A Liberal MP who pledged to work for housing affordability holds at least five mortgages on rental properties, according to newly-disclosed filings with the Ethics Commissioner. “We are addressing our housing affordability needs,” MP Taleeb Noormohamed (Vancouver Granville) said July 29: “The housing crisis is a Canada-wide problem that is especially hard hitting right here in Vancouver Granville.”
China Students Launder Cash
Foreign students in Canada are implicated in money laundering for organized crime, says a federal agency. Students from China and Hong Kong were named by the Financial Transactions and Reports Analysis Centre: “A number of suspected ‘money mules’ are international students.”
Claim “Intense” Competition
Competition in Canadian telecom is intense, lawyers for Rogers Communications Inc. wrote in a submission to the anti-trust Competition Tribunal. The company is attempting to counter a federal proposal to block its $26 billion buyout of Calgary competitor Shaw Communications: “Competition for wireless services in Canada is intense.”
Growth Goes West: StatsCan
Western Canada within 20 years will grow by a third while Newfoundland and Labrador will be smaller and greyer, Statistics Canada forecast yesterday. Nationwide the seniors’ population next year will eclipse the number of children: “If Canada’s population continues to increase in the future it will be mainly because of immigration.”
Ukraine Aid Now Up To $3B
Canadian aid to Ukraine since the February 24 invasion by Russia now totals more than $3.1 billion. The figure includes grants, military aid and loans, said Foreign Minister Mélanie Joly: “Canadians stand with them in their defence.”
Rushed Orders For Body Bags
Thousands of Covid body bags were quietly bought up by the Department of Public Works at the same time political aides looked for “success stories” to tell the public, Access To Information records show. Authorities feared a shortage of bags in the first weeks of the pandemic: “Do we need special ones to deal with people who died from Covid?”
Toronto Has Too Many MPs
Canada’s most Liberal city, Toronto, stands to lose a seat in Parliament under federal redistricting. Election planners said as large as Toronto has grown, the rest of Ontario has grown larger: “Over-representation in Toronto has emerged due to uneven population growth.”
Find Kids ‘Hybrid Immunity’
So many children have been infected with Covid there is increasingly “hybrid immunity” among elementary schoolkids, says the National Advisory Committee on Immunization. Most Canadian parents have not provided Covid shots to children under 12, the panel said: “Severe medical conditions in this age group should be rare.”
Loopholes In Foreigners’ Ban
Cabinet is preparing to write numerous loopholes into a promised ban on foreigners’ purchase of residential real estate. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau promised the ban last August 25 while campaigning for re-election: “We’ll crack down on the predatory speculators.”
‘You Get A Parade In Buffalo’
Canada’s largest airport is so bad that competitors in nearby Buffalo, N.Y. ought to hold a parade for the transport minister, says a Conservative MP. The Commons transport committee listened as MP Tony Baldinelli (Niagara Falls, Ont.) read out TripAdvisor comments disparaging Pearson International Airport as the worst on Earth: “Just got back from a trip to Nevada flying out of Buffalo and I’m from Ontario. The airport is a dream.”
Ottawa Lost: One Class Hotel
Sir Wilfrid Laurier, the great seeker of the “sunny ways” in politics, lived in a grand hotel just steps from Parliament Hill before he became prime minister. The Russell Hotel was Ottawa’s answer to 19th century elegance. In time it descended into ruin.
Laurier arrived in Ottawa in 1874. The capital then was a place of sharp contrasts with shining new parliament buildings surrounded by dismal muddy streets, ramshackle houses and open sewers.
“Ottawa is not a handsome city,” said Laurier. “I would not wish to say anything disparaging of the capital but it is hard to say anything good of it.” Later as prime minister he created the 1899 Ottawa Improvement Commission devoted to beautification of the city.
Laurier lodged at the Russell Hotel, a glittering example of Second Empire architecture designed by Henry Hodge Horsey, a prolific architect. The building filled the south side of Sparks Street, east of Elgin, catching the eye of passersby with a mansard roof and corner tower, numerous hooded windows and elaborate ornamentation.
The Russell boasted “250 rooms elegantly furnished,” reported Canadian Illustrated News, with English carpets and an Ottawa novelty: two passenger elevators that sped visitors up four storeys.
Laurier hated the hotel. He complained it was too costly and smelled of food and drink from its famed tavern that had been a caucus hangout since the days of Confederation.
Yet Laurier remained at the Russell House for 24 years. Here he wrote the ringing speeches that transfixed the House. Here he launched his 1896 election campaign that restored Liberals to power for the first time in a generation.
In time Liberal contributors bought Laurier a mansion in Ottawa’s Sandy Hill on Theodore Street, now Laurier Avenue, where the party chief remained till his death in 1919. Laurier House was subsequently willed to his successor Mackenzie King and in 1950 turned into a National Historic Site.
And the Russell? It remained Ottawa’s premier hotel until the Chateau Laurier opened nearby in 1912, then went into a long, sad decline. It closed its doors in 1925.
When Mackenzie King proposed to turn Elgin Street into a grand boulevard south from the National War Memorial, the dilapidated hotel was in the way.
While talk of expropriation was ongoing the vacant building suffered a major fire on April 14, 1928, and what remained was demolished. There is now nothing to remind us of Ottawa’s grand hotel or Laurier’s life in it.
By Andrew Elliott

Spent $120M For Covid Cargo
Air cargo flights of Chinese medical supplies cost taxpayers $120 million in the first 90 days of the pandemic, say Access To Information records. Federal agencies said they had no choice but to charter planes after failing to maintain a national stockpile of masks, gloves and medical gowns: “The cost of flying one cargo plane from China to Canada is between $600,000 and $800,000.”
‘I’d Have Made It Mandatory’
Cable and satellite TV customers in Canada should be required to pay for gay programming, a CRTC commissioner said yesterday. A majority of federal regulators rejected mandatory carriage for Out TV Network Inc. of Vancouver, the self-described “world’s first LGBTQ network.”
Hockey Anti-Trust Suit Fails
The Federal Court of Appeal has dismissed an $825 million anti-trust lawsuit against the NHL and junior hockey leagues. Former players alleged breach of the Competition Act: ‘The statement of claim alleging a conspiracy between leagues has no chance of success.’
31% Fear Radio Waves: Study
Nearly a third of Canadians say they’re concerned about health effects of everyday use of cellphones, Wi-Fi, Smart Meters and other products that emit radiation, says in-house research by the Department of Health. Regulators have consistently maintained wireless devices pose no danger to human health: “There is no evidence that using a cellphone causes brain tumours.”



