A Québec court has fined a homeowner $200 for cussing police with a common vulgarity. Other tribunals have concluded the f-word does not have the same raw connotation in French as in English: “He put forward an explanation, namely that he was not insulting the police but rather he was pointing out the lack of service rendered by the police.”
Inflation Swamps Food Guide
Inflation has overtaken the Canada Food Guide, says the federal department responsible for benchmark guidance on healthy eating. Less than a third of Canadians can afford minimum daily servings of fruit and vegetables, it said: “The Food Guide was released prior to the recent rising cost of food due to inflation and does not currently acknowledge the growing issues of food availability and affordability.”
Ex-Clerk Joins Liberal Group
Michael Wernick, former chief clerk of the federal public service, yesterday joined a Liberal-affiliated think tank. Wernick abruptly resigned in 2019 following disclosures of cabinet’s failed attempt to quash a criminal prosecution of SNC-Lavalin Group Inc.: “I worry about the reputations of honourable people who have served their country being besmirched.”
Fed Staff OK For $500 Credits
A quarter million federal employees working from home may have been eligible for tax credits at $400 to $500 each, says the Canada Revenue Agency. It did not estimate the cost of “home office expense” credits: “Can you tell us what the cost ramifications are to the treasury?”
Climate Subsidy For The CNR
Cabinet approved millions in climate subsidies to one of Canada’s most profitable corporations, records show. Canadian National Railways Company received the $4.4 million subsidy last November 28 to install electric charging stations: “Our overall estimate for public charging infrastructure needs across Canada would represent a total investment of approximately $20 billion.”
Press Aid’s A Ballot Question
Federal subsidies of Canadian newsrooms should be a ballot question for voters in the next general election, a Conservative MP said yesterday. Millions in cabinet-approved aid compromised media with “little corporate incentive to bite the hand that feeds them,” said MP Michelle Rempel Garner (Calgary Nose Hill): “Journalism is far weaker than ever.”
Secret Research Violates Law
The Privy Council Office is conducting secret “behavioural science” research and concealing the findings in breach of an Act of Parliament, Access To Information records show. Federal law requires that all publicly-funded opinion research be promptly disclosed to taxpayers and other political parties: “The rich dataset can support immediate policy objectives such as more precisely targeting government messaging.”
“Tone Was Very Negative…”
Staff in a briefing note to Foreign Minister Mélanie Joly complained media coverage of misconduct by Chinese agents has been “very negative.” The analysis noted the Prime Minister was openly criticized “for appearing to be weak.”
Millions For CBC Advertising
Federal departments and agencies spent millions advertising on the CBC even as private sponsors fled the network, records show. English television ad sales fell 25 percent with the loss of Hockey Night In Canada licensing: “It’s all an illusion.”
Gov’t Agency Admits Failure
The Public Health Agency six years after promising to eliminate tuberculosis says it is nowhere near meeting its target. “Rates have not decreased,” said an Agency audit: “In comparison the United States tuberculosis rate has been decreasing continuously since the early 1990s.”
Anti-Trust Bureau Mea Culpa
The Competition Bureau yesterday in a mea culpa acknowledged its approval of corporate mergers in the grocery trade did not benefit consumers. Lack of competition let grocers hike profit margins by “modest yet meaningful” amounts, up to a billion a year, said the federal anti-trust agency: “There is some truth to that.”
Senator Was Favourite Guest
A senator who threatened to sue Canadian media over China coverage took more state-sponsored trips to the People’s Republic than any other parliamentarian, records show. Senator Victor Oh (Ont.), a Mississauga developer, accepted six junkets at China’s expense to promote trade and “cultural exchanges.”
Gov’t Keepsake China Made
Immigrants taking the citizenship oath at federal ceremonies receive as keepsakes a maple leaf pin made in China, records show. The Department of Immigration last year ordered a quarter-million pins from a Chinese vendor: “This is our national symbol.”
Drugged Driving’s Doubled
Drug impaired driving rates have doubled since Parliament legalized marijuana, says a Department of Justice report. Legalization was accompanied by Bill C-46 An Act To Amend The Criminal Code that allowed random roadside drug testing: “The rate of drug-impaired driving offences increased 105 percent from 2017.”
Green Cars May Be Fire Risk
Electric cars may pose a fire hazard, says a National Research Council report. The Council said it did not know how many fires were caused by vehicles’ lithium batteries since federal regulators do not collect the data: “There are still questions regarding the fire safety of electric vehicles.”



