Broadcasters face stringent requirements on correcting even casual errors in news coverage under a ruling by regulators. The Canada Broadcast Standards Council said TV networks must issue on-air corrections for minor garbling in their reports: “This creates a precedent.”
Monthly Archives: August 2013
Watson, A Privacy Policy!
Canada’s privacy commissioner is expressing unease over the findings of an internet audit that identified large gaps in consumer protection measures. Two in 10 websites and apps had incoherent policies: “It’s lame.”
Price Probe Questioned
A Department of Finance “test case” of the retail impact of tariff cuts is limited in scope and may not get the answers the government is after, says an industry group. The Retail Council of Canada questioned whether the federal study will “capture the full effect of the tariff changes”, an executive said.
Bees. Trouble.
Health Canada is denying a claim it’s delaying regulation of chemicals blamed for widespread damage to bee colonies. The department said it is “carefully examining” documentation of bee deaths attributed to pesticides, but planned no response till 2014 at the earliest: “Unacceptable.”
Feds Settle Billing Dispute
Telecom regulators have dismissed an appeal by Bell Canada over a ruling on wholesale internet charges. The Canadian Radio-Television & Telecom Commission reaffirmed wholesalers must provide standard rates to independent clients: “They’ve stuck to their guns.”
Tax Credit Like Free Booze?
Federal revenue agents feared one of Ottawa’s most popular tax credits had become an “open bar” for Corporate Canada, according to an unpublished government report. Canada Revenue Agency commissioned the study but withheld it from MPs and initially declined to release it to the Department of Finance: “This is odd.”
Regulations Went That Way
The Canadian Food Inspection Agency proposes more deregulation of the fertilizer industry, including repeal of a ban on misleading claims by manufacturers. The “red-tape reduction” proposals are to be drafted following the close of public consultations Sept. 17.
That’s One Big Red Flag
A First Nation suing cabinet over an investment pact with China says it fears “future generations” will be tied to the far-reaching deal. The Department of International Trade signed the agreement 11 months ago, but has yet to ratify it.
CPR Cited For “Annoyance”
A two-year noise complaint against one of the nation’s biggest railways has ended with a Canadian Transportation Agency order that’s cheered residents of a Prairie neighbourhood. Investigators ruled the CPR broke federal law that requires noise be kept to “reasonable” levels: “It became hell.”
“On Paper It Sounds Great”
New Department of Immigration rules that target the hiring of foreign workers who speak neither French nor English do not go far enough in curbing the practice, says a union that challenged the department in Federal Court: “It should be French and English, period.”
No Fishing On Famed River
One of Canada’s largest runs of wild Pacific salmon has dropped to its lowest level in generations, prompting the closure of local commercial and sport fishing by Department of Fisheries scientists: “Something’s got to break and it will.”
I Love A Mystery
Environment Canada is lifting import controls on 11 new mysterious chemicals, but declined to publish them on a routine list of industrial substances. No department official would agree to an interview: “Putting those names on the inventory list is like telling it to the world.”
Thanks, America
Canada’s lumber industry is having its best year since the 2008 crash of the American subprime mortgage market, according to new federal data. Analysts told Blacklock’s the recovery is due to new housing starts in the United States: “It is definitely better.”
Feds Charge For Permits
Employers face more than $23 million in new user fees to hire foreign workers. Cabinet imposed a flat $275 fee for every position that companies apply to fill through foreign hires, excluding farm labour: “It is really going to hit.”
No Life Like It?
The Department of National Defence is being sued for allegedly misleading a recruit with inflated promises of pay and expenses. An army captain with a degree in engineering named top brass in his lawsuit over claims of unpaid benefits: “My career is at a halt.”



