A 10% Loan Repayment

Cabinet is withholding terms of federal loans given to corporations, including an Alberta processor that’s paid only a fraction of financing it received before losing its license in the biggest beef recall in Canadian history. XL Foods Inc. has repaid a tenth of a $1,161,102 federal loan, according to documents: “What are we getting for it?”

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A Battle On Bill C-377

A bill that compels all Canadian unions to publish confidential data is “inappropriate,” “unconstitutional” and a “significant invasion of their privacy,” witnesses told a Senate hearing. But a contractors’ group that lobbied for Bill C-377 says it may produce expert analysis proving the measure is legal, though contentious.

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Field Find Investigated

Discovery of genetically-modified wheat supposedly removed from the North American market is renewing debate over controls on unapproved products. The Oregon case follows a similar Canadian incident involving modified flax seed discovered nine years after it was ordered destroyed.

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‘One Effective Lobby’

Parliament faces a pushback from business ratepayers over continued federal aid for municipalities. The Canadian Federation of Independent Business, in a new report and Commons testimony, depicted large cities as unaccountable and bloated with billion-dollar payrolls.

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A Real Canadian Artifact

The Canadian Museum of Civilization has suffered large deficits on foreign exhibitions, including $463,000 lost in displaying imperial Chinese artifacts, new accounts show. Disclosure of the deficits came as MPs voted to refocus the museum on Canadian stories.

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“It Fell From The Sky”

Two tobacco smugglers who sued the revenue department for return of cash they claimed fell from the heavens have lost their case in Federal Court. A judge dismissed the claim by a couple found driving with $3,300 in bootleg tobacco and $11,775 bundled in twenty-dollar bills, telling police “ça tombe du ciel” (“it fell from the sky”).

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Shhh — Trade Talks Ultra Secret

Cabinet is concealing details of far-reaching trade talks even from industry insiders forced to sign confidentiality agreements. In a process one MP dubbed “a farce,” the Dairy Farmers of Canada confirmed they were denied access to technical texts in Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) talks despite receiving secret briefings. “Listen, we’re down to the most sensitive negotiations,” Trade Minister Ed Fast told Blacklock’s.

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New Rules On Hang-Ups?

Canada’s telecom regulator is urging industry to address one of the most persistent consumer complaints – how to cancel a contract. Complex rules and terms, rarely standardized between companies, can “leave a consumer frustrated,” acknowledged one association.

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Lobster Recipe

A long-awaited Senate report is urging more action to rescue the nation’s billion-dollar lobster industry. The Senate fisheries committee proposes a renewed federal program, due to expire in 2014, that budgeted more than $50 million for license buy-backs.

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I’ll Have Tacos, Hold The Chromotrope FB Red Dye

Seven percent of foods randomly tested by federal inspectors violated Food and Drug Act regulations on colouring and industrial dyes, including cheddar cheese.

The Canadian Food Inspection Agency would not name the cheese it tested, or what action was taken, but said results were obtained at a federal laboratory in Longueil, Que.

The agency yesterday reported its audit of everyday supermarket items found most dyed products fell within acceptable limits. Of 100 foods sampled, seven contained either excessive levels of colouring, or industrial dyes not allowed under the Food and Drug Act.

Three of the suspect foods were Canadian-made: cheddar cheese, horseradish with beets, and dried papaya.

Others were U.S.-made chicken tandoori seasoning, and lumpfish; Belgian almond paste; and curing powder produced in Thailand, used to preserve meats.

“With increasing multiculturalism and market globalization, consumers can find an ever increasing array of processed foods available at retail,” the agency wrote in its report Food Colours Used in the Production of Manufactured Foods; “Exposure to food colours has likely increased as a result.”

Dyes and colouring are regulated for purity, toxicity and potential allergic reactions. The agency noted U.K. research has suggested a link between food colouring and Attention Deficit Disorder in children, but added: “This area of research is controversial and the evidence corroborating this claim is not concrete.”

By Staff

Pass Bill To High Court?

The Supreme Court is being drawn into Senate debate over a contentious labour bill. Opponents of legislation that compels unions to publish confidential data urged the Department of Justice to test its constitutionality: “It is mind-boggling.”

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Regulatory Snafus “Scary”

From fishing boats to carcinogenic chemicals, federal agencies are taking years, even decades to correct regulatory mistakes despite the risk of lawsuits. “It’s a scary prospect,” Senator Bob Runciman told Blacklock’s; “We see files that have been around for twenty, thirty years.”

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50 Year Emissions “Outrageous”: MP

Coal plants granted clean-air exemptions face more stringent emission targets under a private bill. Green Party leader Elizabeth May proposed to waive a grace period for coal plants to comply with Environment Canada targets: “A 50-year wriggle room for any coal-fired power plants is outrageous.”

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Oh, So It’s Not The Money

Money cannot buy success in health care, according to a national analysis by the Conference Board of Canada. The study concluded cash alone did not buy A-grade medicare across the provinces, and concluded Canadians “spend too much for what we get” overall, said an analyst.

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‘Don’t Let Cabinet Gut Bill’

A Conservative MP accuses cabinet of trying to “gut” a disclosure bill on public service salaries. Brent Rathgeber said proposed amendments are cause for “mistrust and suspicion,” and subject senior public servants to less scrutiny than $10,000-a year contractors.

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