Cabinet today said it will revive a popular 2007 program that offered $5,000 grants to homeowners for energy refits. The program was cancelled in 2012 on complaints over the cost: “It doesn’t take much.”
Monthly Archives: November 2020
WE ‘Misunderstood The Law’
We Charity appeared to misunderstand the Lobbying Act in failing to disclose dozens of contacts with federal staff, cabinet and political aides, says Lobbying Commissioner Nancy Bélanger. The charity out-lobbied General Motors in pursuing a $43.5 million grant, records show: “Would that be okay?”
Ambassador Holds Pot Stock
Bob Rae, Canada’s ambassador to the United Nations, is the only current federal public office holder with investments in the marijuana trade. Neither Rae nor the Department of Foreign Affairs would comment on the disclosure: “Bob Rae has dedicated his life to serving Canadians.”
Commissioner Clears Baylis
No rules were broken when the Department of Health awarded a $237.3 million contract to a company chaired by former Québec Liberal MP Frank Baylis, says the Commissioner of Ethics. Baylis was not bound by conflict of interest rules since he’d left Parliament six months before the contract was signed: “Can that be considered a conflict of interest?”
Few Flag-Wavers, Gov’t Finds
Few Canadians fly the flag but are quietly proud of their country as strong and free, says a Department of Canadian Heritage study. The research was conducted after the pandemic forced cancellation of Canada Day observances on Parliament Hill for the first time in forty-four years: “This is where they were born, this is their country and they love their country.”
Seek Disclosure On ID Theft
Parliament should require all banks and telecom companies to publicly disclose accounts implicated in fraud and identity theft, says the Commons industry committee. MPs heard Covid-19 drove a sharp rise in calls by thieves posing as public health officers: “Government should prevent further harm to Canadians.”
Feds Need ‘Fiscal Credibility’
Cabinet must set some deficit target in the name of “financial credibility”, Parliamentary Budget Officer Yves Giroux yesterday told the Senate national finance committee. Senators expressed alarm over federal borrowing now seven times greater than the previous record deficit of $55.6 billion in 2010: “Where is the government headed?”
Ignore Warning On Vegas Bill
Attorney General David Lametti yesterday introduced a Vegas-style sports bet bill to decriminalize bookmaking though Liberals had opposed it as harmful. “What changed?” asked a reporter. “I would call it more of an evolution,” replied Lametti.
Must Get Back To Work: Bank
The pandemic has exposed a “stunning” divide in wage-earners’ wellbeing, Bank of Canada Governor Tiff Macklem yesterday told the Commons finance committee. Macklem said the country must get back to work: “The longer people are unemployed, their skills deteriorate, it’s harder to get back.”
Earning Less Than $10,000
Canadian writers earn a fraction of the minimum wage with net income below $10,000 a year on average, the Writers’ Union of Canada says in a submission to the Commons finance committee. Authors blamed mass photocopying of books without permission or payment by schools, colleges and universities: “Income for writers has dropped precipitously.”
Black Lives Defamation Suit
An Ontario court will hear the country’s first Black Lives Matter defamation lawsuit. A shoe cleaning business sued for slander after an ex-employee published profane tweets calling owners “Caucasian people” unsympathetic to the protest movement: “The public has an interest in knowing about a company’s stance on matters of social and political importance.”
Feds ‘Creating Jobs’ In Kenya
A federal agency spent nearly $13 million to create jobs in Kenya with subsidies for a Nairobi company that promptly laid off staff. FinDev Canada withheld Access To Information records on the transaction for a year, and censored thousands of pages of documents: “We performed our own due diligence.”
Pay $72M For California Cars
Taxpayers have paid more than $70 million to subsidize the purchase of California electric cars, data show. The Commons environment committee yesterday was told rebates are a subsidy for the rich: “What we’re doing is subsidizing a vehicle that a wealthy person is going to buy.”
No Sun Holidays This Winter
Snowbirds and holidayers should stay home this winter, Public Safety Minister Bill Blair said last night. Blair said cabinet can’t forbid Canadians from chasing the sun, but recommended they stock up on private health insurance: “We will continue to discourage it.”
Extra $70M For MP Pensions
Parliament must make up a $70 million-a year shortfall in the MPs’ pension plan, actuaries said yesterday. The plan currently pays an average $69,800 a year to retirees: “The number of deaths among pensioners was less than anticipated.”



