Landmark Win For Travelers

Canadian airlines cannot refuse passengers’ compensation for poor service under the guise of “safety” compliance, says the Federal Court of Appeal. The landmark ruling came in the case of an Ottawa businessman whose WestJet flight from Regina was cancelled due to staffing shortages: “He arrived at his final destination approximately 21 hours later.”

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No Profit In Patriotic Appeal

Canada Post yesterday said it expected to record its steepest pre-tax loss to date in 2025 despite a patriotic appeal to consumers to “shop Canadian, ship Canadian.” Losses would eclipse last year’s $841 million shortfall, said management: “Canada Post is on track to post its eighth consecutive year of losses.”

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Public Meant It On Tariff War

Canadians supported retaliatory tariffs against the United States even if it meant job losses, says in-house research by the Department of Foreign Affairs. The public expected cabinet would “not back down” prior to Prime Minister Mark Carney’s decision to fold $30 billion in retaliatory tariffs: “I know it’s a little complex.”

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Dep’t Hires More Consultants

The Department of Employment yesterday said it will hire more consultants, this time to interview employers to gain an “in-depth understanding” of its hire-a-student program. The department earlier confirmed it tripled spending on consultants because none of its 34,410 employees were “available.” 

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Admit Shelter Use Unknown

Illegal immigrants and refugee claimants occupy more than a tenth of beds in homeless shelters, says a memo to Housing Minister Gregor Robertson. Actual figures are likely higher but unverifiable due to the refusal of “sanctuary cities” like Vancouver to keep records on foreigners without permits, said the document: “This allows individuals to access services without fear of being deported.”

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‘We Were Unprepared’: Feds

Executives at the Public Health Agency in an internal report admit they were unprepared and poorly trained to manage the Covid outbreak that killed 60,871 Canadians. The acknowledgement came three years after the Agency awarded a pandemic hero’s medallion to every manager and employee for “their commitments towards pandemic relief.”

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Mad Dash Thru The Airport

A British Columbia family made to hurry up and wait for a WestJet flight to Kelowna has been awarded $5,323 in compensation. The airline falsely blamed the weather for an inexplicable delay in boarding, said a British Columbia Tribunal: “It was caused by WestJet.”

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Cabinet Faked Success Stories

A federal subsidy program that gave away more than $130 million on a promise of promoting business start-ups and creating jobs achieved neither, says a Department of Industry report. Auditors could not identify a single start-up or count any net job creation despite claims of success by then-Trade Minister Mary Ng: “These would have been useful.”

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Black Market In Work Permits

Federal inspectors have confirmed a black market in migrant worker permits, says a labour department briefing note. The department said it would tighten inspections amid public complaints that foreigners have cost Canadians jobs and wages: ‘Misuse includes the buying and selling of permits.’

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Shortage Bad But Improving

Canada shows slight improvement in easing a chronic shortage of doctors and nurses, says a Department of Health briefing note. The department noted there are still tens of thousands of foreign-trained health care professionals here who do not work in the medical field: “Only 58 percent, 114,000 workers, have employment in the field.”

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Good Enough For Gretzky

The City of Niagara Falls, Ont. presented Prime Minister Mark Carney with a bottle of Wayne Gretzky-brand whiskey as a token of thanks for his service, according to ethics filings. Carney’s nemesis Donald Trump has repeatedly praised Gretzky as one of his favourite Canadians: “The Great One, Wayne Gretzky the Great. How good is Wayne Gretzky? He’s the Great One.”

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Review: Waiting On The Russians

In the 1950s any Soviet paratrooper who attempted to land in the Northwest Territories would have faced the Canadian Rangers, a crack team of marksmen assigned to wage guerrilla-style “hit and run” operations on the tundra.

The Russians never landed. By the laws of inertia, the Rangers remained. Historian P. Whitney Lackenbauer celebrates these Cold Warriors who never fired a shot in anger. Instead, they became a caricature.

“Clad in their red sweatshirts, they appeared regularly in media photographs,” Lackenbauer writes without irony. “Rangers greeted Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip when they arrived in Iqaluit to begin their Golden Jubilee visit. The Queen made particular note of the Rangers’ presence and told them how much she liked their uniforms.”

Professor Lackenbauer is a respected scholar. His difficulty is in chronicling members of an armed force whose military careers were never interrupted by combat. At one point he is reduced to telling the story of a Labrador Ranger who used icebergs for target practice.

The history of this odd force dates from 1947 when the first company was formed in Dawson City. The captain was a local storekeeper. In 1956 the Rangers’ strength peaked at 2725 men, mainly ex-cops, Inuit trappers and Hudson’s Bay clerks.

“Should an enemy ever advance over the Arctic barrens,” explained the Cold War-era Montreal Gazette, “the Ranger role would be hit-and-run operations to stall the invading force until Canada’s mobile striking force could be transported or parachuted into the area.”

The Rangers received neither pay nor training, but satisfied a romantic ideal. “They are a flexible, inexpensive and culturally inclusive means of having ‘boots on the ground’ to demonstrate sovereignty and to conduct or support domestic operations,” Lackenbauer writes.

Whatever military purpose was served by the Rangers vanished Oct. 4, 1957 with the Soviet launch of a 23-inch satellite Sputnik 600 miles into orbit. Now the Russians didn’t have to parachute into Dawson City. They could fling a missile overhead into Washington D.C.

Regardless, The Canadian Rangers is a celebration. “The Rangers’ basic mandate –‘to provide a military presence in sparsely settled northern, coastal and isolated areas of Canada that cannot conveniently or economically be provided for by other components of the Canadian Forces’– has remained remarkably consistent since 1947,” Lackenbauer writes.

Well, maybe. Readers are told of the experience of John Sperry, an Anglican missionary who served as a Ranger lieutenant in Coppermine. Sperry received his commission in the mail and never held any meetings since “no one ever asked him to report on the number of Rangers in the platoon.” Captain Sperry’s only function was to sign up volunteers, hand them a government-issue rifle and distribute the annual ration of bullets.

The Rangers’ yearly ammunition budget was $8.35 per volunteer. It was a long fall from making the Arctic safe from the Soviets.

By Holly Doan

The Canadian Rangers: A Living History by P. Whitney Lackenbauer; UBC Press; 658 pages; ISBN 9780774824538; $34.95

Wanted To Censor Charities

Cabinet claimed a right to censor charities from making statements deemed “false or misleading” under threat of losing their tax status, then-Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland wrote in a 2023 email. The document was disclosed yesterday under Access To Information: “It frightens me.”

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