A Blacklock’s report has prompted cabinet to revise an order for a commemorative Royal Canadian Mint coin. Cabinet yesterday acknowledged the all-Canadian tribute to veterans of the Battle of the Atlantic depicts an aircraft that was neither built nor flown in combat here: “Delete ‘Canadian-made'”
Monthly Archives: June 2016
No Cabinet Fix For FINTRAC
Cabinet yesterday tightened technical regulations impacting a federal anti-terror agency, but stopped short of halting arbitrary fines for minor breaches of the law. Federal judges have cited the agency for random penalties on small businesses: “I don’t want to be negative, but…”
Feds Mandate Drug Notices
Health Canada in 2017 will require mandatory reporting of drug shortages by pharmaceutical companies. Amendments to Food & Drug Regulations mirror a 2014 New Democrat bill defeated in the Commons: “It’s a victory for patients”.
Tax Relief On Broom Handles
Finance Minister Bill Morneau is proceeding with promised tariff cuts – on broom handles. Cabinet yesterday disclosed a short list of new tariff-free imports pledged in the March 22 budget: ‘The objective is to help Canadian manufacturers’.
Hazard Regs Proceed, Slowly
A federal initiative to harmonize labeling of hazardous chemicals, underway for five years, has seen the first regulations detailed. The program won’t be fully enacted till 2019: “There is a long transition period for this”.
90K Credit Checks In Military
The defence department is contracting for mass credit checks on all 90,000 civilian and military staff, the largest background check of its kind. The defence employees’ union called it an invasion of privacy: ‘We have members who peel potatoes; they’re going to sell secrets?’
No Immunity For Fed Breach
Health Canada has lost a bid for blanket immunity under the Privacy Act for alleged breaches of personal information on 43,000 people. The Federal Court of Appeal said the department should face claims of liability over what staff dismissed as a paperwork error: “That is nobody’s business”.
Watchdog Censured, Again
A federal anti-terror agency has been cited in Court for the second time in weeks for arbitrarily fining businesses. The latest ruling followed a seven-year court battle by an Ontario realtor: “We are left in the dark”.
Nt’l Audit On Poisoned Meat
The federal Public Health Agency will spend nearly a million dollars on spot tests for contaminated meat at supermarkets in three provinces. Authorities said the audit was not intended as a check on slaughterhouse inspectors: “The Americans have been in the business of collecting this data for a while”.
Cabinet Frets Over DNA Bill
Cabinet is expressing wariness over the constitutionality of a DNA privacy bill, says its Commons sponsor. The worry came as author of the bill, Senator James Cowan (Liberal-N.S.), was cited by the American Society of Human Genetics for his advocacy against genetic discrimination: “This is a real problem”.
Agency Eyes $100 Banknotes
Needle-in-haystack searches for money laundering are prompting a federal agency to more narrowly target investigations, say Access To Information records. The Financial Transactions & Reports Analysis Centre said it will use “demographic factors” in attempting to track criminals, typically involving cash transactions with $100 banknotes in certain cities: “These trends have important implications”.
Anti-Drug Program A Failure
A costly Public Safety plan to curb teenage smoking and drug abuse has been rated a failure by federal consultants. Researchers concluded teenagers were just as likely to smoke and drink regardless of the $1.56 million awareness program: “It is questionable”.
Health Dep’t vs Poppy Farm
An Alberta company singled out by Health Canada says it will attempt to overturn a federal ban on commercial production of medicinal opium poppy. API Labs Inc. of Lethbridge said it’s hired an Ottawa lobbyist to press the case for poppy in the name of agricultural diversification: “We expected the federal government would support innovation and small business”.
Feds Free Up Pension Hoard
Cabinet for the first time will automatically enroll deserving pensioners in the federal Old Age Security program effective November 1. The initiative follows disclosures that successive governments pocketed more than a billion a year in unclaimed benefits: “I can’t imagine what the government’s motivation would be for keeping that money”.
Made In Canada Blitz Kaput
A “Made In Canada” campaign to promote homegrown manufacturers has been dropped two years after it was launched by cabinet. The industry department identified the patriotic appeal as top priority only a year ago, according to Access To Information records: “So what’ s been done?”



