Gov’t Eyes First Carbon Tariff

Cabinet is researching the world’s first carbon tariff on imports to protect Canadian industry, says an Access To Information memo. The Department of Environment admitted its national carbon tax will impact the ability of Canadian employers to compete: “Border carbon adjustments ‘level the playing field’.”

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Auditors Lose Key Tax Ruling

Federal auditors have lost a key court ruling that strikes down Canada Revenue Agency’s access to taxpayers’ confidential records. The case is expected to go to the Supreme Court: “It can be seen as a question of national importance, no doubt.”

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Fed Mercury Regs To Tighten

Cabinet has issued an order to ratify a United Nations treaty on mercury emissions. Canada signed the Minamata Convention in 2013 but had yet to bring the anti-pollution pact into force: “Nobody is regulating logging as a source of mercury.”

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Fined $1,300 For Canned Paté

A tribunal has upheld a $1,300 fine against an Alberta woman for a “very serious violation” of federal law, carrying four small cans of chicken paté in her luggage. Adjudicators have no power to waive Canada Border Services Agency penalties on humanitarian grounds, the tribunal said: “Officers must protect Canadians.”

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Won’t Disclose Cannabis Cost

Cabinet has no estimated cost of the impact of legalized cannabis on police budgets, hospital visits, border enforcement, insurance claims or traffic injuries, say records. Ministers in documents tabled in the Senate acknowledged a lack of research, but noted Health Canada spent $174,396 on polling: “Our question to the government is simple.”

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Feds Urged To Disclose Tax Scheme; Must “Come Clean”

Environment Canada must disclose the full scope of its carbon tax plan, say legislators. A secret memo published yesterday by Blacklock’s indicated a tax of $300 per tonne – six times the rate claimed by cabinet – is required to meet greenhouse gas emission targets: “It will bankrupt many families in my riding.”

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Payment Bill Clears Hurdle

A Senate panel last evening approved a private Conservative bill mandating prompt payment to subcontractors and tradespeople on public works. The legislation would counter abusive practices by large general contractors, senators said: “We had men in tears here talking about this problem.”

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Complain Bill Hurts Research

A Senate bill banning the capture and display of whales would criminalize research, claim Canada’s aquariums. Witnesses testifying at the Senate fisheries committee could not cite any peer-reviewed studies inspired by whales in captivity: “I don’t think I feel like a criminal.”

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Secret Memo: $50 Carbon Tax Won’t Work, Cabinet Admits

Environment Canada in a secret memo admits it will not meet pollution targets with its $50 carbon tax. Rates must rise up to $300 per tonne – the equivalent of 70¢ a litre on gasoline – to lower greenhouse gas emissions, said the Access To Information document: “Impacts obviously depend on tax rates.”

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Skills Training For 6-Yr Olds

Canada should mandate computer skills training for kindergartners, says an Access To Information report by the industry department. Schools must be “brought up to date” to prepare children for an automated workplace, the report said. The Canadian Teachers’ Federation did not comment: “Educators are not aligned on what skills are important.”

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Report Rates Trump Top Risk

A federal report rates U.S. President Donald Trump a greater threat to Canadian exports than war or terrorism. Export Development Canada in its latest Country Risk Quarterly warns of “high impact” from any serious renegotiation of continental trade pacts: “We should not assume the worst.”

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