Feds Repatriate ‘Antique’ To Bulgaria In Secret Ceremony

The Department of Canadian Heritage in an elaborate secret ceremony repatriated to Bulgaria an antique sword dating from the era of Czar Ferdinand I, circa 1910. One collectibles dealer described the incident as bizarre, saying the “antique” is ordinary military surplus worth a few dollars on eBay: “Seriously, this is ludicrous”.

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Warning On Climate Change

Local authorities are poorly funded to face climate change-related flooding that is rated a national peril, says new University of Waterloo research. The study follows a 2015 report that most major Canadian cities are unprepared: “Municipalities are at the front line, doing the most work, and facing the most risk”.

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1 in 4 See Telecom Bill Shock

One in four Canadians, 24 percent, still complain of “bill shock” over telecom charges three years after regulators enacted a Wireless Code on the promise of better service. The findings are contained in a $48,500 survey of cellphone clients by the CRTC: “People want more choice”.

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Court OKs No-Bonus Bylaw

A British Columbia ban on pharmacy rewards for customers will not be heard by the Supreme Court. Justices declined to hear a challenge of the ban on what the B.C. College of Pharmacists called an “inappropriate” practice that preys on vulnerable customers: “It’s double-points day”.

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Post Lockout “Troublesome”

Parliament faces appeals to quickly end any Canada Post shutdown after management served notice it will lock out workers on Monday. Legislators earlier passed back-to-work legislation on the post office in 1997 and 2011: “How do you stop that?”

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Feds Sued On Pesticide Sales

Regulators are accused of breaking federal law in licensing the sale of pesticides without full study of environmental risks. A coalition of four eco-groups yesterday sued the Pest Management Regulatory Agency in Federal Court: “This needs to be settled”.

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CN Lawsuit On Rail Records

Canadian National Railways is taking court action to block the release of federal records on track inspections. One legal analyst described the Federal Court application as puzzling: ‘Disclosure could reasonably be expected to result in material financial loss’.

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Gov’t Wary Of Reform Vote

Any national referendum on electoral reform would be inherently undemocratic and “not the best way” to decide how Canadians elect the next Parliament, says Minister of Democratic Institutions Maryam Monsef. A Commons committee yesterday opened witness hearings on reform promised in the Liberals’ 2015 election platform: “That is not good enough for me”.

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Legislators Ponder Post Recall

Parliament faces the prospect of a mid-summer recall after Canada Post served notice it will lock out workers effective July 8. The last lockout at the post office in 2011 cost $100 million, by management estimate, and saw Parliament introduce a back-to-work bill in five days: “If it’s not essential, then why do we have a monopoly?”

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Nt’l Pensions Claims Up 40%

The number of Canadians on Old Age Security has increased 40 percent since 1997, reports the Chief Actuary. The growing number of pensioners prompted a Senate call to reconsider lowering of the age of eligibility to 65: “Will we have enough money?”

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Lawsuit On TV Heritage Site

A Canadian town famed for historic architecture has won a costly lawsuit over municipal heritage designations. St. Marys, Ont., featured in the CBC-TV series Murdoch Mysteries, won the three-year court battle launched by a disgruntled building owner: “The Town did everything right”.

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Stock Regs Legal, Just Local

An Alberta penny stock executive has lost a bid for a Supreme Court appeal on whether local securities regulation is lawful. Canada remains the only G20 country without federal securities regulation: “This issue has been mooted in Canada for at least 70 years”.

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Memo Sees A $50 Carbon Tax

Canada may need a carbon tax of $50 a tonne and more if climate change targets are to be met, says a cabinet memo obtained through Access To Information. The memo cited research that lowering greenhouse gas emissions will require more vigorous policies than seen to date: “Efforts would have to start immediately”.

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Fake Historic Site Honoured

An aging movie theatre has been designated a National Historic Site as “one of the first” built in Canada to screen talking films. It wasn’t. Parks Canada yesterday declined to disclose research substantiating the claim. Other fake federal historic sites include a purported 17th century explorers’ campsite, and a farmer’s field where Champlain allegedly lost his astrolabe: “Remarkable”.

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White Refugee Claim Rejected

A federal judge has dismissed a refugee claim by a white South African family. The Court ruled there is no legal basis for any claim the country’s white minority requires protection from state persecution: “These are clear, unambiguous findings”.

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