Recruitment of new Mounties continues to be a fraction of needs, an RCMP union has told the Commons public safety committee. The National Police Federation counted only 380 graduates from the RCMP police academy in Regina last year, about a third of requirements: “The backlog it has created will be felt for years.”
Monthly Archives: March 2022
Poem: ‘It’s How You Say It’
Minimum wage goes up.
Tim Hortons
sends a letter to employees,
cancelling paid breaks,
cutting health benefits.
Some say
that’s not the Canadian way.
I read the letter carefully.
It starts with
“It is with great regret”;
a different way of saying
“We are sorry”.
What’s more Canadian?
(Editor’s note: poet Shai Ben-Shalom, an Israeli-born biologist, writes for Blacklock’s each and every Sunday)

Two Years And No Reporting
Cabinet’s $327,000-a year chief science advisor has not published an annual report in two years despite a requirement to account for the “state of federal government science.” Records show Dr. Mona Nemer, an Ottawa chemist, instead spent nearly a quarter million flying from Yokohama to Paris since her appointment: “Science is everywhere.”
CBC Pulls False Convoy Story
The CBC has retracted another false Freedom Convoy story that suggested foreigners played a large role in the protest. The claim was made on a radio broadcast of The World This Hour, self-described as “Canada’s most trusted audio newscast.”
“On February 10 in a report about the protest convoy CBC Radio’s The World This Hour incorrectly said GoFundMe ended a fundraiser for the protesters over questionable donations to the group,” the network said in a statement. No explanation was given.
CBC News at the time claimed to have completed an exclusive analysis of Freedom Convoy donations and found suspicious contributions from foreigners. “The donations identified by CBC News are likely only a fraction of all the donations made by people outside of Canada,” read a February 10 website story headlined “Convoy Protest Received Hundreds Of Donations That Appeared To Be From Abroad.”
“In recent days questions have emerged about how the protesters raised so much money so quickly and where it came from,” said the article. “Before GoFundMe shut down the protest convoy’s crowdfunding page and announced donors would be refunded it had attracted more than 120,000 donations amounting to more than $10 million.”
A second story that same day went further in questioning Freedom Convoy contributions. “An analysis of GoFundMe donations by CBC News has revealed at least one third of them had been made by donors who chose to remain anonymous or who listed names that were obviously fictitious or political commentary.”
Both stories were by Elizabeth Thompson, a CBC reporter who spoke negatively of protesting truckers at a public meeting of the Parliamentary Press Gallery on February 15. “Personally I felt a little uncomfortable because there were all these guys roaming around the street,” said Thompson.
GoFundMe executives in March 3 testimony at the Commons public safety committee confirmed foreigners comprised a small portion of convoy donors, that most contributions were small, and that a check of credit card records found no evidence of involvement by terrorist groups, neo-Nazis or other known criminals. “Our records show 88 percent of donated funds originated in Canada,” said Juan Benitez, president of GoFundMe.
Canada’s top anti-terror financing regulator also described convoy fundraising as harmless. “There were people around the world who were fed up with Covid and were upset and saw the demonstrations,” Barry McKillop, deputy director of the Financial Transactions and Reports Analysis Centre, testified February 24 at the Commons finance committee. “I believe they just wanted to support the cause.”
The CBC on February 3 corrected an earlier television story suggesting Russians were behind the Freedom Convoy. Television host Nil Koksal in a January 28 broadcast of Power And Politics claimed “there is concern that Russian actors could be continuing to fuel things as this protest grows or perhaps even instigating it from the outside.”
The claim was false. “A clarification note was added,” the CBC said in a statement.
By Staff 
Feds Fail Audit On Airports
The Department of Transport that regulates national airports does an inadequate job of managing its own, says an internal audit. Investigators found favouritism in contracting, misuse of government credit cards and unexplained spending at seven small, federally-owned airfields: “Employees have side jobs, family relations work together and business partners are friends.”
Complain Lobby Ban’s Unfair
A Parliament Hill ban on lobbyist-paid interns is unfair, says the corporate-sponsored Canadian Political Science Association. The practice was prohibited four years ago by Ethics Commissioner Mario Dion as a clear conflict of interest: “They are not volunteers because they are paid by the organization that places them.”
Feds Fret Fewer Kids In Sport
Children’s participation in sports has declined so sharply it could affect future Olympic programs, says the Department of Canadian Heritage. Staff blamed high costs but made no mention of cabinet’s 2017 repeal of a fitness tax credit: “This could result in a gap in the number of high performance athletes competing in a decade or so.”
MPs Drop Tomb Jumper Case
MPs have quietly dropped a committee investigation into a mystery woman who jumped on the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier during Freedom Convoy protests. Cabinet blamed convoy truckers for the incident though the woman was never identified nor arrested and Ottawa police would not testify: “We describe this as a unique demonstration.”
Few Facts On Firearm Crimes
Statistics Canada for the first time is collecting data on the number of stolen and smuggled firearms used in gun crimes. However it “may take a few years” to compile figures from police nationwide, it said: ‘Who owned it? How it was stored? Was the owner licensed?’
Almost Everybody Got Bonus
CMHC last year awarded the equivalent of a five-figure bonus to almost every employee on its payroll, according to records obtained by the Canadian Taxpayers Federation. Bonuses were paid as CEO Romy Bowers publicly lamented the tragedy of homelessness in Canada: “On any given night as many as 35,000 people across our country may be experiencing homelessness. Why is this happening?”
Pay For Work Privacy Breach
A sawmill operator has been ordered to pay $1,000 for breaching privacy rights of an employee forced to take a drug test. Run of the mill mishaps at work are not sufficient justification for testing, a British Columbia labour arbitrator ruled: “When a breach of an employee’s privacy rights is established an award of general damages is appropriate.”
Predicts A Long, Brutal War
Canadians should expect a brutal war in Ukraine to last for years, the chair of the Commons defence committee said yesterday. Military commanders called it a valid concern: “This is something we are very concerned about.”
Gov’t Grateful For Coverage
Heritage Minister Pablo Rodriguez is promising more media subsidies after thanking reporters for their Freedom Convoy coverage. “Look at the role that the journalists played,” said Rodriguez: “I think there are even more things we should be able to do.”
CBC-TV Guarded Reporters
CBC-TV assigned a security guard to protect every single reporter assigned to cover the Freedom Convoy, a journalism seminar was told last night. Media recounted the extraordinary security measures at a Carleton University “Journalism Under Siege” seminar: “This was a real threat.”
Archives Cursed Critics: ‘FFS’
Internal records show managers at the national archives were driven to exchanging profane emails following a public outcry over removal of webpages celebrating John A. Macdonald. Response from taxpayers was overwhelmingly negative, admitted staff: “Are you guys on drugs?”



