Millennials require plenty of praise and “want fun” at work, says a Treasury Board recruitment report. The document released through Access To Information also lamented younger workers – those under 37 – are distrustful of hierarchy and expect speedy promotions: “Hiring is on the upswing”.
Monthly Archives: September 2016
Post Discloses $240M In Costs
Canada Post spent more than a quarter-billion dollars on a plan to abolish home mail delivery, says a federal report. Management did not report the spending in financial accounts to taxpayers, or disclose it to MPs: “To spend $240 million on a failed program is disastrous”.
Food Bill Goes To Commons
MPs returning to the Commons September 19 are being asked to pass a private bill observing food waste awareness. Some $27 billion worth of food is pointlessly spoiled each year, according to the Canadian Federation of Agriculture: “The average household throws out five pounds of food every week, worth about $12”.
Bill Promises Small Biz Break
A bill granting thousands of dollars in federal tax savings to small business owners, farmers and fishermen has been reintroduced in the Commons. The legislation extends capital gains exemptions on owners’ sales of family businesses to children and grandchildren: “We are going to see significant transfers of assets in the tens of billions”.
Big Farms Get Most Subsidies
Most federal farm subsidies are now paid to million-dollar companies, says Department of Finance research. The richest growers also accounted for most production, according to a memo released through Access To Information: ‘The trend is expected to continue’.
Canada Pension Bill Promised
Cabinet will introduce legislation next month to raise mandatory Canada Pension Plan premiums 20 percent on a promise of expanded benefits for retirees. MPs on the Commons finance committee said taxpayers have too little information on what the program will cost: “This is a very, very long-term thing”.
Library Was Rude, Not Racist
Zealous enforcement of library rules may be rude but not racist, a tribunal has decided. The judgment came in the case of a Black library user told he couldn’t have a book or free photocopies: “I can’t comment on any of this”.
Surprise Finding In 13,000-Year Environmental Study
Humans are not inherently destructive of the environment, says a University of Waterloo case study. Researchers credited thousands of years of First Nations settlement on the British Columbia coast with improving natural habitat: “It’s a really incredible situation”.
Fed Piracy Laws Rated Weak
Parliament must simplify and strengthen anti-piracy enforcement, says a lawyer for Apple Inc. The iPhone giant has filed a federal lawsuit against a Chinese-Canadian storekeeper over the alleged import of counterfeit Apple products: “Legislation alone doesn’t work well”.
Carbon Tax A Loser In Gov’t Study: ‘Jobs Were The Focus’
Canadians rate a carbon tax the last option cabinet should consider in reducing greenhouse gas emissions, says in-house government research. Newly-released data showed the public is also unaware of federal emissions targets: “Change is difficult”.
Post Pension A ‘Crisis’: Memo
A pension shortfall at Canada Post accounts for some 90 percent of all deficits in Crown plans, says a finance department memo. The secret report released through Access To Information said the post office has “reached the limit” in deferring pension payments, and described the funding issue as a crisis: ‘Deficits continue to pose challenges’.
Violator Gets ‘Off The Hook’
Failure to prosecute SNC-Lavalin Group Inc. for illegal political contributions lets the company “off the hook”, says an advocacy group. The country’s largest engineering firm similarly won a 2015 reprieve from a federal contractors’ ethics blacklist despite corruption charges: “It shouldn’t be allowed”.
MPs To Probe CPP ‘Tax Hike’
A cabinet proposal to raise Canada Pension Plan premiums 20 percent has prompted the Commons finance committee to convene a rare special hearing. The committee meets tomorrow at Conservatives’ request to consider a study of proposed changes to the CPP: “We need to know exactly how much this is going to cost”.
Work Faster, Says Info Chief
Government employees should not need more than a few minutes to pull records for release to the public, a provincial commissioner has ruled. Saskatchewan Information Commissioner Ronald Kruzeniski ordered an 88 percent discount in fees charged for disclosure of public documents: “We go down to the records dungeon and it’s going to take hours and hours and hours”.
Paid $18K For Missing Flights
Cabinet and staff billed thousands in airline change fees over a five-month period, according to accounts tabled in Parliament. Extra costs to change ticket reservations included fees to have one cabinet minister’s director of communications “provide support” for a media interview: “These change fees apply to all passengers at all times”.



