No Resignation, No Apology

Deputy Defence Minister Christiane Fox in a staff email to employees indicated she would neither resign nor apologize after being censured for cronyism. Fox said she breached an Act of Parliament to hire a friend who'd previously worked at a Good Life gym in the name of diversity. The gym employee is Black: "My efforts were focused on advancing diversity and inclusion." READ MORE

28% More Staff Than Inmates

The $4 billion federal prison system has a quarter more employees than prisoners in custody, new figures show. Staff outnumber inmates even with job cuts proposed this year, said a Correctional Service report: "The current portfolio is not sustainable." READ MORE

Bring Man Back From Death

The balance of probabilities is sufficient to void a declaration of death, says the Supreme Court of Canada. The ruling came on appeal by a life insurance company opposed to a $550,000 payout over a “dead” policyholder: "What is meant by the ‘return’ of a person who has been declared dead?" READ MORE

Ottawa Lost: One Of A Kind

Of the capital’s lost landmarks none is more curious than an old federal museum that exhibited oil paintings, whale bones and lobster. It was the Dominion Fisheries Museum, opened at the corner of Queen and O'Connor streets in 1884. READ MORE

Review: Pop’s Subterranean

Conspiracy is mythology, but after sundown. Even when wholly fiction, both satisfy some human need to explain a ridiculous, implausible world. Author Richard Syrett calls it “the madness unleashed by creative genius.” He is a gifted essayist. Syrett is a Toronto broadcaster, producer and podcaster, and enthusiastic chronicler of the underworld of popular culture. “Pop keeps people distracted and docile, background noise for factory life,” Syrett quotes an interview subject. The result is Tales From The Rock ‘n Roll Twilight Zone, a forensic probing of “the eerie coincidences, the suspicious circumstances, the whispers that something darker was at work.” The result is jarring. READ MORE

Paperwork Vanished: Audit

Auditors are faulting Foreign Minister Anita Anand’s department for sloppy accounting by diplomats abroad including disappearing paperwork on spending. The latest report follows a 2020 disclosure that one Embassy misappropriated $145,000 for a party pavilion and lied to cover the expense: "It was nearly impossible to determine." READ MORE

Seeks Property Rights Probe

Parliament must convene hearings on property rights after a British Columbia judge granted Aboriginal title to 1,846 acres near Richmond, B.C. including private lots purchased by ratepayers, Opposition Leader Pierre Poilievre said yesterday. “This is a federal issue,” he told reporters: "You need property rights protection to have a thriving, property-owning democracy." READ MORE

Guest Commentary

Jack Murta

Family

I believe we all look for and need a family. It’s where we go for friendship and respect. If your family at home is so dysfunctional you can’t stay in the house, if you have been told how useless you are, that you are a failure, then you’ll find family with a motorcycle gang or a group of young people shooting up drugs under a bridge. Family is the big difference. The wounds never really heal but there are people who do break their negative habits. Lives change with forgiveness.