Draft environmental risk assessments of three common pesticides should be completed next month, says Health Canada’s Pest Management Regulatory Agency. The reviews coincide with a federal lawsuit alleging the Agency improperly licensed farm chemicals: “They just are the right kind of product that Canadian agriculture sees benefits from.”
Monthly Archives: February 2018
$116K To Teach Man French
Parks Canada spent more than $100,000 on French lessons for a single Saskatchewan employee. The billings disclosed through Access To Information included thousands for travel: “Parks Canada is committed to providing bilingual services.”
Punish Privacy Scofflaws
Privacy Commissioner Daniel Therrien says he should gain new powers to compel private companies to obey federal privacy law. The current Act requires that Therrien sue firms for damages in Federal Court: “We are behind.”
Sunday Poem: “The Pitch”
The Prime Minister
goes to Davos
to persuade the world’s rich
to invest in Canada.
He may have a case,
and documents to prove it.
The Panama Papers.
The Paradise Papers.
Canada Revenue Agency says
it will take years
to process these files.
Until then,
come and enjoy
the lowest tax rates
in the entire industrialised world.
(Editor’s note: poet Shai Ben-Shalom, an Israeli-born biologist, examines current events in the Blacklock’s tradition each and every Sunday)

Will Consider Random Tests
Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale says cabinet will consider whether to permit random workplace drug testing with legalization of cannabis. Railways and other employers have sought statutory rights to test on the jobsite: “I understand the concerns.”
MPs Endorse Strike Rights
MPs yesterday gave Second Reading to a cabinet bill upholding public employees’ right to strike. The bill follows a 2015 Supreme Court ruling that governments cannot unilaterally designate which employees are forbidden from strike action: “Liberals are on the side of the union bosses.”
Payday Lenders Targeted
Payday lenders must be regulated to control a “cycle of debt” for borrowers, the Senate banking committee was told yesterday. A Senate bill would update Canada’s usury law for the first time since 1978: “I encourage the Senate to act quickly.”
Nov. 11 Holiday Act To Pass
The Senate will pass into law a private Liberal bill proclaiming November 11 a legal federal holiday. The Legion and small businesses opposed the bill, predicting it will result in Remembrance Day becoming a day off with pay in all ten provinces: “You then have an argument.”
Prisoners Lose Pay Appeal
A federal judge has rejected prisoners’ claims that 2013 cuts to inmate pay breached the Canada Labour Code. The previous Conservative cabinet cut benefits 30 percent and imposed a 42¢ fee for telephone privileges: “Although not luxurious, the offenders’ needs are met adequately.”
Appeal For Jury Reforms
Parliament should promote jury reforms including better pay and free counselling for trial participants, witnesses yesterday told the Commons justice committee. Experts said low jury pay and lack of support compromise the justice system: “Jury duty is in itself stressful.”
Water Bottle ‘Death Anxiety’
Marketing of bottled water in Canada targets consumers’ “death anxiety”, says new research by the University of Waterloo. Analysts examined commercial messaging used to sell water by the bottle in a country where tap water is typically safe, plentiful and inexpensive: “We like to think we’re rational.”
No Bids On $1.7B Contracts
The Department of Public Works last year awarded more than $1.7 billion in sole-sourced contracts without any competitive bidding. Awards included millions paid to pollsters and media corporations: “We should look into who’s getting favourable treatment.”
National Anthem Rewritten
The Senate last night passed into law a private Liberal bill to rewrite O Canada. Senators voted to end a filibuster by critics that delayed the bill’s passage for months: “I think it’s not right for a handful of senators to push this through without going to the Canadian public.”
Need More Marijuana Cops
The Department of Justice says police need five times the number of specially-trained officers they now have to curb drug impaired driving. “We’re confident we’ll be ready,” Attorney General Jody Wilson-Raybould yesterday told the Senate legal and constitutional affairs committee. Cabinet has set a July 1 deadline to pass a bill legalizing recreational marijuana.
No Fake News On Weather
Telecom regulators yesterday cleared the Weather Network of broadcasting inaccurate information. There was no evidence the channel deliberately spread “false news”, said the CRTC.
A lone unidentified viewer from British Columbia filed multiple complaints after the Weather Network last April 13 broadcast a long-range forecast entitled “30-Day Forecast” that in fact covered only 27 days. Under Television Broadcasting Regulations licensees are forbidden from “broadcasting false or misleading news”.
The channel’s Canadian licensee, Pelmorex Weather Networks Inc., admitted 30 days was not 27 days but explained graphics were constrained by high-definition television. “Technical limitations of space on the screen and detail issues in standard definition make it difficult to squeeze the 30 days onto the screen in all cases without decreasing the font size, which would have made the information tougher for viewers to read,” Pelmorex wrote in a submission.
The Canadian Radio Television & Telecommunications Commission ruled that, while the graph title was clearly wrong, “Given the protections afforded by the Canadian Charter Of Rights And Freedoms and the objectives set out in the Broadcasting Act, the breach of these provisions must be flagrant for the Commission to take action on a complaint. The Commission does not consider it to be the case in this instance.”
Pelmorex yesterday did not comment. The Weather Network last June 6 changed its long-range forecast titles from “30 Days” to “Next 4 Weeks”.
The Canadian Broadcast Standards Council last October 12 dismissed a similar complaint against the network. “This complaint is hair-splitting and even verging on the frivolous,” the Council wrote.
A Canadian Association of Broadcasters’ Code Of Ethics requires that all TV non-fiction programming be fact-based. “It is not every inaccuracy that will amount to a breach of the Code provisions,” wrote staff.
The Council earlier rejected complaints that a TV news report referred to Olympic “uniforms” instead of “clothing”, or that the red cross painted on ambulances was a “healing message of Jesus Christ”: “There is no such link; it is simply the symbol of the Red Cross Society”.
Complaints about weather have seen federal agencies flooded with viewer mail in the past. A 2016 Environment Canada initiative to transfer its weather website to a single government portal promoted “rude” and “abusive” emails, according to Access To Information records. “This is a terrible website,” wrote one complainant; “Now you clowns have gone and changed the weather again!” said another.
Viewers similarly complained in 2013 when Environment Canada depicted temperatures in both Celsius and Fahrenheit, though the Metric Commission mandated Celsius temperatures in 1975. Comments from website visitors included: “Help!”; “How do I change it???”; and “I am 45 and can no longer understand Fahrenheit.”
“Canadians talk more about the weather than Americans,” Liberal MP Scott Simms (Bonavista-Gander, Nfld. & Labrador), a former TV weatherman, said in an earlier interview. “If it’s not hockey, it’s weather. I tell people it’s why I became a politician, to stop lying to them.”
By Staff 



