Unions Seek Post Bank Data; Report Censored For 6 Years

A federal task force on Canada Post is accused of burying the corporation’s own data in support of postal banking. Union executives yesterday asked a Commons committee to order the release of confidential research that rated post office banks a win-win: “You can see for yourself”.

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Preschoolers Watch 2 Hours Of TV Daily: StatsCan Study

The average 4-year old watches the equivalent of two hours’ worth of TV daily, says Statistics Canada. Senators who authored research on childhood obesity rates said preschoolers’ TV habits underscore the need for a federal ban on food ads that target children: “We still have a crisis on our hands”.

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Rail Can’t Blame The Weather

Railways can’t blame the weather for breaching service agreements, the Federal Court of Appeal has ruled. Judges upheld a complaint by one of the country’s largest agri-businesses that it was shortchanged on service promised by Canadian National Railways: “CN cannot now complain”.

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Long War Already Forgotten

Only two years after ending the nation’s longest overseas combat mission, most Canadians say they can’t recall hearing anything about the military. The findings are contained in new Department of National Defence in-house research: “Canadians pay less attention”.

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Feds List New UNESCO Sites

Parks Canada is reviewing a list of 65 new nominees for UNESCO World Heritage status even as the agency is accused of failing to protect one site already designated. Access To Information records indicate Canadians nominated scores of candidates for UN designation as “unique or exceptional”.

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CPP Benefits Will Take Years

Workers must wait generations to reap maximum benefits from a cabinet proposal to expand the Canada Pension Plan, the Commons finance committee has been told. Finance Minister Bill Morneau acknowledged workers now 16 would have to make decades’ worth of contributions to see the maximum return: “You’re correct”.

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Feds Consider Rail Recorders

Cabinet should mandate surveillance recorders in rail locomotives so long as employee privacy rights are acknowledged, says the Transportation Safety Board. The transport minister said the proposal, including amendments to legislation, will be considered: “Unions have some concerns”.

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Employers Join Random Drug Test Hearing: “It’s Unusual”

Industrial employers have won the right as intevenors to join an Alberta challenge of random workplace drug tests. The Supreme Court ruled three years ago that random testing was unjustified: “Employers are intervening in order to try to influence how that case is now interpreted”.

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Email Plan Gets Complicated

Canadians emailing federal employees should first consult a government directory to avoid misdirected messages, says Shared Services Canada. The agency has been warned of inevitable confusion as it standardizes all email addresses, even for staff with identical names: “This remains an important initiative”.

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