Christmas Caroling Not Safe

Christmas caroling is unsafe, says Dr. Theresa Tam. The chief public health officer said singing indoors is not recommended this Christmas even among people who are fully vaccinated against the coronavirus: “Singing is not the best idea if Covid is circulating.”

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Took Subsidies Then Cut Jobs

One of Canada’s largest newspaper chains fired 111 employees after pocketing taxpayers’ subsidies, according to court records. Federal documents confirm a $595 million newspaper bailout did not create jobs as promised: “The loss of even just one job is a tragedy.”

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Gov’t Approves Vax Waivers

The Department of Transport effective today will permit airlines and airports to grant employee exemptions to compulsory vaccination on medical or religious grounds. Similar exemptions for air passengers are expected by month’s end: “How does a manager decide?”

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Must ‘Shut Down Tar Sands’

Cabinet should act to “leave the majority of the fossil fuels in the ground from now on,” a scientific panel of the Canadian Meteorological and Oceanographic Society has been told. Further mining of Alberta oil sands is “unacceptable in terms of the survival of this planet,” said a climate scientist: “You have the power.”

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A Sunday Poem: “Red Flag”

 

In Washington D.C.

the Redskins football team

is asked to change its name.

 

Strong arguments are called up.

 

The term is offensive,

hurtful,

completely inappropriate;

does not inspire tolerance,

respectfulness.

 

I hardly disagree.

 

And yet,

considering the Ottawa Senators…

 

(Editor’s note: poet Shai Ben-Shalom, an Israel-born biologist, writes for Blacklock’s each and every Sunday)

$65M Email Plan Went Awry

A program to simplify hundreds of thousands of federal email addresses is on hold after five years and $65 million. Shared Services Canada, the federal IT department, said the setback was temporary: “Most government things don’t fail in a catastrophic way; they fail in a kind of mundane and annoying way.”

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Gov’t Order: Eat Lunch Alone

The Department of Health recommends federal employees eat lunch alone, keep chairs six feet apart and wear masks in the office though 98 percent are vaccinated against Covid. The House of Commons issued its own pandemic directive stating even employees working from home must show proof of vaccination or a negative Covid test: “No vaccines are 100 percent effective.”

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Election Chief Is Out By June

Election Commissioner Yves Côté will resign next June after ten years in office. Côté is best known for awarding SNC-Lavalin Group Inc. a settlement over $117,803 in illegal campaign contributions, but prosecuting Rebel News Network Ltd. for a book promotion deemed too political: ‘We are committed to protecting the integrity of the electoral process.’

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We Charity Claims $3M Libel

We Charity’s Kielburger family has filed a $3 million defamation lawsuit against a Toronto publisher. The claim in Ontario Superior Court was filed in the name of the Kielburgers’ mother over allegations she diverted charitable donations to a family bank account: ‘It is disinformation.’

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95% Vaccinated, Military Still Threatens Discharge Nov. 15

Military who decline to reveal their vaccination status are threatened with discharge effective Monday though 95 percent are already immunized, says General Wayne Eyre, acting chief of defence staff. The threat follows successive audits confirming Canada’s military is chronically short of recruits: “There is no point in us having a target of 68,000 and continuing to be 4,000 people short.”

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Small Biz Pushback At CRA

The Canada Revenue Agency aims to speed tax collections by prodding small business to use electronic invoicing, according to in-house research. Business owners questioned in focus groups told the Agency to mind its own business: “They were skeptical.”

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Dep’t Tried To Cheat NAFTA

A federal department knowingly tried to breach an international treaty to award a six-figure contract to a favoured supplier, says Procurement Ombudsman Alexander Jeglic. Emails uncovered during an audit showed staff in the Department of Citizenship knew they were breaching NAFTA rules: “You cannot structure a procurement to avoid obligations under the North American Free Trade Agreement.”

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Court Orders CEO’s Emails

A federal judge has ordered the release of confidential emails between airline lobbyists and Scott Streiner, CEO of the Canadian Transportation Agency. Streiner was faulted by consumers’ advocates for allowing airlines to forego cash refunds on $8.5 billion worth of tickets aboard Covid-cancelled flights: “There were communications between third parties and the Agency.”

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