Canada Post waited a week to notify employees of what became a fatal Covid outbreak at a mail processing plant, according to its largest union. Post office management did not comment. Federal labour inspectors earlier cited Canada Post four times for breach of health regulations at separate plants: “Every worker in Canada has a right to a safe and healthy workplace.”
Monthly Archives: April 2021
Tax Foreign Equity At $175M
Cabinet will levy a $175 million a year equity tax on foreign offshore owners of Canadian residential real estate. A similar British Columbia tax in 2019 was upheld as constitutional by the B.C. Supreme Court: “This is a fairly new concept.”
Will Rewrite 1978 Usury Law
Cabinet proposes to rewrite a 1978 usury law to curb what one MP called “ungodly” interest rates on payday loans. Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland yesterday also proposed first-ever federal regulation of credit card swipe fees paid by storekeepers and other merchants: ‘They are among the highest in the world.’
Tax Yachts, Smokes & Google
Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland yesterday raised tobacco taxes 16 percent, proposed a three percent revenue tax on Google and a ten percent luxury tax on costly cars and yachts. New taxes should help lower the deficit by $200 billion this year, said Freeland: “Congratulations!”
Bill Targets Gruesome Trade
The Senate human rights committee last night endorsed a bill to ban organ transplant tourism under threat of fourteen years’ imprisonment. Advocates targeted China where political dissidents and other detainees are murdered for organ transplants, senators were told: “That is a very important thing to understand about the difference between China and every other country in the world.”
Will Name Beneficial Owners
The Department of Industry will complete by 2025 a public registry naming actual owners of corporations doing business in Canada under so-called “beneficial ownership” rules. Cabinet yesterday promised a “publicly accessible corporate beneficial ownership registry by 2025.”
OK Climate Loans & Rebates
Cabinet will introduce interest-free loans for climate change home refits and rebate a portion of carbon taxes paid by farmers, according to budget documents. It follows a proposal to raise the federal carbon tax 240 percent by 2030: “I have personally seen bills for the carbon tax of tens of thousands of dollars.”
Fix $15 Fed Minimum Wage
Cabinet will mandate a $15 an hour federal minimum wage, the first increase since 1996. The rate would apply to workers in federally-regulated private sector workplaces like airports and radio stations but is a “pace setter” for provinces, said the Canadian Labour Congress: “It should exert some upward pressure.”
‘My Job Is To Ensure Safety’
An internet censorship bill to promote “content moderation” will be introduced within two weeks, says Heritage Minister Steven Guilbeault. “My job is to ensure the safety and security of the Canadian population,” said Guilbeault. “That’s what I am here for.”
Staff Stressed ‘Success’ Stories
The Prime Minister’s Office in internal emails directed staff to “use the success stories” in public announcements on pandemic management. Staff recommended skewing information to emphasize positive news over factual reporting: “Use the success stories rather than specific delivery numbers.”
Did Absolute Best Says Hajdu
Health Minister Patricia Hajdu told the Commons health committee she is grateful for employees “doing their absolute best” this pandemic, but stopped short of an apology for mismanagement cited by auditors. “Are you the minister responsible for the Public Health Agency?” asked New Democrat MP Don Davies (Vancouver Kingsway). “Yes I am,” replied Hajdu.
Pot Firing Worth $5K Penalty
A federal labour arbitrator has ordered Canadian National Railway Co. to pay $5,000 in damages to an employee fired for using marijuana a day before his shift. “Flimsy,” the arbitrator ruled: “I find it difficult to accept the company could possibly believe it had grounds to dismiss.”
Youth Grants Cost $117M
A national grant program for youth volunteers went about 12 percent over budget to more than $117 million, according to labour department figures. Cabinet launched the Canada Service Corps three years ago: “It helps them develop relationships.”
Poem: “Silence Of The Sea”
In the Gulf of St. Lawrence,
rescuers from Canada and the U.S.
try to free three whales
entangled in ropes.
In the port of Kushiro,
a crane lifts the body
of a Minke whale.
Mouth wide open.
Baleen shown.
Blood drips from where the harpoon hit.
It is the first of 227 whales
to be killed this year
– 25 of them endangered –
as Japan lifts its ban
on commercial hunting.
Tokyo restaurateur Shintaro Sato
hopes young Japanese
will rediscover the taste.
His family
has been preparing whale dishes
for half a century.
(Editor’s note: poet Shai Ben-Shalom, an Israeli-born biologist, writes for Blacklock’s each and every Sunday)

Appointee Had Ethics Breach
Cabinet yesterday named former Liberal Party national director Ian McKay as Canadian ambassador to Japan. McKay two years ago was cited for breach of the Conflict Of Interest Act in failing to disclose directorship in a cannabis company: “Nobody else seems to be outraged.”



