Drunk On Duty A Disability

A locomotive engineer fired by Canadian Pacific for drinking rye on duty has been ordered reinstated by a labour board. An arbitrator ruled alcoholism is a disability under the Canadian Human Rights Act: “The duty to accommodate does not excuse the conduct.”

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Charity Fails On Mystery Fees

A charity cited for poor bookkeeping and unexplained consulting fees to a director has lost a bid to keep its license. The Federal Court of Appeal noted the same man was involved with the Humane Society of Canada Foundation that was also stripped of its charitable status: “It is difficult for a charity to reverse a decision of the Canada Revenue Agency.”

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Casino Operations Detailed

A Tax Court judge has delved into the inner workings of casinos where staff pocket lucrative tips worth as much as $1,000 a week. Details came in the case of a minimum-wage slot attendant with a Master’s degree who failed to pay tax on tips worth 112 percent of his income: “So, are these amounts taxable or not?”

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Skipped Blacklist Deadline

The Department of Public Works has delayed introduction of a new policy on blacklisting federal contractors implicated in wrongdoing. Staff yesterday would not say why the deadline was skipped, or whether delays were due to an ongoing corruption probe of SNC-Lavalin Group Inc.: “The government is committed to taking action against improper and unethical business practices.”

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Overworked & Underpaid

Newly-hired federal managers complain they are overworked and literally underpaid. Nearly two-thirds of executives surveyed, 61 percent, say they have not received cheques they’re owed due to ongoing foul-ups in a payroll system that has cost taxpayers $1.2 billion to date: ‘There is missing and incorrect pay.’

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More Women, Better Health

Electing more women politicians is good for the nation’s health, says a University of Waterloo study. Researchers suggested women in office, regardless of political party, are more likely to spend on programs that lower mortality rates: “Yes, women in government do in fact advance population health.”

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Protest Workplace Plea Deal

Labour organizers yesterday protested the dismissal of criminal charges against a concrete company accused of negligence in a truck driver’s death. Cabinet two years ago promised to step up enforcement of a law that made employers criminally liable for needless industrial accidents: ‘Consequences must be more than a cost of doing business.’

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SNC-Lavalin Probe “A Joke”

The Commons justice committee yesterday voted 5 to 4 against summoning ex-attorney general Jody Wilson-Raybould to testify on alleged political interference in the Department of Justice. Liberal MPs agreed to investigate allegations, but set no hearing schedule or deadline to report to Parliament: “This is really a joke.”

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Won’t Force Home Renos

A proposed climate change rewrite to the National Building Code will not force homeowners to renovate older properties, the National Research Council said yesterday. Realtors and builders had protested owners could face costly refits when selling: “It is not mandated that everyone refit their homes.”

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Column Was Juvenile But OK

A press ombudsman has dismissed a complaint against the National Post for ridiculing a woman’s name. Snide or derisive remarks about private citizen’s family names are “juvenile” but meet newspaper standards, ruled the National News Media Council: “This was an atrocious example of bad journalism.”

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Blame CBC For Flu Shot Rate

Fewer than 4 in 10 Canadians get a winter flu shot though influenza kills more people than car accidents, says a new federal report. The Public Health Agency of Canada blamed a CBC news story in part for low vaccination rates: ‘Recent media reports may be contributing.’

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Vote Today On Lavalin Probe

The Commons justice committee is expected to vote today on whether to investigate lobbying by SNC-Lavalin Group Inc. to avoid prosecution on corruption charges. The hearing follows the abrupt cabinet resignation of Jody Wilson-Raybould, former attorney general: “We must stand together.”

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$238K For Inquiry’s Travel

More than a quarter-million was spent last year on meals, hotel rooms and airline tickets by the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls, according to accounts. The panel will finish its work six months past deadline: “We are not there to decide if this is a good expenditure or a bad expenditure.”

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Gov’t Sued Over Herbicide

Health Canada faces a federal lawsuit over licensing of a bestselling weed-killer cited as “probably carcinogenic” by the World Health Organization. The advocacy group Safe Food Matters Inc. yesterday filed a Federal Court application to cancel the license: “We don’t know how pervasive it is.”

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Failure On Cost Recovery

The last federally-owned marine service in the country failed to raise fees as mandated by cabinet, auditors reported yesterday. Subsidies for the Newfoundland & Labrador ferry service cost taxpayers the equivalent of $379 per passenger last year: “We found weaknesses.”

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