Want Deer Cull At Sacred Site

Parks Canada would license a deer cull at a “sacred site” under a proposal disclosed Saturday. Parks managers complained deer were a nuisance at Grosse Ile, Que., a historic quarantine station home to mass graves of thousands who fled the Irish famine of 1847: "That island is a sacred site." READ MORE

Reconciliation Rated Unclear

After 11 years of reconciliation fewer than half of employees in one major federal department say they have a clear understanding of what it means or how it applies to their work. It follows a 2024 Privy Council survey of Indigenous people that found reconciliation had not resulted in “any tangible improvements in the qualify of life for Indigenous people.” READ MORE

MPs Question Green Windfall

MPs seek documents regarding millions in subsidies awarded to friends of the Liberal Party for a green energy project in Nova Scotia. One MP likened the windfall to the “green slush fund,” the scandal-ridden Sustainable Development Technology Canada agency disbanded in 2024 over conflicts of interest: "Canadians deserve transparency." READ MORE

Judge Orders Rail Disclosure

A federal judge has ordered public disclosure of locomotive data recorders for the first time since Parliament mandated use of the contentious surveillance equipment in 2022. The ruling came in the case of electronic data that captured the final, terrifying moments of a fatal derailment in a mountain pass: "Railway companies are statutorily obliged to record this information." READ MORE

Want More Quake Protection

The Department of Natural Resources proposes a fully-automated earthquake warning system that would not only alert the public of impending disaster but slow trains, divert landing aircraft and shut off natural gas mains. No budget was disclosed: "Why have you not taken any steps to protect your property from earthquakes?" READ MORE

Ottawa Lost: Bagman Station

It was a monument to scandal. For 19th century visitors and VIPs, the last stop in Ottawa was Canadian Pacific Railway’s Broad Street station. It had no more frequent visitor than Prime Minister John Abbott, millionaire lawyer and CPR fixer.  The station is gone now, the scandal forgotten. And Abbott is recalled only as the great-grandfather of actor Christopher Plummer. READ MORE

Review: For Nelson

First-hand accounts of horrific childhoods are rare in literature, and compelling: Charlie Chaplin’s My Autobiography, or A Memoir of Robert Blincoe, the recollections of an English workhouse boy that was so stark one U.K. reviewer said it made Oliver Twist look like a holiday camp. From Athabasca University Press is My Decade at Old Sun, My Lifetime of Hell, the memoirs of an Indian Residential schoolboy. Arthur Bear Chief’s story is so raw it would have gone unpublished 30 years ago. Bear Chief notes with irony the Anglican Church didn’t give him much of an education at the Old Sun Residential School in Gleichen, Alta. His English skills were so poor that later, as a public servant, he had an ex-wife ghostwrite his government reports. The result in My Decade at Old Sun is a plain and riveting narrative stripped of adjectives and ornamental prose. It is vivid and powerful. READ MORE

Guest Commentary

Media & Reform

Our Submission To The Commons Heritage Committee 2026 Study: “Journalism & Media”

Competition in journalism rests on fair play, transparency and integrity. Parliament in 2019 amended the Income Tax Act to subsidize daily news media on a promise taxpayers’ aid was temporary and transitional. Temporary, transitional aid is now a permanent, secret subsidy for 141 news corporations. It is the only federal program of its kind that does not mandate disclosure of actual payments. If recipients of $2,500 Canada Student Loan subsidies are named under proactive disclosure, taxpayers are owed similar transparency for newsrooms receiving payroll rebates up to $29,750 per employee.