A federal agency will spend $3.78 million to encrypt government-issue mobile devices. Cabinet has not addressed concerns that private messages transmitted by 98,000 government BlackBerry devices are exempt from public scrutiny: “The secrecy loopholes are huge”.
Monthly Archives: November 2016
Cabinet Endorses Porn Probe
Cabinet is endorsing a Conservative proposal for the first federal investigation of pornography since 1985. MPs from all parties yesterday expressed support for a Commons committee probe of explicit internet content: “This is an issue close to the hearts of many Canadians”.
Few Fines In National Parks
Parks Canada has not reviewed the effectiveness of federal fines on scofflaws in years, records show. The Agency handed out fewer than 3,000 tickets in the past decade for a range of offences from illegal fishing to operating off-road vehicles in national parks: “Offences are way too common”.
Long Wait On 1-800 Tax Line
Callers to a Canada Revenue Agency hotline for reporting of tax cheats face long waits on hold, 9 minutes or more. The Agency launched the 1-800 line for informants in 2014: “It will be sort of hit and miss”.
No Sale On Electric Vehicles
Environment Canada did not purchase a single electric vehicle last year despite a cabinet commitment to cut greenhouse gas emissions, records show. The 2016 budget set aside $62.5 million in funding for electric recharging stations and other initiatives: ‘We support the deployment of electric vehicles’.
Income Up For Many Seniors
Family income for seniors has grown at double the pace of younger families since 1976, says Statistics Canada. The new research followed data that Canadians over 65 typically have more wealth and less debt than younger people.
“The wealthiest cohort in Canada are seniors – empirically, statistically and factually,” said Prof. Ian Lee, an economist with Carleton University’s Sprott School of Business. “This is not a theory or opinion. This is hard data.”
StatsCan in a report Seniors’ Income From 1976 To 2014 concluded median income for senior households over the period grew 67 percent, from $32,700 to $54,500 a year. Median income for younger families grew 31 percent over the four decades, from $62,500 to $82,100.
“The income of families whose major income earner was 65 years or older rose steadily from 1976 to 2014,” said Seniors’ Income. “However, this was not the case for the income of younger families.”
Prof. Lee said the figures raise questions over cabinet’s proposal for a 20 percent increase in mandatory Canada Pension Plan premiums to fund an increase in seniors’ benefits. “This idea that we have a serious pension crisis in Canada is nonsense,” said Lee.
Data show about 2 percent of senior families live below the poverty line. The rate is higher for single Canadians over 65.
“It’s obscene that the Government of Canada gives me a pension and Old Age Security cheque,” said Lee. “I make too much money. What I argue is folding Old Age Security into the Guaranteed Income Supplement, make qualifications means-tested, and give it to those who need it.”
Cabinet has said an expanded Canada Pension Plan is necessary. “From a poverty reduction perspective, this enhancement is good news,” Employment Minister Jean-Yves Duclos earlier told the Commons human resources committee; “If the enhancement were fully in place right now, the number of Canadian families at risk of not saving enough for retirement would be reduced.”
StatsCan in an earlier report Survey Of Financial Security 2012 noted while Canadians over 65 typically have less cash income, they have higher net worth with mortgage-free homes – $246,000 on average, compared to net worth of $23,000 for younger singles. Pensioners’ debts average 4 percent of equity, compared to 26 percent for single parents at work, and 24 percent for couples with children.
Some 59 percent of Canadian seniors own their own homes, by Department of Finance estimate. Younger Canadians by comparison carry $28.3 billion in student loan debt; $33.2 billion in consumer credit debt; and $1 trillion in mortgage debt, Financial Security said.
By Jason Unrau 
Spent $3.5M On Nov. 11 Ads
Veterans Affairs Canada budgeted $3.5 million to promote Remembrance Week observances, according to Access To Information records. Data did not indicate whether the ads worked. A total 69 percent of Canadians surveyed said they skipped last year’s November 11 events despite the ad blitz: “What do you remember about this advertising?”
Landscaping Cost Questioned
Canadian diplomats billed taxpayers more than $1.7 million on gardening and swimming pool maintenance at missions abroad, documents show. Foreign Minister Stéphane Dion in a report to Parliament described the work as “vital”.
Probe Asthma Links To Smog
Health Canada is funding $400,000 in research on the incidence of childhood asthma due to air pollution. It follows a 2016 finding that more Canadians die from diesel exhaust than from walking into traffic: “We know there is a connection”.
“A Matter Of Human Rights”
Canada pushes
for an extradition treaty
with China.
A problematic agreement.
The Chinese may want to know
that sending a woman back to Canada
means she will be treated fairly by the police,
by the court;
that drinking water will be provided
in her First Nations reserve;
that her meals will include
fresh produce;
that her kids won’t be taken away
to a residential school;
and that her name won’t become an entry
in the list of missing and murdered
Aboriginal women.
Or she may be better off
in China.
(Editor’s note: poet Shai Ben-Shalom, an Israeli-born biologist, examines current events in the Blacklock’s tradition each and every Sunday)

Pause For Remembrance Day
Blacklock’s Reporter today pauses for Remembrance Day observance with gratitude to all who honoured our country. Thank you for your service — The Editor.

90,000,000,000 Litres Of Waste
Nearly 90 billion litres of raw sewage and untreated wastewater have been dumped in waterways by municipalities in the past year, says Environment Canada. “No studies have been done or are ongoing regarding the impact,” the department wrote in notice.
Still Billing For Sports Tickets
A Crown corporation has again spent public funds on pro sports tickets despite a 2015 cabinet directive to halt the practice. Staff at Farm Credit Canada billed taxpayers for 28 game tickets to see the hometown Saskatchewan Roughriders: “This is public money”.
Threaten Lawsuit On Blacklist
A federal contractor is threatening to sue the public works department after being publicly blacklisted for tax evasion. The company is the third to unwittingly breach a little-known 2015 policy in which firms that plead guilty to tax offences are banned from public works for 10 years: “We’re going to sue”.
No Cuts In Gov’t Taxi Budget
Federal agencies continue to spend million a year on taxis, almost all of it shuttling between offices in Ottawa, according to accounts. Staff at Environment Canada booked only $20 worth of bus fares compared to $14,447 on cabs, though the department officially encourages taxpayers to cut greenhouse gas emissions by using transit: “There is a bit of irony”.



