Federal regulators say they are still awaiting cabinet’s final approval to launch on an interest-free loan program for home energy refits. Cabinet announced the plan last April 19 but has yet to introduce it: “We are waiting impatiently for it.”
Voluntary Vax Is Best: PHAC
Mandating vaccination is not recommended, says the deputy chief epidemiologist with the Public Health Agency of Canada. Dr. Howard Njoo told reporters Friday immunization was “a voluntary choice” and that positive education was preferable to coercion: “It doesn’t have to be because there’s a mandate.”
Never Meant To Tax Equity
CMHC never meant to commission $250,000 worth of research on a home equity tax, the CEO told the Commons finance committee. Romy Bowers said the federal insurer had done no work on the entire subject of taxation: “Unfortunately I am not in a position to answer.”
Public ‘Coping Or Struggling’
Only a third of Canadians think they will be better off in five years, says a global survey by a Chicago-based public relations firm. The finding mirrored in-house research by the Department of Finance that found many Canadians were merely “coping or struggling.”
Sunday Poem: “Engineered”
I dreaded her.
My Grade 6 English teacher
who beat at the blackboard
with her chalk.
Imagined this immense fibreglass structure
– half the wall –
detaching, falling, crushing her underneath.
Studied it for days.
Affixed with only four screws,
I concluded it’s doable.
Today, brought my
screwdriver.
(Editor’s note: poet Shai Ben-Shalom, an Israeli-born biologist, writes for Blacklock’s each and every Sunday)

Trump Tweeted, Feds Bought
Internal records show the Department of Health rushed to stock a malaria drug after then-U.S. President Donald Trump endorsed it on Twitter as a Covid treatment. Managers in a censored memo rushed to buy hydroxychloroquine based on “media articles,” they said: “That’s all it is, just a feeling.”
Too Generous For Truckers
Labour Minister Seamus O’Regan’s office in correspondence with a senator said paid sick leave for the private sector should be not be too generous to avoid abuse by workers. The letter claimed employees like truck drivers would take advantage of automatic benefits such as ten days’ paid sick leave per year: “Give it to me in writing.”
Question Grocers On Bonus
New Democrat and Liberal MPs yesterday said they’d like to recall grocery executives for questioning over alleged wage fixing. Legislators and the Commissioner of Competition have proposed to outlaw collusion between employers on workers’ pay: “Have them come back and explain.”
Rate Is Worse Than Botswana
First Nations hamlets under federal care have higher Covid death rates than Botswana despite more than a billion in emergency spending by the Department of Indigenous Services, data show. Management yesterday had no explanation: “Is that enough? No.”
$500K Too Rich For Manitoba
A Manitoba judge has discounted a defamation award by 90 percent after concluding Prairie courts are much more modest in awarding damages for libel. A Winnipeg developer who’d won a half million at trial saw his damages cut to $50,000: “Awards for defamation in that amount are virtually non-existent.”
Costs Squeezing Families: PM
Rising prices are “real pressure” for Canadians, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau yesterday told reporters. His remarks followed new Statistics Canada data that the cost of living is now rising at the fastest rate in 30 years: “What is the government’s plan to try and combat it?”
$82M Budget Item A Mystery
The Treasury Board says it does not have a single document, email or memo explaining an $81.9 million budget line item to promote vaccinations in the public service. Board President Mona Fortier could not explain the cost when questioned earlier in the Commons: “No information related to your request exists.”
Everyone Could Get Cheques
The Department of Employment yesterday budgeted up to $4 million to pay lockdown benefits to the equivalent of 100 percent of tax filers in a remote Québec hamlet. The department would not comment on discretionary cash awards approved by cabinet order: “The supports we have for people are there to be used.”
Court Issues Vax Gag Order
A Brampton, Ont. judge has issued a gag order forbidding a father from criticizing the federal vaccination program within earshot of his 10-year old son. Anything that “calls into question the safety or efficacy of the Covid-19 vaccine” is not allowed, ruled Ontario Superior Court.
Budget Office Warns On Debt
Cabinet spent half a trillion since the outbreak of the pandemic including billions that had nothing to do with Covid, the Parliamentary Budget Office said yesterday. There was little sign of restraint, added analysts: “Are we headed for very tight fiscal discipline, or are we headed for mild discipline, or are we headed for no discipline at all?”



