Halifax ‘patio police’ win red tape crown for burdening small business | CFIB

Federal border agency, Ontario recycling authority share CFIB Paperweight Award

Regina, January 20, 2016 – On the third day of Red Tape Awareness Week™, the Canadian Federation of Independent Business (CFIB) announced the winners of its annual Paperweight Award, citing the worst examples of government agencies and departments at all levels that are holding back small businesses with misguided rules, hard-to-follow processes and bad customer service.

“This year’s Paperweight winners represent ‘specific irritants’ that are costing small businesses time and money,” said Satinder Chera, vice-president at CFIB. “Whether it’s governments going back on their word, or forcing business owners to fill out online forms they don’t need to, or temporarily taking away a service without saying when it will be restored, these leading 2016 examples of red tape are ones that should be the easiest for government to fix.”

The Saskatchewan Ministry of Labour Relations and Workplace Safety was a finalist for the provincial Paperweight Award for a dumb rule which requires employers to apply for a special permit from the Ministry if an employee wants to observe a public holiday on a different day.  In other provinces, the employee and manager can simply agree to swap days. 

 “For the second time, the requirement to get a permit to swap a statutory holiday was a finalist for CFIB’s Paperweight award. The first time was in 2014,” added Marilyn Braun-Pollon, CFIB’s vice-president, Prairie & Agri-business. “Although the permit to swap a statutory holiday did not win, clearly it still remains an irritant for Saskatchewan small business owners and needs to be eliminated.”

Municipal Winner: Here come the Halifax ‘patio police’

In Halifax Regional Municipality (HRM), rules about restaurant patios, and the way those rules are enforced, are getting out of hand. New patio regulations are less clear than in the past, and responsibility for inspection and approval is now split over several different city departments, leading to unnecessary costs for business owners. One popular Argyle Street restaurant that had bolted their patio railing to the sidewalk for 20 years with city approval, was recently told to use cinder blocks to support the railing instead. Another restaurant on the same street got its patio designs approved by the city, only to be told after it was built that the railing was a few inches too close to the sidewalk. Both faced fines over a thousand dollars, and spent close to that amount to comply with the new rules.

Provincial Winner: Ontario recycling authority wasting everyone’s time

Manufacturers and importers are required to report on product packaging and recycling of printed paper to Stewardship Ontario through a long, poorly-designed online form. Small businesses in the industry that are not required to report have no way of knowing for sure what their obligations are until they start completing the online form.  After filling several parts of the form, the process abruptly stops without a clear explanation. When users call Stewardship Ontario for clarification they are told their business is not required to report. They then have to find the poorly marked checkbox on the form which indicates that they are exempt.

Federal Winner: Website not found - Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) drops small biz site

The CBSA website’s small business section was a key source for small business owners looking for information on trading with the United States. With no warning, the CBSA dropped the section from their website, including the specific call centre number they had for SMEs. The website no longer has any SME-specific information. The CBSA says the removal is temporary, while they move to the consolidated Canada.gc.ca website, but no timeline has been given, leaving business owners without access to government trade-related information tailored to small importers.

Government red tape is a hidden tax that affects Canada’s small businesses much more than larger firms. The annual cost of all regulations on businesses in Canada is pegged at $37 billion per year, with one-third of that ($11 billion) considered red tape. In Saskatchewan, all federal, provincial and municipal regulations cost businesses $927 million per year, $278 million of which is considered red tape.

Read the full list of finalists for the 2016 Paperweight Award at cfib.ca

To arrange an interview with Marilyn Braun-Pollon, CFIB’s Vice-President Prairie & Agri Business, please call (306) 757-0000, 1-888-234-2232 or email mssask@cfib.ca. You may follow CFIB Saskatchewan on Twitter @cfibsk.

For more information or to arrange an interview with Satinder Chera, please contact Ryan Mallough at 416-222-8022 or public.affairs@cfib.ca

CFIB is Canada’s largest association of small- and medium-sized businesses with 109,000 members (5,250 in Saskatchewan) across every sector and region.