Health Canada was warned of strong consumer “pushback” before approving first-ever retail sales of genetically-modified fish, new records show. The department’s own research indicated consumers did not want the product, and questioned whether Health Canada was a credible regulator: “The negative reaction was so strong…”
Monthly Archives: September 2016
Quake Could Topple Insurers
A San Francisco-style earthquake in Canada is a “peak peril” that could threaten the viability of some insurers, says Superintendent of Financial Institutions Jeremy Rudin. The regulator in 2015 raised minimum quake reserves for insurers by $3 billion: “We should talk about earthquakes”.
Animal Bill Omits Livestock
A private Liberal bill in the Commons would criminalize animal cruelty. The legislation does little to protect truckloads of livestock and poultry freighted daily in Canada, said the Federation of Humane Societies: “This is about ending animal abuse, not animal use”.
No Appeal For Failing French
A CBC newsroom assistant who claimed discrimination after failing a French test has lost a bid to appeal to the Supreme Court. Justices declined to hear the case: “Not every unfairness is discriminatory”.
Gov’t Probe Hits Airline Food
Canada’s second-largest airport is accused of breaching the Competition Act following a two-year probe of airline catering contracts. Anti-trust investigators yesterday referred allegations against the Vancouver Airport Authority to the federal Competition Tribunal: ‘It engaged in conduct that constitutes an abuse of a dominant market position’.
Climate Target ‘Will Be Hard’
Cabinet will struggle to meet climate change targets even if car buyers quadrupled the number of electric vehicles on the road, says the Conference Board of Canada. The forecast follows federal Access To Information documents that confirmed most Canadians couldn’t buy an electric car even if they wanted one: “There’s a limit”.
Little Data On Legal Cannabis
Cabinet has no data on the economic impact of legalizing marijuana, or the effect on school performance, insurance claims or organized crime, says the Department of Public Safety. Liberals have pledged to legalize cannabis use this term: “We’ve been wondering what the plan is”.
Cabinet Intros ‘Diversity’ Bill
Publicly-traded companies must file diversity reports on appointments of directors and senior management under a new cabinet bill. The legislation stopped short of capping directors’ benefits proposed in a private Liberal bill introduced in the Senate: “Let’s put competent people on boards”.
Ruling On “Duty Of Loyalty”
A Health Canada scientist fired for breaching a “duty of loyalty” after publicly commenting on federal policy has been ordered reinstated by a labour board. A second researcher similarly disciplined lost a bid for reinstatement: “They ended up paying with their careers”.
Bill Bans Children’s Food Ads
A bipartisan Senate bill proposes to ban food and beverage marketing to children under 13. The sponsor, Senator Nancy Greene Raine, said national regulation is needed to restrict manipulative ads targeting minors: “Canadians expect us to enact laws that protect our children”.
Cautioned On “Frankenmeat”
Regulators must be careful in licensing the sale of so-called “Frankenmeat” developed by genetically blending different species, says a cattle industry group. MPs yesterday opened hearings on first-ever federal licensing of an engineered species, made-in-the-lab salmon: “You have to be very vigorous”.
Enviro Assessments For Rail
Railways would be subject to first-ever environmental assessments under a private bill introduced in the Commons. The New Democrat bill would see rail freighting of dangerous goods regulated by the Canadian Environmental Assessment Act: “Rail is under-regulated”.
City Wins Phantom Tax Case
A court has granted a city the right to appeal the tax assessment on a 77-storey building that doesn’t exist. The phantom building had been assessed at $7.5 million: ‘It’s inexplicable’.
Navy Researches Automation
The navy is commissioning research on adjustment of crew shifts to automation. Cost pressures are likely to see greater use of computerized technology, analysts said: “Modern navies are experiencing a personnel crunch”.
No Research On Carbon Tax
Federal agencies are telling Parliament they have no research on the impact of a proposed carbon tax. A cabinet memo earlier obtained through Access To Information estimated a tax of $50 a tonne or more is required to meet climate change targets: “We have to find out”.



