A federal watchdog has fined an unidentified bank $350,000 for deliberately misleading customers over the cost of loans. The Federal Consumer Agency of Canada would not name the bank though it can do so: “A significant number of customers were impacted.”
Monthly Archives: December 2018
PM Preoccupied With Press
Declassified 1979 cabinet minutes indicate then-Prime Minister Joe Clark was preoccupied with media coverage – one newspaper column was raised over and over in cabinet – and seemed “buoyant about the prospects” of winning re-election in 1980: “The outlook was good.”
MPs Re-Examine Fish Farms
The Commons fisheries committee is commissioning another study on aquaculture, nearly identical to a 2016 review by a Senate panel. The latest study follows an audit by the Environment Commissioner that complained the fisheries department failed to protect wild fish stocks from industrial-scale salmon farming: “I talk to industry people, I’m left with more questions than answers.”
A Sunday Poem: “Tornadoes”
In West Ottawa,
lives are disrupted by forces of nature.
Over a hundred homes damaged.
Affluent suburbs turned into rubble.
Chairs, tables, mattresses, stoves
scattered in the yards.
A fridge thrown, open,
food inside.
The community comes together.
Volunteers remove debris,
tarp roofs,
board smashed windows.
A firefighter
carries out personal items
salvaged from the ruins –
medications, makeup brushes, a set of lipsticks.
Ontario activates the province’s
Disaster Recovery Assistance program.
“We will spare no expense,”
promises Premier Ford.
The city council
waives fees for affected residents.
“So proud to be mayor of this city,”
says Jim Watson.
In another part of town,
lives are disrupted by a piece of paper.
Tenants
in the Heron Gate community of
low-income immigrants
get eviction orders.
The landlord says
units are too costly to maintain.
Over a hundred townhomes
will be demolished,
replaced with resort-style condos.
Some have already left,
their homes quickly boarded up.
They are forced to settle for smaller apartments
at higher rental fees.
15-year-old Warda
has to share her room
with two of her siblings.
In the yards, scattered furniture –
chairs, tables, couches, mattresses.
A fridge is tossed, open,
food inside.
The mayor claims there is nothing he can do.
“These are provincial responsibilities,” he says.
“The owners have the right.”
(Editor’s note: poet Shai Ben-Shalom, an Israeli-born biologist, examines current events in the Blacklock’s tradition each and every Sunday)




