MPs Like Gaming Ad Curbs

The Commons yesterday by a 291 to 28 vote gave Second Reading to a private bill to regulate advertising of sports betting. Bill S-211 An Act Respecting A National Framework On Sports Betting Advertising passed the Senate last October 21: "We know there is the potential, as with many other addictive activities, to destroy." READ MORE

Seek Pay For Public Disorder

Protestors convicted of attempting to intimidate Canadians under hate crime amendments to the Criminal Code should pay the cost of prosecution, the Senate was told yesterday. The proposal follows complaints that one of Canada’s largest Orthodox synagogues now spends a million a year on security: "Where hatred is the animating force behind a serious crime, requiring an offender to bear some of those costs is a signal that a community’s safety should not be taken for granted." READ MORE

Another TV Fee Hike OK’d

Cable TV subscribers face another rate hike, the second in two weeks, after the CRTC yesterday increased mandatory monthly fees to rescue a money-losing channel. It follows a Department of Canadian Heritage report warning the future of television in Canada is “uncertain.” READ MORE

Calls China Police A Partner

Chinese police are a law enforcement “partner” just like the FBI, the Mounties said yesterday. However details of a confidential partnership agreement with Beijing cannot be disclosed “without their permission,” said a Deputy Commissioner. READ MORE

Network Losing $40M A Year

The operators of Canada’s largest private TV news network yesterday said losses are running at $40 million a year. “There is fear,” said an executive with Bell Media Inc. READ MORE

Miller Silent On Hate Subsidy

Heritage Minister Marc Miller yesterday would not say who in his office recommended a Canada Summer Jobs grant for an anti-Semite. Internal records confirm payment to a constituent in Miller’s riding who fantasized about shooting Jews: "I would strongly recommend as the Member of Parliament for downtown Montréal that the money be clawed back." READ MORE

Target Bigotry In Professions

Canadian universities, unions and medical professions must confront anti-Semitism, the Senate human rights committee said yesterday. A committee report specifically denounced anti-Jewish discourse in professions: "It was deeply sad." READ MORE

Guest Commentary

Karen Mahoney

The Gambler

All families have skeletons. Ours is illegal betting. My grandfather’s incarceration was an embarrassment for my mother. He served his time at Burch Industrial Farm near Brantford, Ont. Over the years I have spoken to people who knew of these events, but none really told me anything. Parliament wrote an epilogue to my grandfather’s story. Now if someone in Canada wants to bet on a boxing match or hockey game, it’s as simple as downloading an app.