Legal Feeds Blog
Tuesday, 18 December 2012 13:55
Food bank challenge exceeds goal
Toronto law firms raised almost $258,000 for the Daily Bread Food Bank this year, surpassing their goal of $250,000.
The final numbers for the Daily Bread Law Firm Challenge are in and, of the 41 law firms that participated, this year Blake Cassels and Graydon LLP is the overall winner, raising more than $40,000. This is the first time since the challenge started in 2003, that Blakes has won.
The winner for per-capita standings is Paliare Roland Rosenberg Rothstein LLP.
The top three firms in the overall standings are:
1. Blakes: $40,412.45
2. McCarthy Tétrault LLP: $39,168.05
3. Paliare Roland: $32,644.54
The top three firms in the per-capita standings are:
1. Paliare Roland: $480.07
2. Solmon Rothbart Goodman LLP: $380.94
3. Owens Wright LLP: $208.04
The Law Firm Challenge is Daily Bread’s largest employee drive of the holiday season and consistently raises close to $250,000 across the city.
The final numbers for the Daily Bread Law Firm Challenge are in and, of the 41 law firms that participated, this year Blake Cassels and Graydon LLP is the overall winner, raising more than $40,000. This is the first time since the challenge started in 2003, that Blakes has won.
The winner for per-capita standings is Paliare Roland Rosenberg Rothstein LLP.
The top three firms in the overall standings are:
1. Blakes: $40,412.45
2. McCarthy Tétrault LLP: $39,168.05
3. Paliare Roland: $32,644.54
The top three firms in the per-capita standings are:
1. Paliare Roland: $480.07
2. Solmon Rothbart Goodman LLP: $380.94
3. Owens Wright LLP: $208.04
The Law Firm Challenge is Daily Bread’s largest employee drive of the holiday season and consistently raises close to $250,000 across the city.
Tuesday, 18 December 2012 11:27
Competition Bureau has no beef with hog deal
The Competition Bureau is allowing the sale of two of the largest independent hog producers in Western Canada to two major processors.
The bureau issued “no action letters” to Olymel L.P., regarding its purchase of Big Sky Farms Inc., and to Maple Leaf Foods, for its acquisition of Puratone Corp.
Despite a finding by the bureau that the vertical acquisition by two processors of hog suppliers would likely lead to anti-competitive effects on competing processors, it signed off on the deal citing competition between the two processors.
“I think this is sort of interesting, as it’s consistent with so many other relatively concentrated/duopoly/oligopoly markets in Canada such as telecom, rail, etc.,” says Steve Szentesi of Steve Szentesi Law Corp. in Vancouver.
Separate investigations concluded the sales were unlikely to lead to a substantial prevention of competition.
In October, Olymel announced it was buying Humboldt, Sask.-based Big Sky, the largest independent hog producer in Western Canada, for $65.25 million. The company went into receivership in September.
On Nov. 1, Maple Leaf Foods Inc., announced it had agreed to acquire Puratone, the second-largest independent hog producer in Western Canada, for $42 million. The Niverville, Man.-based producer was also struggling, having entered creditor protection in early September.
Owing to transportation costs and limits on the time and distance that live hogs can be transported safely, the bureau determined the relevant geographic market for the purchase and sale of live hogs was likely limited to the province where the processor or producer, as applicable, was located and the adjacent Prairie provinces.
Generally, Szentesi says there tends to be less guidance from the bureau for vertical mergers involving suppliers/distributors/customers, compared to horizontal mergers involving direct competitors.
A statement from the bureau indicated that, consistent with the approach to vertical mergers outlined in the bureau’s Merger Enforcement Guidelines, the bureau considered whether post-transaction Olymel or Maple Leaf would have the ability and incentive to foreclose rivals’ access to live hogs in upstream markets or to limit or cease their purchases of live hogs from upstream rivals, and if so, whether such ability and incentive would likely result in a substantial lessening or prevention of competition in upstream markets or among pork processors for the sale of pork primal cuts in the downstream market.
In both investigations, the bureau concluded the mergers were unlikely to lead to a substantial lessening or prevention of competition for a number of reasons, including the inability to create or increase market power upstream due to an excess demand for hogs and the inability to create or increase market power downstream due to, among other factors, effective remaining competition.
| The Competition Bureau gives the OK to the sale of two of the largest independent hog producers in Western Canada. (Photo: Shutterstock) |
Despite a finding by the bureau that the vertical acquisition by two processors of hog suppliers would likely lead to anti-competitive effects on competing processors, it signed off on the deal citing competition between the two processors.
“I think this is sort of interesting, as it’s consistent with so many other relatively concentrated/duopoly/oligopoly markets in Canada such as telecom, rail, etc.,” says Steve Szentesi of Steve Szentesi Law Corp. in Vancouver.
Separate investigations concluded the sales were unlikely to lead to a substantial prevention of competition.
In October, Olymel announced it was buying Humboldt, Sask.-based Big Sky, the largest independent hog producer in Western Canada, for $65.25 million. The company went into receivership in September.
On Nov. 1, Maple Leaf Foods Inc., announced it had agreed to acquire Puratone, the second-largest independent hog producer in Western Canada, for $42 million. The Niverville, Man.-based producer was also struggling, having entered creditor protection in early September.
Owing to transportation costs and limits on the time and distance that live hogs can be transported safely, the bureau determined the relevant geographic market for the purchase and sale of live hogs was likely limited to the province where the processor or producer, as applicable, was located and the adjacent Prairie provinces.
Generally, Szentesi says there tends to be less guidance from the bureau for vertical mergers involving suppliers/distributors/customers, compared to horizontal mergers involving direct competitors.
A statement from the bureau indicated that, consistent with the approach to vertical mergers outlined in the bureau’s Merger Enforcement Guidelines, the bureau considered whether post-transaction Olymel or Maple Leaf would have the ability and incentive to foreclose rivals’ access to live hogs in upstream markets or to limit or cease their purchases of live hogs from upstream rivals, and if so, whether such ability and incentive would likely result in a substantial lessening or prevention of competition in upstream markets or among pork processors for the sale of pork primal cuts in the downstream market.
In both investigations, the bureau concluded the mergers were unlikely to lead to a substantial lessening or prevention of competition for a number of reasons, including the inability to create or increase market power upstream due to an excess demand for hogs and the inability to create or increase market power downstream due to, among other factors, effective remaining competition.
Tuesday, 18 December 2012 09:39
News roundup — December 18, 2012
Canada
Saskatoon may face human rights complaint over 'Merry Christmas' messages on buses, The National Post
Environmental lawyer concludes B.C.'s wolf hunt operates like a lottery, needs gov't license to be legal, Calgary Herald
Lawyer argues misleading robocalls strong evidence despite not stopping any of his clients from voting, Toronto Star
United States
Bloomberg says lawmakers too 'cowed' by firearms lobby to pass gun control laws, Reuters
Man sentenced to 10 years for hacking celebrity e-mail accounts, Reuters
International
Congolese warlord acquitted by war crimes court, Reuters
Inquest into Bangladesh garment industry calls for legal action, Reuters
Saskatoon may face human rights complaint over 'Merry Christmas' messages on buses, The National Post
Environmental lawyer concludes B.C.'s wolf hunt operates like a lottery, needs gov't license to be legal, Calgary Herald
Lawyer argues misleading robocalls strong evidence despite not stopping any of his clients from voting, Toronto Star
United States
Bloomberg says lawmakers too 'cowed' by firearms lobby to pass gun control laws, Reuters
Man sentenced to 10 years for hacking celebrity e-mail accounts, Reuters
International
Congolese warlord acquitted by war crimes court, Reuters
Inquest into Bangladesh garment industry calls for legal action, Reuters
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