johnson & Johnson (JNJ) announced an agreement to acquire Synthes, a manufacturer of bone implants and surgical tools, in a deal valued at $21.3 billion.
Healthcare provider stocks have shown a notable move to the upside in early trading, with hospital operator Universal Health Services (UHS) leading the way higher after reporting stronger than expected first quarter earnings growth.
Wireless, biotech, and banking stocks are also seeing early strength, while weakness has emerged among electronic storage and semiconductor stocks.
The major averages are currently posting modest gains, just above the unchanged line. The Dow is up 8.21 points or 0.1 percent at 12,603.58, the Nasdaq is up 3.48 points or 0.1 percent at 2,851.02 and the S&P 500 is up 0.78 points or 0.1 percent at 1,348.02.
Video Link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tfX_T9BpIug
Dominion Lending Centres Clearlease Commercial (DLC Clearlease/Clearlease.com) is a fully diversified Lease Finance Mortgage Banking Brokerage Company specializing in Equipment Leasing, Automobile Leasing, Residential, Commercial Lending/Mortgage Financing. DLC Clearlease possesses the capability to accommodate financing needs ranging from a small second Home Mortgage to a Multi-Million Dollar Commercial Projects. No mortgage is too small or too large for this integrated Company.
Equipment Lease Financing in Vancouver, Surrey, Delta, Richmond, Langley, New Westminster, North Vancouer, West Vancouver, B.C. Also offering Automobile Lease Financing and Mortgage information. Founded by the Pidgeon brothers.
You may have recently seen a Dominion Lending advertisement on such media outlets as: Global News, CTV News, CBC Television, Rogers Sportsnet or possibly heard the great Don Cherry, a Canadian Sports legend, discuss Dominion Lending Centres.
Venezuela aims with gain billions of dollars by imposing tax on windfall oil prices – Dominion Lending Centres Clearlease
VANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA – (April 27, 2011) Clearlease Reports Venezuela is imposing a windfall profits tax on royalties from oil projects when crude prices are above $40 a barrel, seeking to squeeze as much as $16 billion mostly out of foreign oil companies, the government said Tuesday.
Energy Minister Rafael Ramirez said the tax, which was decreed by President Hugo Chavez last week, will allow the government to collect between $9 billion and $16.3 billion this year.
A 20 per cent tax will be in effect when the price of a barrel of Venezuelan oil is between $40 and $70 a barrel, Ramirez said. When the price is between $70 and $90, the tax rises to 80 per cent. Between $90 and $100, the tax reaches 90 per cent, and if the price tops $100 a barrel, a 95 per cent tax will be imposed.
The price of Venezuela ‘s heavy, sulfur-laden crude reached $94.60 a barrel Tuesday, Ramirez said.
The tax will be imposed on Venezuela ‘s state-run oil company as well as foreign oil firms operating in Venezuela ‘s crude-rich Orinoco Belt, Ramirez said.
If Venezuelan crude remains above $90 throughout 2011, an estimated $9 billion will be funneled into a development fund, Ramirez said. If Venezuela ‘s oil prices top $110, an estimated $16.3 billion could be collected.
Ramirez said revenue from the tax will not used for investment in the oil industry, but rather will be funneled into the government’s social programs and projects aimed at improving health care, education, housing, agriculture and infrastructure.
“It’s a powerful tool the state has designed to acquire windfall income,” Ramirez said.
He denied the fund would exclude projects launched by state governors and mayors as some government critics have alleged.
Ramirez told journalists that the tax won’t be imposed on “the development of new oil fields,” projects aimed at boosting oil production and agreements such as Petrocaribe program, which provides oil and natural gas to some Latin American and Caribbean nations at preferential prices.
It also will not apply to a deal signed last year between Venezuela and China, under which Venezuela ships oil to the Asian giant in exchange for goods and services, Ramirez said. Under that agreement, China lent $20 billion to Venezuela in exchange for shipments of 100,000 barrels a day over a 10-year period.
Ramirez, who is also president of Venezuela ‘s state-run oil company, known as PDVSA, said the company has a $4 billion debt owed to contractors.
PDVSA is negotiating with the owners of 74 oil service firms for compensation after the government expropriated the companies in 2009. Ramirez said negotiations have been slow because authorities believe some of the companies failed to pay taxes. If talks break down, the disputes will be settled in Venezuelan courts, he said.
PDVSA is awaiting a ruling from the World Bank’s International Center for Settlement of Investment Disputes in a dispute with Exxon Mobil Corp. The case was brought by the Irving, Texas-based company in 2007 over the government’s nationalization of the Cerro Negro heavy oil project.
Exxon Mobil has also sought to recoup increased royalties and taxes imposed by the government starting in 2004. Exxon Mobil ‘s oil project was one of four taken over by Chavez’s government in May 2007 as he brought the oil industry under majority state control.
Video Link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tfX_T9BpIug
Dominion Lending Centres Clearlease Commercial (DLC Clearlease/Clearlease.com) is a fully diversified Lease Finance Mortgage Banking Brokerage Company specializing in Equipment Leasing, Automobile Leasing, Residential, Commercial Lending/Mortgage Financing. DLC Clearlease possesses the capability to accommodate financing needs ranging from a small second Home Mortgage to a Multi-Million Dollar Commercial Projects. No mortgage is too small or too large for this integrated Company.
Headquartered in Downtown Vancouver, British Columbia. We’re expanding in Q2, 2011 to Calgary and Edmonton, Alberta! In Q3, 2011 we are expanding in Toronto, Ontario! Dominion Lending Centres Clearlease services clients from Coast to Coast. Our Residential Group has a team of Licensed Mortgage Brokers offering our clients the best terms and rates available in the current market. Our Commercial Funding/Mortgage Group is active across Canada Funding Mortgages in cities such as Toronto, Edmonton, Calgary, Vancouver and Victoria.
You may have recently seen a Dominion Lending advertisement on such media outlets as: Global News, CTV News, CBC Television, Rogers Sportsnet or possibly heard the great Don Cherry, a Canadian Sports legend, discuss Dominion Lending Centres.
Video Link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tfX_T9BpIug
VANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA – (April 27, 2011) Clearlease Reports Venezuela is imposing a windfall profits tax on royalties from oil projects when crude prices are above $40 a barrel, seeking to squeeze as much as $16 billion mostly out of foreign oil companies, the government said Tuesday.
Energy Minister Rafael Ramirez said the tax, which was decreed by President Hugo Chavez last week, will allow the government to collect between $9 billion and $16.3 billion this year.
A 20 per cent tax will be in effect when the price of a barrel of Venezuelan oil is between $40 and $70 a barrel, Ramirez said. When the price is between $70 and $90, the tax rises to 80 per cent. Between $90 and $100, the tax reaches 90 per cent, and if the price tops $100 a barrel, a 95 per cent tax will be imposed.
The price of Venezuela ‘s heavy, sulfur-laden crude reached $94.60 a barrel Tuesday, Ramirez said.
The tax will be imposed on Venezuela ‘s state-run oil company as well as foreign oil firms operating in Venezuela ‘s crude-rich Orinoco Belt, Ramirez said.
If Venezuelan crude remains above $90 throughout 2011, an estimated $9 billion will be funneled into a development fund, Ramirez said. If Venezuela ‘s oil prices top $110, an estimated $16.3 billion could be collected.
Ramirez said revenue from the tax will not used for investment in the oil industry, but rather will be funneled into the government’s social programs and projects aimed at improving health care, education, housing, agriculture and infrastructure.
“It’s a powerful tool the state has designed to acquire windfall income,” Ramirez said.
He denied the fund would exclude projects launched by state governors and mayors as some government critics have alleged.
Ramirez told journalists that the tax won’t be imposed on “the development of new oil fields,” projects aimed at boosting oil production and agreements such as Petrocaribe program, which provides oil and natural gas to some Latin American and Caribbean nations at preferential prices.
It also will not apply to a deal signed last year between Venezuela and China, under which Venezuela ships oil to the Asian giant in exchange for goods and services, Ramirez said. Under that agreement, China lent $20 billion to Venezuela in exchange for shipments of 100,000 barrels a day over a 10-year period.
Ramirez, who is also president of Venezuela ‘s state-run oil company, known as PDVSA, said the company has a $4 billion debt owed to contractors.
PDVSA is negotiating with the owners of 74 oil service firms for compensation after the government expropriated the companies in 2009. Ramirez said negotiations have been slow because authorities believe some of the companies failed to pay taxes. If talks break down, the disputes will be settled in Venezuelan courts, he said.
PDVSA is awaiting a ruling from the World Bank’s International Center for Settlement of Investment Disputes in a dispute with Exxon Mobil Corp. The case was brought by the Irving, Texas-based company in 2007 over the government’s nationalization of the Cerro Negro heavy oil project.
Exxon Mobil has also sought to recoup increased royalties and taxes imposed by the government starting in 2004. Exxon Mobil ‘s oil project was one of four taken over by Chavez’s government in May 2007 as he brought the oil industry under majority state control.
Video Link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tfX_T9BpIug
Dominion Lending Centres Clearlease Commercial (DLC Clearlease/Clearlease.com) is a fully diversified Lease Finance Mortgage Banking Brokerage Company specializing in Equipment Leasing, Automobile Leasing, Residential, Commercial Lending/Mortgage Financing. DLC Clearlease possesses the capability to accommodate financing needs ranging from a small second Home Mortgage to a Multi-Million Dollar Commercial Projects. No mortgage is too small or too large for this integrated Company.
Headquartered in Downtown Vancouver, British Columbia. We’re expanding in Q2, 2011 to Calgary and Edmonton, Alberta! In Q3, 2011 we are expanding in Toronto, Ontario! Dominion Lending Centres Clearlease services clients from Coast to Coast. Our Residential Group has a team of Licensed Mortgage Brokers offering our clients the best terms and rates available in the current market. Our Commercial Funding/Mortgage Group is active across Canada Funding Mortgages in cities such as Toronto, Edmonton, Calgary, Vancouver and Victoria.
You may have recently seen a Dominion Lending advertisement on such media outlets as: Global News, CTV News, CBC Television, Rogers Sportsnet or possibly heard the great Don Cherry, a Canadian Sports legend, discuss Dominion Lending Centres.
Video Link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tfX_T9BpIug
Venezuela aims with gain billions of dollars by imposing tax on windfall oil prices – Dominion Lending Centres Clearlease
VANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA – (April 27, 2011) Clearlease Reports Venezuela is imposing a windfall profits tax on royalties from oil projects when crude prices are above $40 a barrel, seeking to squeeze as much as $16 billion mostly out of foreign oil companies, the government said Tuesday.
Energy Minister Rafael Ramirez said the tax, which was decreed by President Hugo Chavez last week, will allow the government to collect between $9 billion and $16.3 billion this year.
A 20 per cent tax will be in effect when the price of a barrel of Venezuelan oil is between $40 and $70 a barrel, Ramirez said. When the price is between $70 and $90, the tax rises to 80 per cent. Between $90 and $100, the tax reaches 90 per cent, and if the price tops $100 a barrel, a 95 per cent tax will be imposed.
The price of Venezuela ‘s heavy, sulfur-laden crude reached $94.60 a barrel Tuesday, Ramirez said.
The tax will be imposed on Venezuela ‘s state-run oil company as well as foreign oil firms operating in Venezuela ‘s crude-rich Orinoco Belt, Ramirez said.
If Venezuelan crude remains above $90 throughout 2011, an estimated $9 billion will be funneled into a development fund, Ramirez said. If Venezuela ‘s oil prices top $110, an estimated $16.3 billion could be collected.
Ramirez said revenue from the tax will not used for investment in the oil industry, but rather will be funneled into the government’s social programs and projects aimed at improving health care, education, housing, agriculture and infrastructure.
“It’s a powerful tool the state has designed to acquire windfall income,” Ramirez said.
He denied the fund would exclude projects launched by state governors and mayors as some government critics have alleged.
Ramirez told journalists that the tax won’t be imposed on “the development of new oil fields,” projects aimed at boosting oil production and agreements such as Petrocaribe program, which provides oil and natural gas to some Latin American and Caribbean nations at preferential prices.
It also will not apply to a deal signed last year between Venezuela and China, under which Venezuela ships oil to the Asian giant in exchange for goods and services, Ramirez said. Under that agreement, China lent $20 billion to Venezuela in exchange for shipments of 100,000 barrels a day over a 10-year period.
Ramirez, who is also president of Venezuela ‘s state-run oil company, known as PDVSA, said the company has a $4 billion debt owed to contractors.
PDVSA is negotiating with the owners of 74 oil service firms for compensation after the government expropriated the companies in 2009. Ramirez said negotiations have been slow because authorities believe some of the companies failed to pay taxes. If talks break down, the disputes will be settled in Venezuelan courts, he said.
PDVSA is awaiting a ruling from the World Bank’s International Center for Settlement of Investment Disputes in a dispute with Exxon Mobil Corp. The case was brought by the Irving, Texas-based company in 2007 over the government’s nationalization of the Cerro Negro heavy oil project.
Exxon Mobil has also sought to recoup increased royalties and taxes imposed by the government starting in 2004. Exxon Mobil ‘s oil project was one of four taken over by Chavez’s government in May 2007 as he brought the oil industry under majority state control.
Video Link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tfX_T9BpIug
Dominion Lending Centres Clearlease Commercial (DLC Clearlease/Clearlease.com) is a fully diversified Lease Finance Mortgage Banking Brokerage Company specializing in Equipment Leasing, Automobile Leasing, Residential, Commercial Lending/Mortgage Financing. DLC Clearlease possesses the capability to accommodate financing needs ranging from a small second Home Mortgage to a Multi-Million Dollar Commercial Projects. No mortgage is too small or too large for this integrated Company.
Headquartered in Downtown Vancouver, British Columbia. We’re expanding in Q2, 2011 to Calgary and Edmonton, Alberta! In Q3, 2011 we are expanding in Toronto, Ontario! Dominion Lending Centres Clearlease services clients from Coast to Coast. Our Residential Group has a team of Licensed Mortgage Brokers offering our clients the best terms and rates available in the current market. Our Commercial Funding/Mortgage Group is active across Canada Funding Mortgages in cities such as Toronto, Edmonton, Calgary, Vancouver and Victoria.
You may have recently seen a Dominion Lending advertisement on such media outlets as: Global News, CTV News, CBC Television, Rogers Sportsnet or possibly heard the great Don Cherry, a Canadian Sports legend, discuss Dominion Lending Centres.
Sony Corp (NYSE: SNE ) says credit card data may have been taken in hacker attack on PlayStation Network – Dominion Lending Centres Clearlease
VANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA – (April 27, 2011) Clearlease Reports Sony Corp (NYSE: SNE ) said Tuesday that the credit card data of PlayStation users around the world may have been stolen in a hack that forced it to shut down its PlayStation Network for the past week, disconnecting 77 million user accounts.
Some players brushed off the breach as a common hazard of operating in a connected world, and Sony said some services would be restored in a week. But industry experts said the scale of the breach was staggering and could cost the company billions of dollars.
“Simply put, one of the worst breaches we’ve seen in several years,” said Josh Shaul, chief technology officer for Application Security Inc., a New York-based company that is one of the country’s largest database security software makers.
Sony said it has no direct evidence credit card information was taken, but said “we cannot rule out the possibility.”
It said the intrusion was “malicious” and that the company had hired an outside security firm to investigate. It has taken steps to rebuild its system to provide greater protection for personal information and warned users to contact credit agencies and set up fraud alerts.
“Our teams are working around the clock on this, and services will be restored as soon as possible,” it said in a blog post Tuesday.
The company shut down the network last Wednesday after it said account information, including names, birthdates, email addresses and log-in information was compromised for certain players in the days prior.
Sony says people in 59 nations use the PlayStation network. Of the 77 million user accounts, about 36 million are in the U.S. and elsewhere in the Americas, 32 million in Europe and 9 million in Asia, mostly in Japan .
Purchase history and credit card billing address information may also have been stolen but the intruder did not obtain the 3-digit security code on the back of cards, Sony said. Spokesman Satoshi Fukuoka said the company has not received any reports yet of credit card fraud or abuse resulting from the breach.
Shaul said that not having direct proof of credit card information theft should not instil a sense of security, and could mean Sony just didn’t know what files were touched.
“They indicated that they’re worried about it, which is probably a very strong indication that everything was stolen,” he said.
If the intruder successfully stole credit card data, the heist would rank among the biggest known thefts of financial data.
Recent major hacks included some 130 million card numbers stolen from payment processor Heartland Payment Systems. As many as 100 million accounts were lifted in a break-in at TJX Cos., the chain that owns discount retailers T.J. Maxx and Marshalls, and some 4.2 million card numbers were stolen from East Coast grocery chain Hannaford Bros. Those attacks allegedly involved a single person: Albert Gonzalez, a Miami hacker who was sentenced last year to 20 years in prison for the attacks.
The Ponemon Institute, a data-security research firm, estimated that the cost of a data breach involving a malicious or criminal act averaged $318 per compromised record in 2010, up 48 per cent from the year earlier.
That could pin the potential cost of the PlayStation breach at more than $24 billion.
Alan Paller, director of research for the SANS Institute, a security training organization, said that even if credit numbers weren’t stolen, knowing someone’s name, email address and which games he or she likes can lead to expertly crafted scam emails. Knowing billing histories can be even more harmful, since they can identify big spenders.
“If you know someone’s spent a lot on gaming, they could be a spectacular target,” he said.
The PlayStation break-in serves as a reminder of the danger of large-scale breaches, even as hackers gravitate toward smaller attacks that target specific, valuable data and are harder to detect.
The theft of credit card numbers has taken on a routine feel, even though instances of mega-breaches has been declining.
Verizon’s latest annual security report, one of the industry’s most authoritative analyses, found that the number of compromised records in cases examined by it and the U.S. Secret Service dropped from a record-breaking 361 million in 2008 to under 4 million last year.
The decline was the result of more targeted attacks, as well as the lack of major breaches to inflate the numbers
Video Link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tfX_T9BpIug
Dominion Lending Centres Clearlease Commercial (DLC Clearlease/Clearlease.com) is a fully diversified Lease Finance Mortgage Banking Brokerage Company specializing in Equipment Leasing, Automobile Leasing, Residential, Commercial Lending/Mortgage Financing. DLC Clearlease possesses the capability to accommodate financing needs ranging from a small second Home Mortgage to a Multi-Million Dollar Commercial Projects. No mortgage is too small or too large for this integrated Company.
Headquartered in Downtown Vancouver, British Columbia. We’re expanding in Q2, 2011 to Calgary and Edmonton, Alberta! In Q3, 2011 we are expanding in Toronto, Ontario! Dominion Lending Centres Clearlease services clients from Coast to Coast. Our Residential Group has a team of Licensed Mortgage Brokers offering our clients the best terms and rates available in the current market. Our Commercial Funding/Mortgage Group is active across Canada Funding Mortgages in cities such as Toronto, Edmonton, Calgary, Vancouver and Victoria.
You may have recently seen a Dominion Lending advertisement on such media outlets as: Global News, CTV News, CBC Television, Rogers Sportsnet or possibly heard the great Don Cherry, a Canadian Sports legend, discuss Dominion Lending Centres.
Video Link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tfX_T9BpIug
VANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA – (April 27, 2011) Clearlease Reports Sony Corp (NYSE: SNE ) said Tuesday that the credit card data of PlayStation users around the world may have been stolen in a hack that forced it to shut down its PlayStation Network for the past week, disconnecting 77 million user accounts.
Some players brushed off the breach as a common hazard of operating in a connected world, and Sony said some services would be restored in a week. But industry experts said the scale of the breach was staggering and could cost the company billions of dollars.
“Simply put, one of the worst breaches we’ve seen in several years,” said Josh Shaul, chief technology officer for Application Security Inc., a New York-based company that is one of the country’s largest database security software makers.
Sony said it has no direct evidence credit card information was taken, but said “we cannot rule out the possibility.”
It said the intrusion was “malicious” and that the company had hired an outside security firm to investigate. It has taken steps to rebuild its system to provide greater protection for personal information and warned users to contact credit agencies and set up fraud alerts.
“Our teams are working around the clock on this, and services will be restored as soon as possible,” it said in a blog post Tuesday.
The company shut down the network last Wednesday after it said account information, including names, birthdates, email addresses and log-in information was compromised for certain players in the days prior.
Sony says people in 59 nations use the PlayStation network. Of the 77 million user accounts, about 36 million are in the U.S. and elsewhere in the Americas, 32 million in Europe and 9 million in Asia, mostly in Japan .
Purchase history and credit card billing address information may also have been stolen but the intruder did not obtain the 3-digit security code on the back of cards, Sony said. Spokesman Satoshi Fukuoka said the company has not received any reports yet of credit card fraud or abuse resulting from the breach.
Shaul said that not having direct proof of credit card information theft should not instil a sense of security, and could mean Sony just didn’t know what files were touched.
“They indicated that they’re worried about it, which is probably a very strong indication that everything was stolen,” he said.
If the intruder successfully stole credit card data, the heist would rank among the biggest known thefts of financial data.
Recent major hacks included some 130 million card numbers stolen from payment processor Heartland Payment Systems. As many as 100 million accounts were lifted in a break-in at TJX Cos., the chain that owns discount retailers T.J. Maxx and Marshalls, and some 4.2 million card numbers were stolen from East Coast grocery chain Hannaford Bros. Those attacks allegedly involved a single person: Albert Gonzalez, a Miami hacker who was sentenced last year to 20 years in prison for the attacks.
The Ponemon Institute, a data-security research firm, estimated that the cost of a data breach involving a malicious or criminal act averaged $318 per compromised record in 2010, up 48 per cent from the year earlier.
That could pin the potential cost of the PlayStation breach at more than $24 billion.
Alan Paller, director of research for the SANS Institute, a security training organization, said that even if credit numbers weren’t stolen, knowing someone’s name, email address and which games he or she likes can lead to expertly crafted scam emails. Knowing billing histories can be even more harmful, since they can identify big spenders.
“If you know someone’s spent a lot on gaming, they could be a spectacular target,” he said.
The PlayStation break-in serves as a reminder of the danger of large-scale breaches, even as hackers gravitate toward smaller attacks that target specific, valuable data and are harder to detect.
The theft of credit card numbers has taken on a routine feel, even though instances of mega-breaches has been declining.
Verizon’s latest annual security report, one of the industry’s most authoritative analyses, found that the number of compromised records in cases examined by it and the U.S. Secret Service dropped from a record-breaking 361 million in 2008 to under 4 million last year.
The decline was the result of more targeted attacks, as well as the lack of major breaches to inflate the numbers
Video Link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tfX_T9BpIug
Dominion Lending Centres Clearlease Commercial (DLC Clearlease/Clearlease.com) is a fully diversified Lease Finance Mortgage Banking Brokerage Company specializing in Equipment Leasing, Automobile Leasing, Residential, Commercial Lending/Mortgage Financing. DLC Clearlease possesses the capability to accommodate financing needs ranging from a small second Home Mortgage to a Multi-Million Dollar Commercial Projects. No mortgage is too small or too large for this integrated Company.
Headquartered in Downtown Vancouver, British Columbia. We’re expanding in Q2, 2011 to Calgary and Edmonton, Alberta! In Q3, 2011 we are expanding in Toronto, Ontario! Dominion Lending Centres Clearlease services clients from Coast to Coast. Our Residential Group has a team of Licensed Mortgage Brokers offering our clients the best terms and rates available in the current market. Our Commercial Funding/Mortgage Group is active across Canada Funding Mortgages in cities such as Toronto, Edmonton, Calgary, Vancouver and Victoria.
You may have recently seen a Dominion Lending advertisement on such media outlets as: Global News, CTV News, CBC Television, Rogers Sportsnet or possibly heard the great Don Cherry, a Canadian Sports legend, discuss Dominion Lending Centres.
Video Link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tfX_T9BpIug
Sony Corp (NYSE: SNE ) says credit card data may have been taken in hacker attack on PlayStation Network – Dominion Lending Centres Clearlease
VANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA – (April 27, 2011) Clearlease Reports Sony Corp (NYSE: SNE ) said Tuesday that the credit card data of PlayStation users around the world may have been stolen in a hack that forced it to shut down its PlayStation Network for the past week, disconnecting 77 million user accounts.
Some players brushed off the breach as a common hazard of operating in a connected world, and Sony said some services would be restored in a week. But industry experts said the scale of the breach was staggering and could cost the company billions of dollars.
“Simply put, one of the worst breaches we’ve seen in several years,” said Josh Shaul, chief technology officer for Application Security Inc., a New York-based company that is one of the country’s largest database security software makers.
Sony said it has no direct evidence credit card information was taken, but said “we cannot rule out the possibility.”
It said the intrusion was “malicious” and that the company had hired an outside security firm to investigate. It has taken steps to rebuild its system to provide greater protection for personal information and warned users to contact credit agencies and set up fraud alerts.
“Our teams are working around the clock on this, and services will be restored as soon as possible,” it said in a blog post Tuesday.
The company shut down the network last Wednesday after it said account information, including names, birthdates, email addresses and log-in information was compromised for certain players in the days prior.
Sony says people in 59 nations use the PlayStation network. Of the 77 million user accounts, about 36 million are in the U.S. and elsewhere in the Americas, 32 million in Europe and 9 million in Asia, mostly in Japan .
Purchase history and credit card billing address information may also have been stolen but the intruder did not obtain the 3-digit security code on the back of cards, Sony said. Spokesman Satoshi Fukuoka said the company has not received any reports yet of credit card fraud or abuse resulting from the breach.
Shaul said that not having direct proof of credit card information theft should not instil a sense of security, and could mean Sony just didn’t know what files were touched.
“They indicated that they’re worried about it, which is probably a very strong indication that everything was stolen,” he said.
If the intruder successfully stole credit card data, the heist would rank among the biggest known thefts of financial data.
Recent major hacks included some 130 million card numbers stolen from payment processor Heartland Payment Systems. As many as 100 million accounts were lifted in a break-in at TJX Cos., the chain that owns discount retailers T.J. Maxx and Marshalls, and some 4.2 million card numbers were stolen from East Coast grocery chain Hannaford Bros. Those attacks allegedly involved a single person: Albert Gonzalez, a Miami hacker who was sentenced last year to 20 years in prison for the attacks.
The Ponemon Institute, a data-security research firm, estimated that the cost of a data breach involving a malicious or criminal act averaged $318 per compromised record in 2010, up 48 per cent from the year earlier.
That could pin the potential cost of the PlayStation breach at more than $24 billion.
Alan Paller, director of research for the SANS Institute, a security training organization, said that even if credit numbers weren’t stolen, knowing someone’s name, email address and which games he or she likes can lead to expertly crafted scam emails. Knowing billing histories can be even more harmful, since they can identify big spenders.
“If you know someone’s spent a lot on gaming, they could be a spectacular target,” he said.
The PlayStation break-in serves as a reminder of the danger of large-scale breaches, even as hackers gravitate toward smaller attacks that target specific, valuable data and are harder to detect.
The theft of credit card numbers has taken on a routine feel, even though instances of mega-breaches has been declining.
Verizon’s latest annual security report, one of the industry’s most authoritative analyses, found that the number of compromised records in cases examined by it and the U.S. Secret Service dropped from a record-breaking 361 million in 2008 to under 4 million last year.
The decline was the result of more targeted attacks, as well as the lack of major breaches to inflate the numbers
Video Link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tfX_T9BpIug
Dominion Lending Centres Clearlease Commercial (DLC Clearlease/Clearlease.com) is a fully diversified Lease Finance Mortgage Banking Brokerage Company specializing in Equipment Leasing, Automobile Leasing, Residential, Commercial Lending/Mortgage Financing. DLC Clearlease possesses the capability to accommodate financing needs ranging from a small second Home Mortgage to a Multi-Million Dollar Commercial Projects. No mortgage is too small or too large for this integrated Company.
Headquartered in Downtown Vancouver, British Columbia. We’re expanding in Q2, 2011 to Calgary and Edmonton, Alberta! In Q3, 2011 we are expanding in Toronto, Ontario! Dominion Lending Centres Clearlease services clients from Coast to Coast. Our Residential Group has a team of Licensed Mortgage Brokers offering our clients the best terms and rates available in the current market. Our Commercial Funding/Mortgage Group is active across Canada Funding Mortgages in cities such as Toronto, Edmonton, Calgary, Vancouver and Victoria.
You may have recently seen a Dominion Lending advertisement on such media outlets as: Global News, CTV News, CBC Television, Rogers Sportsnet or possibly heard the great Don Cherry, a Canadian Sports legend, discuss Dominion Lending Centres.
Advance poll turnout up more than a third from 2008: Elections Canada – Dominion Lending Centres Clearlease
VANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA – (April 27, 2011) Clearlease Reports Voters flocked to last weekend’s advance polls in higher numbers than Elections Canada expected, with Friday and Monday the busiest advance polling days ever.
The elections agency said its preliminary figures show just over two million people cast ballots on Friday, Saturday and Monday, which was a 34.5 per cent increase from the 1.5 million who voted in advance in 2008.
The agency said 676,000 people voted on Friday and another 832,000 cast ballots on Monday.
The highest turnout in any riding came in Nepean-Carleton in Ottawa, where 16,988 people voted. Pierre Poilievre, parliamentary secretary to Prime Minister Stephen Harper, won the seat in 2004 and is seeking a fourth term.
The Elections Act requires that advance polls be held on the tenth, ninth and seventh days before election day. This year’s increased participation may be due to the fact that all three days were holidays for many people.
The Harper government has twice introduced a bill that would expand the number of advance polls, adding the two Sundays before election day. Under the bill, all polling stations across the country — not just the limited number normally involved in advance voting — would be open on the Sunday immediately before an election.
The bill died on the order paper for a second time when the election was called.
But Steven Fletcher, minister of state responsible for democratic reform, said the Conservatives intend to reintroduce it if they are re-elected.
“Lives of Canadians in the 21st century are quite different than perhaps they were in the past,” he said in an interview. “People have to get their kids to school, they have to get to work, you know, there’s traffic. Often people find that the day is done before they even get a chance to vote.”
Hence, he said it’s important to provide more options for people to vote in advance, particularly on weekends, when people are less busy.
“I think it makes our democracy stronger when people have more opportunity to vote,” Fletcher said.
Video Link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tfX_T9BpIug
Dominion Lending Centres Clearlease Commercial (DLC Clearlease/Clearlease.com) is a fully diversified Lease Finance Mortgage Banking Brokerage Company specializing in Equipment Leasing, Automobile Leasing, Residential, Commercial Lending/Mortgage Financing. DLC Clearlease possesses the capability to accommodate financing needs ranging from a small second Home Mortgage to a Multi-Million Dollar Commercial Projects. No mortgage is too small or too large for this integrated Company.
Headquartered in Downtown Vancouver, British Columbia. We’re expanding in Q2, 2011 to Calgary and Edmonton, Alberta! In Q3, 2011 we are expanding in Toronto, Ontario! Dominion Lending Centres Clearlease services clients from Coast to Coast. Our Residential Group has a team of Licensed Mortgage Brokers offering our clients the best terms and rates available in the current market. Our Commercial Funding/Mortgage Group is active across Canada Funding Mortgages in cities such as Toronto, Edmonton, Calgary, Vancouver and Victoria.
You may have recently seen a Dominion Lending advertisement on such media outlets as: Global News, CTV News, CBC Television, Rogers Sportsnet or possibly heard the great Don Cherry, a Canadian Sports legend, discuss Dominion Lending Centres.
Video Link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tfX_T9BpIug
VANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA – (April 27, 2011) Clearlease Reports Voters flocked to last weekend’s advance polls in higher numbers than Elections Canada expected, with Friday and Monday the busiest advance polling days ever.
The elections agency said its preliminary figures show just over two million people cast ballots on Friday, Saturday and Monday, which was a 34.5 per cent increase from the 1.5 million who voted in advance in 2008.
The agency said 676,000 people voted on Friday and another 832,000 cast ballots on Monday.
The highest turnout in any riding came in Nepean-Carleton in Ottawa, where 16,988 people voted. Pierre Poilievre, parliamentary secretary to Prime Minister Stephen Harper, won the seat in 2004 and is seeking a fourth term.
The Elections Act requires that advance polls be held on the tenth, ninth and seventh days before election day. This year’s increased participation may be due to the fact that all three days were holidays for many people.
The Harper government has twice introduced a bill that would expand the number of advance polls, adding the two Sundays before election day. Under the bill, all polling stations across the country — not just the limited number normally involved in advance voting — would be open on the Sunday immediately before an election.
The bill died on the order paper for a second time when the election was called.
But Steven Fletcher, minister of state responsible for democratic reform, said the Conservatives intend to reintroduce it if they are re-elected.
“Lives of Canadians in the 21st century are quite different than perhaps they were in the past,” he said in an interview. “People have to get their kids to school, they have to get to work, you know, there’s traffic. Often people find that the day is done before they even get a chance to vote.”
Hence, he said it’s important to provide more options for people to vote in advance, particularly on weekends, when people are less busy.
“I think it makes our democracy stronger when people have more opportunity to vote,” Fletcher said.
Video Link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tfX_T9BpIug
Dominion Lending Centres Clearlease Commercial (DLC Clearlease/Clearlease.com) is a fully diversified Lease Finance Mortgage Banking Brokerage Company specializing in Equipment Leasing, Automobile Leasing, Residential, Commercial Lending/Mortgage Financing. DLC Clearlease possesses the capability to accommodate financing needs ranging from a small second Home Mortgage to a Multi-Million Dollar Commercial Projects. No mortgage is too small or too large for this integrated Company.
Headquartered in Downtown Vancouver, British Columbia. We’re expanding in Q2, 2011 to Calgary and Edmonton, Alberta! In Q3, 2011 we are expanding in Toronto, Ontario! Dominion Lending Centres Clearlease services clients from Coast to Coast. Our Residential Group has a team of Licensed Mortgage Brokers offering our clients the best terms and rates available in the current market. Our Commercial Funding/Mortgage Group is active across Canada Funding Mortgages in cities such as Toronto, Edmonton, Calgary, Vancouver and Victoria.
You may have recently seen a Dominion Lending advertisement on such media outlets as: Global News, CTV News, CBC Television, Rogers Sportsnet or possibly heard the great Don Cherry, a Canadian Sports legend, discuss Dominion Lending Centres.
Video Link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tfX_T9BpIug
Advance poll turnout up more than a third from 2008: Elections Canada – Dominion Lending Centres Clearlease
VANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA – (April 27, 2011) Clearlease Reports Voters flocked to last weekend’s advance polls in higher numbers than Elections Canada expected, with Friday and Monday the busiest advance polling days ever.
The elections agency said its preliminary figures show just over two million people cast ballots on Friday, Saturday and Monday, which was a 34.5 per cent increase from the 1.5 million who voted in advance in 2008.
The agency said 676,000 people voted on Friday and another 832,000 cast ballots on Monday.
The highest turnout in any riding came in Nepean-Carleton in Ottawa, where 16,988 people voted. Pierre Poilievre, parliamentary secretary to Prime Minister Stephen Harper, won the seat in 2004 and is seeking a fourth term.
The Elections Act requires that advance polls be held on the tenth, ninth and seventh days before election day. This year’s increased participation may be due to the fact that all three days were holidays for many people.
The Harper government has twice introduced a bill that would expand the number of advance polls, adding the two Sundays before election day. Under the bill, all polling stations across the country — not just the limited number normally involved in advance voting — would be open on the Sunday immediately before an election.
The bill died on the order paper for a second time when the election was called.
But Steven Fletcher, minister of state responsible for democratic reform, said the Conservatives intend to reintroduce it if they are re-elected.
“Lives of Canadians in the 21st century are quite different than perhaps they were in the past,” he said in an interview. “People have to get their kids to school, they have to get to work, you know, there’s traffic. Often people find that the day is done before they even get a chance to vote.”
Hence, he said it’s important to provide more options for people to vote in advance, particularly on weekends, when people are less busy.
“I think it makes our democracy stronger when people have more opportunity to vote,” Fletcher said.
Video Link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tfX_T9BpIug
Dominion Lending Centres Clearlease Commercial (DLC Clearlease/Clearlease.com) is a fully diversified Lease Finance Mortgage Banking Brokerage Company specializing in Equipment Leasing, Automobile Leasing, Residential, Commercial Lending/Mortgage Financing. DLC Clearlease possesses the capability to accommodate financing needs ranging from a small second Home Mortgage to a Multi-Million Dollar Commercial Projects. No mortgage is too small or too large for this integrated Company.
Headquartered in Downtown Vancouver, British Columbia. We’re expanding in Q2, 2011 to Calgary and Edmonton, Alberta! In Q3, 2011 we are expanding in Toronto, Ontario! Dominion Lending Centres Clearlease services clients from Coast to Coast. Our Residential Group has a team of Licensed Mortgage Brokers offering our clients the best terms and rates available in the current market. Our Commercial Funding/Mortgage Group is active across Canada Funding Mortgages in cities such as Toronto, Edmonton, Calgary, Vancouver and Victoria.
You may have recently seen a Dominion Lending advertisement on such media outlets as: Global News, CTV News, CBC Television, Rogers Sportsnet or possibly heard the great Don Cherry, a Canadian Sports legend, discuss Dominion Lending Centres.
Vancouver woman who helped mom die in Europe sues to legalize assisted dying in Canada – Dominion Lending Centres Clearlease
VANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA – (April 27, 2011) Clearlease Reports the daughter of a terminally ill British Columbia woman who escorted her mother to Switzerland to die with the help of a doctor is reopening the assisted suicide debate in this country.
Lee Carter filed a suit in B.C. Supreme Court on Tuesday, launching what’s believed to be the first constitutional challenge since Sue Rodriguez lost her battle on the issue in Canada’s highest court in 1993.
Rodriguez was a Victoria mother suffering from Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis — more commonly known as Lou Gehrig’s disease — who sought to have federal laws criminalizing assisted death struck down.
The B.C. Civil Liberties Association is funding the new suit, which Carter said would have “thrilled” her 89-year-old mother Kathleen.
“It was what she wanted, so this would be supporting her dream and honouring her vision,” she said in an interview, adding she believes the choice to die with dignity is something that should be available to all Canadians.
The association is named as a plaintiff in the suit, along with Carter’s husband and a Victoria doctor who says he’s willing to participate in physician-assisted dying if the laws were to be repealed.
Suicide is legal in Canada, but it is illegal to counsel, aid or abet another person in the act.
The lawsuit describes in detail how Carter and her husband helped make the distressing arrangements required for the elderly woman to terminate her life after the woman told them of her “firm conclusion.”
Kathleen Carter was suffering from degenerative spinal stenosis, which caused her chronic pain. She had been told by her neurologist that her condition would eventually reduce her to lying flat in bed, completely immobile.
After expressing fears she’d be left trapped in her own body, her seven children all signed a letter of support required by the Swiss clinic where she drank a glass of sodium pentobarbital to kill herself.
Afterwards, her daughter mailed a farewell letter to 125 friends and family dictated by her mother explaining the medical consultations and other legal conditions she followed to do so under the European country’s laws.
It stated that “she alone had made the choice to end her life, and that her trip to Switzerland was filled with laughter and fond reminiscences.”`
Another B.C. organization, the Farewell Foundation, launched a suit last week challenging Canada’s laws on assisted suicide. The group has said it would offer help to terminally ill people from its physician members.
In the 1993 ruling on the Rodriguez case, the Supreme Court of Canada concluded the law against assisted suicides does impinge on the right to liberty and security of the person, but it doesn’t subject anyone to cruel and unusual punishment. Any discrimination against disabled people unable to commit suicide is justified, said the ruling.
Ultimately, the high court said, the matter should be decided by Parliament.
But Chris Considine, the Victoria lawyer who argued on behalf of Rodriguez, said Tuesday parliament never acted.
He said the fundamentals of the Carter case don’t differ widely from the Rodriguez case.
But changing social attitudes, along with evidence that deliberate protocols to facilitate physician-assisted dying “appear to be successful” elsewhere in the world, making for a stronger case today, Considine said.
“It may be timely for the Supreme Court of Canada to reevaluate the matter,” he said, recalling nationwide interest in the case that ended in a narrow 5-4 split decision.
“If so then I think that’s a welcome thing for all Canadians to know where they stand when they have to deal with these issues later in life.”
Alex Schadenberg, executive director of the Euthanasia Prevention Coalition based in London, Ont., said he’s read studies disputing that legalization of medically-assisted suicide in Europe has worked smoothly.
He argues keeping the criminal provisions in place ensures vulnerable people are protected.
“The bigger question is — when someone is asking to die — the question is ‘Why?’ What can we do as a society to enable that person to live out their life with dignity?” he said.
Grace Pastine, litigation director for the association, said Kathleen Carter’s experience, and a host of other similarly heartwrenching personal stories told by people with incurable illnesses, will form the foundation of the case.
“It’s important the court hear from many different Canadians who are seeking a choice in dying,” she said.
A variety of experts from the several states and countries that have legalized assisted suicide will also testify that allowing medically-assisted dying prevents suffering and upholds human rights, Pastine said.
That could include doctors from any of Washington, Oregan or Montana, as well as Switzerland, Belgium, Luxembourg and the Netherlands.
Set to argue the case is well-known constitutional lawyer Joseph Arvay. He’ll contend the law removes a person’s right to make decisions about their body and also restricts physicians’ freedom to administer compassionate end of life care.
“Death and the way we die are very much a part of life … and the way we die is really part of our right to self-determination and entitlement to human dignity under the law,” Pastine said.
The defendant, Canada’s Attorney General, has 21 days to file its reply to the suit.
Video Link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tfX_T9BpIug
Dominion Lending Centres Clearlease Commercial (DLC Clearlease/Clearlease.com) is a fully diversified Lease Finance Mortgage Banking Brokerage Company specializing in Equipment Leasing, Automobile Leasing, Residential, Commercial Lending/Mortgage Financing. DLC Clearlease possesses the capability to accommodate financing needs ranging from a small second Home Mortgage to a Multi-Million Dollar Commercial Projects. No mortgage is too small or too large for this integrated Company.
Headquartered in Downtown Vancouver, British Columbia. We’re expanding in Q2, 2011 to Calgary and Edmonton, Alberta! In Q3, 2011 we are expanding in Toronto, Ontario! Dominion Lending Centres Clearlease services clients from Coast to Coast. Our Residential Group has a team of Licensed Mortgage Brokers offering our clients the best terms and rates available in the current market. Our Commercial Funding/Mortgage Group is active across Canada Funding Mortgages in cities such as Toronto, Edmonton, Calgary, Vancouver and Victoria.
You may have recently seen a Dominion Lending advertisement on such media outlets as: Global News, CTV News, CBC Television, Rogers Sportsnet or possibly heard the great Don Cherry, a Canadian Sports legend, discuss Dominion Lending Centres.
Video Link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tfX_T9BpIug
VANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA – (April 27, 2011) Clearlease Reports the daughter of a terminally ill British Columbia woman who escorted her mother to Switzerland to die with the help of a doctor is reopening the assisted suicide debate in this country.
Lee Carter filed a suit in B.C. Supreme Court on Tuesday, launching what’s believed to be the first constitutional challenge since Sue Rodriguez lost her battle on the issue in Canada’s highest court in 1993.
Rodriguez was a Victoria mother suffering from Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis — more commonly known as Lou Gehrig’s disease — who sought to have federal laws criminalizing assisted death struck down.
The B.C. Civil Liberties Association is funding the new suit, which Carter said would have “thrilled” her 89-year-old mother Kathleen.
“It was what she wanted, so this would be supporting her dream and honouring her vision,” she said in an interview, adding she believes the choice to die with dignity is something that should be available to all Canadians.
The association is named as a plaintiff in the suit, along with Carter’s husband and a Victoria doctor who says he’s willing to participate in physician-assisted dying if the laws were to be repealed.
Suicide is legal in Canada, but it is illegal to counsel, aid or abet another person in the act.
The lawsuit describes in detail how Carter and her husband helped make the distressing arrangements required for the elderly woman to terminate her life after the woman told them of her “firm conclusion.”
Kathleen Carter was suffering from degenerative spinal stenosis, which caused her chronic pain. She had been told by her neurologist that her condition would eventually reduce her to lying flat in bed, completely immobile.
After expressing fears she’d be left trapped in her own body, her seven children all signed a letter of support required by the Swiss clinic where she drank a glass of sodium pentobarbital to kill herself.
Afterwards, her daughter mailed a farewell letter to 125 friends and family dictated by her mother explaining the medical consultations and other legal conditions she followed to do so under the European country’s laws.
It stated that “she alone had made the choice to end her life, and that her trip to Switzerland was filled with laughter and fond reminiscences.”`
Another B.C. organization, the Farewell Foundation, launched a suit last week challenging Canada’s laws on assisted suicide. The group has said it would offer help to terminally ill people from its physician members.
In the 1993 ruling on the Rodriguez case, the Supreme Court of Canada concluded the law against assisted suicides does impinge on the right to liberty and security of the person, but it doesn’t subject anyone to cruel and unusual punishment. Any discrimination against disabled people unable to commit suicide is justified, said the ruling.
Ultimately, the high court said, the matter should be decided by Parliament.
But Chris Considine, the Victoria lawyer who argued on behalf of Rodriguez, said Tuesday parliament never acted.
He said the fundamentals of the Carter case don’t differ widely from the Rodriguez case.
But changing social attitudes, along with evidence that deliberate protocols to facilitate physician-assisted dying “appear to be successful” elsewhere in the world, making for a stronger case today, Considine said.
“It may be timely for the Supreme Court of Canada to reevaluate the matter,” he said, recalling nationwide interest in the case that ended in a narrow 5-4 split decision.
“If so then I think that’s a welcome thing for all Canadians to know where they stand when they have to deal with these issues later in life.”
Alex Schadenberg, executive director of the Euthanasia Prevention Coalition based in London, Ont., said he’s read studies disputing that legalization of medically-assisted suicide in Europe has worked smoothly.
He argues keeping the criminal provisions in place ensures vulnerable people are protected.
“The bigger question is — when someone is asking to die — the question is ‘Why?’ What can we do as a society to enable that person to live out their life with dignity?” he said.
Grace Pastine, litigation director for the association, said Kathleen Carter’s experience, and a host of other similarly heartwrenching personal stories told by people with incurable illnesses, will form the foundation of the case.
“It’s important the court hear from many different Canadians who are seeking a choice in dying,” she said.
A variety of experts from the several states and countries that have legalized assisted suicide will also testify that allowing medically-assisted dying prevents suffering and upholds human rights, Pastine said.
That could include doctors from any of Washington, Oregan or Montana, as well as Switzerland, Belgium, Luxembourg and the Netherlands.
Set to argue the case is well-known constitutional lawyer Joseph Arvay. He’ll contend the law removes a person’s right to make decisions about their body and also restricts physicians’ freedom to administer compassionate end of life care.
“Death and the way we die are very much a part of life … and the way we die is really part of our right to self-determination and entitlement to human dignity under the law,” Pastine said.
The defendant, Canada’s Attorney General, has 21 days to file its reply to the suit.
Video Link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tfX_T9BpIug
Dominion Lending Centres Clearlease Commercial (DLC Clearlease/Clearlease.com) is a fully diversified Lease Finance Mortgage Banking Brokerage Company specializing in Equipment Leasing, Automobile Leasing, Residential, Commercial Lending/Mortgage Financing. DLC Clearlease possesses the capability to accommodate financing needs ranging from a small second Home Mortgage to a Multi-Million Dollar Commercial Projects. No mortgage is too small or too large for this integrated Company.
Headquartered in Downtown Vancouver, British Columbia. We’re expanding in Q2, 2011 to Calgary and Edmonton, Alberta! In Q3, 2011 we are expanding in Toronto, Ontario! Dominion Lending Centres Clearlease services clients from Coast to Coast. Our Residential Group has a team of Licensed Mortgage Brokers offering our clients the best terms and rates available in the current market. Our Commercial Funding/Mortgage Group is active across Canada Funding Mortgages in cities such as Toronto, Edmonton, Calgary, Vancouver and Victoria.
You may have recently seen a Dominion Lending advertisement on such media outlets as: Global News, CTV News, CBC Television, Rogers Sportsnet or possibly heard the great Don Cherry, a Canadian Sports legend, discuss Dominion Lending Centres.
Video Link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tfX_T9BpIug
Vancouver woman who helped mom die in Europe sues to legalize assisted dying in Canada – Dominion Lending Centres Clearlease
VANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA – (April 27, 2011) Clearlease Reports the daughter of a terminally ill British Columbia woman who escorted her mother to Switzerland to die with the help of a doctor is reopening the assisted suicide debate in this country.
Lee Carter filed a suit in B.C. Supreme Court on Tuesday, launching what’s believed to be the first constitutional challenge since Sue Rodriguez lost her battle on the issue in Canada’s highest court in 1993.
Rodriguez was a Victoria mother suffering from Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis — more commonly known as Lou Gehrig’s disease — who sought to have federal laws criminalizing assisted death struck down.
The B.C. Civil Liberties Association is funding the new suit, which Carter said would have “thrilled” her 89-year-old mother Kathleen.
“It was what she wanted, so this would be supporting her dream and honouring her vision,” she said in an interview, adding she believes the choice to die with dignity is something that should be available to all Canadians.
The association is named as a plaintiff in the suit, along with Carter’s husband and a Victoria doctor who says he’s willing to participate in physician-assisted dying if the laws were to be repealed.
Suicide is legal in Canada, but it is illegal to counsel, aid or abet another person in the act.
The lawsuit describes in detail how Carter and her husband helped make the distressing arrangements required for the elderly woman to terminate her life after the woman told them of her “firm conclusion.”
Kathleen Carter was suffering from degenerative spinal stenosis, which caused her chronic pain. She had been told by her neurologist that her condition would eventually reduce her to lying flat in bed, completely immobile.
After expressing fears she’d be left trapped in her own body, her seven children all signed a letter of support required by the Swiss clinic where she drank a glass of sodium pentobarbital to kill herself.
Afterwards, her daughter mailed a farewell letter to 125 friends and family dictated by her mother explaining the medical consultations and other legal conditions she followed to do so under the European country’s laws.
It stated that “she alone had made the choice to end her life, and that her trip to Switzerland was filled with laughter and fond reminiscences.”`
Another B.C. organization, the Farewell Foundation, launched a suit last week challenging Canada’s laws on assisted suicide. The group has said it would offer help to terminally ill people from its physician members.
In the 1993 ruling on the Rodriguez case, the Supreme Court of Canada concluded the law against assisted suicides does impinge on the right to liberty and security of the person, but it doesn’t subject anyone to cruel and unusual punishment. Any discrimination against disabled people unable to commit suicide is justified, said the ruling.
Ultimately, the high court said, the matter should be decided by Parliament.
But Chris Considine, the Victoria lawyer who argued on behalf of Rodriguez, said Tuesday parliament never acted.
He said the fundamentals of the Carter case don’t differ widely from the Rodriguez case.
But changing social attitudes, along with evidence that deliberate protocols to facilitate physician-assisted dying “appear to be successful” elsewhere in the world, making for a stronger case today, Considine said.
“It may be timely for the Supreme Court of Canada to reevaluate the matter,” he said, recalling nationwide interest in the case that ended in a narrow 5-4 split decision.
“If so then I think that’s a welcome thing for all Canadians to know where they stand when they have to deal with these issues later in life.”
Alex Schadenberg, executive director of the Euthanasia Prevention Coalition based in London, Ont., said he’s read studies disputing that legalization of medically-assisted suicide in Europe has worked smoothly.
He argues keeping the criminal provisions in place ensures vulnerable people are protected.
“The bigger question is — when someone is asking to die — the question is ‘Why?’ What can we do as a society to enable that person to live out their life with dignity?” he said.
Grace Pastine, litigation director for the association, said Kathleen Carter’s experience, and a host of other similarly heartwrenching personal stories told by people with incurable illnesses, will form the foundation of the case.
“It’s important the court hear from many different Canadians who are seeking a choice in dying,” she said.
A variety of experts from the several states and countries that have legalized assisted suicide will also testify that allowing medically-assisted dying prevents suffering and upholds human rights, Pastine said.
That could include doctors from any of Washington, Oregan or Montana, as well as Switzerland, Belgium, Luxembourg and the Netherlands.
Set to argue the case is well-known constitutional lawyer Joseph Arvay. He’ll contend the law removes a person’s right to make decisions about their body and also restricts physicians’ freedom to administer compassionate end of life care.
“Death and the way we die are very much a part of life … and the way we die is really part of our right to self-determination and entitlement to human dignity under the law,” Pastine said.
The defendant, Canada’s Attorney General, has 21 days to file its reply to the suit.
Video Link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tfX_T9BpIug
Dominion Lending Centres Clearlease Commercial (DLC Clearlease/Clearlease.com) is a fully diversified Lease Finance Mortgage Banking Brokerage Company specializing in Equipment Leasing, Automobile Leasing, Residential, Commercial Lending/Mortgage Financing. DLC Clearlease possesses the capability to accommodate financing needs ranging from a small second Home Mortgage to a Multi-Million Dollar Commercial Projects. No mortgage is too small or too large for this integrated Company.
Headquartered in Downtown Vancouver, British Columbia. We’re expanding in Q2, 2011 to Calgary and Edmonton, Alberta! In Q3, 2011 we are expanding in Toronto, Ontario! Dominion Lending Centres Clearlease services clients from Coast to Coast. Our Residential Group has a team of Licensed Mortgage Brokers offering our clients the best terms and rates available in the current market. Our Commercial Funding/Mortgage Group is active across Canada Funding Mortgages in cities such as Toronto, Edmonton, Calgary, Vancouver and Victoria.
You may have recently seen a Dominion Lending advertisement on such media outlets as: Global News, CTV News, CBC Television, Rogers Sportsnet or possibly heard the great Don Cherry, a Canadian Sports legend, discuss Dominion Lending Centres.
Boeing Co (NYSE:BA) profit seen steady, eyes on Dreamliner – Dominion Lending Centres Clearlease
RICHMOND, BRITISH COLUMBIA – (April 27, 2011) Clearlease Reports Wall Street expects Boeing Co (NYSE:BA) to report a first-quarter profit in line with year-ago results on Wednesday, while investors will be on alert for confirmation that the long-delayed 787 Dreamliner is finally on schedule.
“Obviously, I think everyone is focused on where we are with certification for the 787,” said Kenneth Herbert, an analyst at Wedbush Securities.
He said experts will also be interested in any expected changes to the production rate of the Dreamliner. Boeing has taken about 850 orders for the lightweight carbon composite aircraft.
The 787 is about three years behind its original schedule, but is set for first delivery in the third quarter of this year.
Aerospace industry experts also will be looking for clues as to whether Boeing will redesign its hot-selling 737 narrow body airliner or simply put a more fuel-efficient engine in the next version.
A redesigned 737 would save more fuel but would take longer to bring to market. Boeing has said it may share its direction this summer.
Analysts expect Boeing to report a first-quarter profit of 70 cents per share, unchanged from a year ago, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S. Revenue is seen at $15.13 billion.
Boeing, which competes with EADS unit Airbus, splits its business almost evenly between commercial airplanes and defense products, but the stock tends to track commercial orders and deliveries more closely.
Boeing said this month it delivered 104 commercial aircraft in the first quarter, including 87 737s, four 767 widebodies and 13 777s. Aircraft manufacturers only get paid on delivery, usually at least 18 months after purchase.
The commercial airplane industry is recovering from a global economic downturn that saw airlines curb orders in recent years.
The company is due to release its earnings at 7:30 a.m. EDT (1130 GMT) on Wednesday.
Shares of Boeing, a Dow Jones industrial average component, have risen about 15 percent since the beginning of 2011.
Video Link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tfX_T9BpIug
Dominion Lending Centres Clearlease Commercial (DLC Clearlease/Clearlease.com) is a fully diversified Lease Finance Mortgage Banking Brokerage Company specializing in Equipment Leasing, Automobile Leasing, Residential, Commercial Lending/Mortgage Financing. DLC Clearlease possesses the capability to accommodate financing needs ranging from a small second Home Mortgage to a Multi-Million Dollar Commercial Projects. No mortgage is too small or too large for this integrated Company.
Headquartered in Downtown Vancouver, British Columbia. We’re expanding in Q2, 2011 to Calgary and Edmonton, Alberta! In Q3, 2011 we are expanding in Toronto, Ontario! Dominion Lending Centres Clearlease services clients from Coast to Coast. Our Residential Group has a team of Licensed Mortgage Brokers offering our clients the best terms and rates available in the current market. Our Commercial Funding/Mortgage Group is active across Canada Funding Mortgages in cities such as Toronto, Edmonton, Calgary, Vancouver and Victoria.
You may have recently seen a Dominion Lending advertisement on such media outlets as: Global News, CTV News, CBC Television, Rogers Sportsnet or possibly heard the great Don Cherry, a Canadian Sports legend, discuss Dominion Lending Centres.
Video Link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tfX_T9BpIug
RICHMOND, BRITISH COLUMBIA – (April 27, 2011) Clearlease Reports Wall Street expects Boeing Co (NYSE:BA) to report a first-quarter profit in line with year-ago results on Wednesday, while investors will be on alert for confirmation that the long-delayed 787 Dreamliner is finally on schedule.
“Obviously, I think everyone is focused on where we are with certification for the 787,” said Kenneth Herbert, an analyst at Wedbush Securities.
He said experts will also be interested in any expected changes to the production rate of the Dreamliner. Boeing has taken about 850 orders for the lightweight carbon composite aircraft.
The 787 is about three years behind its original schedule, but is set for first delivery in the third quarter of this year.
Aerospace industry experts also will be looking for clues as to whether Boeing will redesign its hot-selling 737 narrow body airliner or simply put a more fuel-efficient engine in the next version.
A redesigned 737 would save more fuel but would take longer to bring to market. Boeing has said it may share its direction this summer.
Analysts expect Boeing to report a first-quarter profit of 70 cents per share, unchanged from a year ago, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S. Revenue is seen at $15.13 billion.
Boeing, which competes with EADS unit Airbus, splits its business almost evenly between commercial airplanes and defense products, but the stock tends to track commercial orders and deliveries more closely.
Boeing said this month it delivered 104 commercial aircraft in the first quarter, including 87 737s, four 767 widebodies and 13 777s. Aircraft manufacturers only get paid on delivery, usually at least 18 months after purchase.
The commercial airplane industry is recovering from a global economic downturn that saw airlines curb orders in recent years.
The company is due to release its earnings at 7:30 a.m. EDT (1130 GMT) on Wednesday.
Shares of Boeing, a Dow Jones industrial average component, have risen about 15 percent since the beginning of 2011.
Video Link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tfX_T9BpIug
Dominion Lending Centres Clearlease Commercial (DLC Clearlease/Clearlease.com) is a fully diversified Lease Finance Mortgage Banking Brokerage Company specializing in Equipment Leasing, Automobile Leasing, Residential, Commercial Lending/Mortgage Financing. DLC Clearlease possesses the capability to accommodate financing needs ranging from a small second Home Mortgage to a Multi-Million Dollar Commercial Projects. No mortgage is too small or too large for this integrated Company.
Headquartered in Downtown Vancouver, British Columbia. We’re expanding in Q2, 2011 to Calgary and Edmonton, Alberta! In Q3, 2011 we are expanding in Toronto, Ontario! Dominion Lending Centres Clearlease services clients from Coast to Coast. Our Residential Group has a team of Licensed Mortgage Brokers offering our clients the best terms and rates available in the current market. Our Commercial Funding/Mortgage Group is active across Canada Funding Mortgages in cities such as Toronto, Edmonton, Calgary, Vancouver and Victoria.
You may have recently seen a Dominion Lending advertisement on such media outlets as: Global News, CTV News, CBC Television, Rogers Sportsnet or possibly heard the great Don Cherry, a Canadian Sports legend, discuss Dominion Lending Centres.
Video Link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tfX_T9BpIug
Boeing Co (NYSE:BA) profit seen steady, eyes on Dreamliner – Dominion Lending Centres Clearlease
RICHMOND, BRITISH COLUMBIA – (April 27, 2011) Clearlease Reports Wall Street expects Boeing Co (NYSE:BA) to report a first-quarter profit in line with year-ago results on Wednesday, while investors will be on alert for confirmation that the long-delayed 787 Dreamliner is finally on schedule.
“Obviously, I think everyone is focused on where we are with certification for the 787,” said Kenneth Herbert, an analyst at Wedbush Securities.
He said experts will also be interested in any expected changes to the production rate of the Dreamliner. Boeing has taken about 850 orders for the lightweight carbon composite aircraft.
The 787 is about three years behind its original schedule, but is set for first delivery in the third quarter of this year.
Aerospace industry experts also will be looking for clues as to whether Boeing will redesign its hot-selling 737 narrow body airliner or simply put a more fuel-efficient engine in the next version.
A redesigned 737 would save more fuel but would take longer to bring to market. Boeing has said it may share its direction this summer.
Analysts expect Boeing to report a first-quarter profit of 70 cents per share, unchanged from a year ago, according to Thomson Reuters I/B/E/S. Revenue is seen at $15.13 billion.
Boeing, which competes with EADS unit Airbus, splits its business almost evenly between commercial airplanes and defense products, but the stock tends to track commercial orders and deliveries more closely.
Boeing said this month it delivered 104 commercial aircraft in the first quarter, including 87 737s, four 767 widebodies and 13 777s. Aircraft manufacturers only get paid on delivery, usually at least 18 months after purchase.
The commercial airplane industry is recovering from a global economic downturn that saw airlines curb orders in recent years.
The company is due to release its earnings at 7:30 a.m. EDT (1130 GMT) on Wednesday.
Shares of Boeing, a Dow Jones industrial average component, have risen about 15 percent since the beginning of 2011.
Video Link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tfX_T9BpIug
Dominion Lending Centres Clearlease Commercial (DLC Clearlease/Clearlease.com) is a fully diversified Lease Finance Mortgage Banking Brokerage Company specializing in Equipment Leasing, Automobile Leasing, Residential, Commercial Lending/Mortgage Financing. DLC Clearlease possesses the capability to accommodate financing needs ranging from a small second Home Mortgage to a Multi-Million Dollar Commercial Projects. No mortgage is too small or too large for this integrated Company.
Headquartered in Downtown Vancouver, British Columbia. We’re expanding in Q2, 2011 to Calgary and Edmonton, Alberta! In Q3, 2011 we are expanding in Toronto, Ontario! Dominion Lending Centres Clearlease services clients from Coast to Coast. Our Residential Group has a team of Licensed Mortgage Brokers offering our clients the best terms and rates available in the current market. Our Commercial Funding/Mortgage Group is active across Canada Funding Mortgages in cities such as Toronto, Edmonton, Calgary, Vancouver and Victoria.
You may have recently seen a Dominion Lending advertisement on such media outlets as: Global News, CTV News, CBC Television, Rogers Sportsnet or possibly heard the great Don Cherry, a Canadian Sports legend, discuss Dominion Lending Centres.
Gwyneth Paltrow is the new model for luxury handbag maker Coach – Dominion Lending Centres Clearlease
RICHMOND, BRITISH COLUMBIA – (April 27, 2011) Clearlease Reports Gwyneth Paltrow is the new model for luxury handbag maker Coach, which she calls “the quintessential New York brand.”
But the new ads will appear exclusively overseas in select European and Asian markets, where the company has labeled key places for expansion.
The first images will launch in the fall to coincide with Coach’s 70th-anniversary campaign.
Coach President and Executive Creative Director Reed Krakoff said in a statement Tuesday that Paltrow has the spirit, energy and elegance associated with Coach Inc.’s leather goods, footwear and jewelry.
Peter Lindbergh shot photos of the Oscar-winning actress on a Manhattan rooftop for the new ads.
Paltrow has modeled for Estee Lauder.
She’s also building a singing career and just released the cookbook “My Father’s Daughter.”
Video Link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tfX_T9BpIug
Dominion Lending Centres Clearlease Commercial (DLC Clearlease/Clearlease.com) is a fully diversified Lease Finance Mortgage Banking Brokerage Company specializing in Equipment Leasing, Automobile Leasing, Residential, Commercial Lending/Mortgage Financing. DLC Clearlease possesses the capability to accommodate financing needs ranging from a small second Home Mortgage to a Multi-Million Dollar Commercial Projects. No mortgage is too small or too large for this integrated Company.
Headquartered in Downtown Vancouver, British Columbia. We’re expanding in Q2, 2011 to Calgary and Edmonton, Alberta! In Q3, 2011 we are expanding in Toronto, Ontario! Dominion Lending Centres Clearlease services clients from Coast to Coast. Our Residential Group has a team of Licensed Mortgage Brokers offering our clients the best terms and rates available in the current market. Our Commercial Funding/Mortgage Group is active across Canada Funding Mortgages in cities such as Toronto, Edmonton, Calgary, Vancouver and Victoria.
You may have recently seen a Dominion Lending advertisement on such media outlets as: Global News, CTV News, CBC Television, Rogers Sportsnet or possibly heard the great Don Cherry, a Canadian Sports legend, discuss Dominion Lending Centres.
Video Link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tfX_T9BpIug
RICHMOND, BRITISH COLUMBIA – (April 27, 2011) Clearlease Reports Gwyneth Paltrow is the new model for luxury handbag maker Coach, which she calls “the quintessential New York brand.”
But the new ads will appear exclusively overseas in select European and Asian markets, where the company has labeled key places for expansion.
The first images will launch in the fall to coincide with Coach’s 70th-anniversary campaign.
Coach President and Executive Creative Director Reed Krakoff said in a statement Tuesday that Paltrow has the spirit, energy and elegance associated with Coach Inc.’s leather goods, footwear and jewelry.
Peter Lindbergh shot photos of the Oscar-winning actress on a Manhattan rooftop for the new ads.
Paltrow has modeled for Estee Lauder.
She’s also building a singing career and just released the cookbook “My Father’s Daughter.”
Video Link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tfX_T9BpIug
Dominion Lending Centres Clearlease Commercial (DLC Clearlease/Clearlease.com) is a fully diversified Lease Finance Mortgage Banking Brokerage Company specializing in Equipment Leasing, Automobile Leasing, Residential, Commercial Lending/Mortgage Financing. DLC Clearlease possesses the capability to accommodate financing needs ranging from a small second Home Mortgage to a Multi-Million Dollar Commercial Projects. No mortgage is too small or too large for this integrated Company.
Headquartered in Downtown Vancouver, British Columbia. We’re expanding in Q2, 2011 to Calgary and Edmonton, Alberta! In Q3, 2011 we are expanding in Toronto, Ontario! Dominion Lending Centres Clearlease services clients from Coast to Coast. Our Residential Group has a team of Licensed Mortgage Brokers offering our clients the best terms and rates available in the current market. Our Commercial Funding/Mortgage Group is active across Canada Funding Mortgages in cities such as Toronto, Edmonton, Calgary, Vancouver and Victoria.
You may have recently seen a Dominion Lending advertisement on such media outlets as: Global News, CTV News, CBC Television, Rogers Sportsnet or possibly heard the great Don Cherry, a Canadian Sports legend, discuss Dominion Lending Centres.
Video Link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tfX_T9BpIug
Gwyneth Paltrow is the new model for luxury handbag maker Coach – Dominion Lending Centres Clearlease
RICHMOND, BRITISH COLUMBIA – (April 27, 2011) Clearlease Reports Gwyneth Paltrow is the new model for luxury handbag maker Coach, which she calls “the quintessential New York brand.”
But the new ads will appear exclusively overseas in select European and Asian markets, where the company has labeled key places for expansion.
The first images will launch in the fall to coincide with Coach’s 70th-anniversary campaign.
Coach President and Executive Creative Director Reed Krakoff said in a statement Tuesday that Paltrow has the spirit, energy and elegance associated with Coach Inc.’s leather goods, footwear and jewelry.
Peter Lindbergh shot photos of the Oscar-winning actress on a Manhattan rooftop for the new ads.
Paltrow has modeled for Estee Lauder.
She’s also building a singing career and just released the cookbook “My Father’s Daughter.”
Video Link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tfX_T9BpIug
Dominion Lending Centres Clearlease Commercial (DLC Clearlease/Clearlease.com) is a fully diversified Lease Finance Mortgage Banking Brokerage Company specializing in Equipment Leasing, Automobile Leasing, Residential, Commercial Lending/Mortgage Financing. DLC Clearlease possesses the capability to accommodate financing needs ranging from a small second Home Mortgage to a Multi-Million Dollar Commercial Projects. No mortgage is too small or too large for this integrated Company.
Headquartered in Downtown Vancouver, British Columbia. We’re expanding in Q2, 2011 to Calgary and Edmonton, Alberta! In Q3, 2011 we are expanding in Toronto, Ontario! Dominion Lending Centres Clearlease services clients from Coast to Coast. Our Residential Group has a team of Licensed Mortgage Brokers offering our clients the best terms and rates available in the current market. Our Commercial Funding/Mortgage Group is active across Canada Funding Mortgages in cities such as Toronto, Edmonton, Calgary, Vancouver and Victoria.
You may have recently seen a Dominion Lending advertisement on such media outlets as: Global News, CTV News, CBC Television, Rogers Sportsnet or possibly heard the great Don Cherry, a Canadian Sports legend, discuss Dominion Lending Centres.