A housing crash in Vancouver and Toronto would put almost a fifth of Canadian mortgages under water but shouldn’t trigger any bank failures, says the Bank of Canada. Researchers saw little chance of bank runs seen following a 1982 crash: “A quick drop in house prices in the Toronto and Vancouver areas would be nationally significant.”
Monthly Archives: November 2018
$66K To Change Web Page
The Canadian embassy in Washington is paying an American contractor nearly $70,000 to freshen up a diplomats’ web page. The Department of Foreign Affairs complained the current site lacks “modern graphic design”.
Can’t Cheat On Gov’t Exam
A federal judge has upheld the dismissal of a Transport Canada analyst for cheating on a civil service exam. The Public Service Commission has investigated dozens of cases of alleged fraud since 2015, according to Access To Information records: ‘Most would call it a simple case of cheating.’
Fed Warning On Home Refits
A federal proposal to force homeowners to use less energy will be unaffordable for some, cautions a first-ever parliamentary review. Draft changes to the National Building Code would impact owners of 14 million homes nationwide: “Not all Canadians can afford to reduce their household’s carbon footprint.”
New Gov’t Blacklist In 2019
A new policy on blacklisting federal contractors convicted of wrongdoing will be detailed next month, says the Department of Public Works. Critics complain the current program punishes small business while offering a “get-out-of-jail-card” for corporate criminals: “The revised policy will be finalized in mid-December.”
Agency Is Buried In Paper
Canada’s trademark office is so burdened with paperwork it takes up to a year to process routine applications, says an internal audit. A Department of Industry review found staff could not locate 20 percent of paper files when auditors asked for them: ‘There is a risk Canada’s reputation suffers.’
Fed Up With Complainer
A man who filed dozens of unsuccessful lawsuits, appeals and complaints in a three-year period has been declared a vexatious litigant – for the sixth time. “It is time to say enough is enough,” wrote an adjudicator with the Ontario Human Rights Tribunal.
Jail Bookkeeper For Fraud
A crooked bookkeeper convicted of defrauding the Canada Revenue Agency of millions must be kept behind bars in the name of public safety, an Alberta judge has ruled. Evidence showed the tax preparer falsified refunds worth $2.9 million in exchange for kickbacks from clients: ‘He caused great emotional and financial hardship.’
A Sunday Poem: “Honour”
A rose
named after Queen Elizabeth II.
Decades of reign
held in pink petals and
thorny stems.
A car
named after President Lincoln.
Leadership during the Civil War
and abolition of slavery
captured in V6 engine
and heated leather seats.
A horsefly
named after Beyoncé.
22 Grammy Awards
and human rights activism
embodied in a six-legged,
golden-abdomen Australian pest.
A bra
named after Chief Justice Beverley McLachlin.
(Editor’s note: poet Shai Ben-Shalom, an Israeli-born biologist, examines current events in the Blacklock’s tradition each and every Sunday)

‘Good Behaviour’ Appointee Fined By Ethics Commission
The Ethics Commissioner yesterday cited a Transportation Safety Board member appointed on condition of “good behaviour” for breach of the Conflict Of Interest Act. Paul Dittmann did not respond to an interview request. Other “good behaviour” cabinet appointees have been dismissed for non-statutory offences like billing too much for luncheons: “Each case will be examined individually on its merits.”
$25 To Join Feminist Group
Three Liberal-appointed senators propose to launch an Association of Feminist Parliamentarians to create a “safe space for meeting and discussions”. Membership is $25. Men are welcome but not allowed to serve as co-chairs of the executive committee: ‘It’s groundbreaking.’
Publisher Banned From Mail
Public Works Minister Carla Qualtrough yesterday banned use of the mail by the publisher of an anti-Semitic attack sheet. The order is rare but not unprecedented: “There is no absolute right to use the mail.”
Careful With Leaks: Judge
Confidential government records remain private even if they’re leaked and republished on Facebook, the British Columbia Supreme Court has ruled. The decision came in the case of personal records obtained from Nanaimo City Hall: ‘The City was likely the source of the leak but I am not sure it matters.’
Drug-Free Prison Act Fizzled
The incidence of contraband drugs in federal prisons actually went up after Parliament passed a Drug-Free Prisons Act, data show. Authorities report nearly 6,000 cases a year: “We keep passing new laws, plugging up the courts.”
Won’t Accept Foreign Mail
The post office yesterday said it will no longer accept any foreign mail for the duration of rotating strikes by the Canadian Union of Postal Workers, now in their 24th day. Management also took an unusual step of detailing a take-it-or-leave-it contract offer to workers: “We are unable to accept incoming items.”



