Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
LAPP, formerly known by its expanded acronym, the Local Authorities Pension Plan, is the largest pension plan in Alberta and the seventh largest in Canada.. With 291,259 members and $58.7 billion in assets (2022), LAPP is a multi-employer jointly sponsored [3] defined benefit pension plan.
The Bill was introduced during the 28th Alberta Legislature in 2013 by Finance Minister Doug Horner. The bill passed first, second, and third readings and went into effect on December 11, 2013. [1] The law applies only to negotiations with the province's largest public-sector union, the Alberta Union of Provincial Employees (AUPE).
Pension Benefits Standards Act, RSBC 1996 C. 352: British Columbia Financial Institutions Commission Alberta: Employment Pension Plans Act RSA 2000, C. E‑8: Office of the Alberta Superintendent of Pensions Saskatchewan: The Pension Benefits Act, 1992 SS 1992, C. P-6.001: Financial and Consumer Affairs Authority of Saskatchewan Manitoba
Appeals Commission for Alberta Workers' Compensation Regulatory/Adjudicative Hears appeals for workers and employers who are dissatisfied with decisions made by the Workers' Compensation Board. Jobs, Economy, and Trades: Alberta Labour Relations Board (ALRB) Regulatory/Adjudicative
The Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers (CAPP), with its head office in Calgary, Alberta, is a lobby group that represents the upstream Canadian oil and natural gas industry. [1] CAPP's members produce "90% of Canada's natural gas and crude oil" [ 2 ] and "are an important part of a national industry with revenues of about $100 billion ...
The Alberta Pensions Services Corporation (APS) is a Crown corporation responsible for providing pension benefit administration services for public-sector employees in Alberta, Canada.
The Alberta Heritage Savings Trust Fund was created in 1976 by the Alberta Heritage Savings Trust Fund Act [43] with three objectives: "to save for the future, to strengthen or diversify the economy, and to improve the quality of life of Albertans. [44] Initially, the fund received 30 per cent of Alberta's non-renewable resource royalties ...
Boards, agencies, and local government: employees of quasi-independent boards set up by the government of Alberta, government agencies, and municipal governments, as well as ATB Financial (a wholly-owned provincial crown corporation) and Alberta Terminals Ltd., [2] a private grain-handling company and division of Cargill that was formerly a ...