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Big Five is the name colloquially given to the five largest banks that dominate the banking industry of Canada: Bank of Montreal (BMO), Scotiabank, Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce (CIBC), Royal Bank of Canada (RBC), and Toronto-Dominion Bank (TD).
After approval by an Ontario Superior Court judge, CIBC announced October 15, 2004, that the settlement would result in the bank paying CA$13.85 million to its cardholders, $1 million to the United Way, $1.65 million to the Class Action Fund of the Law Society of Upper Canada, and $3 million in legal fees. The bank also announced that it has ...
Edmonton: High school teacher Edmonton Manning: Aaron Paquette: M Edmonton: Artist, author Edmonton Mill Woods: Jasvir Deol: M Edmonton Riverbend: Brian Fleck M Professor Edmonton Strathcona: Linda Duncan: Incumbent Member of Parliament F Edmonton: Environmental law consultant Edmonton West: Heather Mackenzie Former Edmonton Public Schools ...
CIBC Capital Markets reached a peak in 1999 and 2000, when the investment bank cracked the top ten of U.S. issuers of high yield bonds and the top twenty in mergers and acquisitions advisory. In 1999, CIBC Capital Markets backed Gary Winnick and his company Global Crossing to build optical fiber cable connections under the ocean. [12]
The period of conservative dominance in Alberta politics was broken in 2015 when the Alberta New Democratic Party formed government for the first time, and Rachel Notley became Alberta's 17th premier. The NDP won 54 of Alberta's 87 seats.
1 Chambly—Borduas: Matthew Dubé [8] Co-president of McGill's NDP club. Globe and Mail reports his Twitter posts during the election were primarily about comics and hockey. [15] M Student 29,598 42.72% 1 Charlesbourg—Haute-Saint-Charles: Anne-Marie Day: 2008 candidate in this riding [19] F Québec: Director of employment agency 24,130 45% 1
Edmonton-South West is a provincial electoral district in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. The district was created in the 2010 boundary redistribution and is mandated to return a single member to the Legislative Assembly of Alberta using the first past the post voting system.
The northern two thirds of Alberta, including Edmonton, received area code 780, while leaving 403 to serve Calgary and southern Alberta. The projected exhaust dates for area codes 403 and 780 were March and October 2009, respectively. In 1997, two area codes, 587 and 825, were reserved by Bellcore for Alberta. [1]