Beware C-10 Says CRTC Exec

Heritage Minister Steven Guilbeault’s YouTube regulation bill C-10 will censor everyday Canadians’ uploaded content, a former vice-chair of the CRTC said yesterday. “The government itself doesn’t seem to understand what it is doing,” he said: “All Canadians communicating over the internet will do so under the guise of the state.”

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Withheld Fed Audit For Years

The Department of Transport says it has no evidence mandating Safety Management Systems at Canadian airlines actually improved safety. The department concealed the findings for two years: “A number of interviewees expressed concern that Transport Canada was ‘offloading regulations’ onto operators.”

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Vows Action On Usury Law

Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland yesterday said she will “really act” to rewrite federal usury law for the first time since 1978. The pandemic has dramatized predatory lending practices, Freeland told the Commons finance committee: “Payday lending can impose real hardship.”

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Says Every Buck’s Well Spent

Every dollar spent by the federal government benefits the economy, says a senior Department of Finance official. Nicholas Leswick, assistant deputy minister, yesterday told the Commons finance committee all money taxed and spent benefits the nation: “Did I understand that incorrectly?”

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Summon Guilbeault On C-10

MP yesterday summoned Heritage Minister Steven Guilbeault to explain his YouTube censorship bill. Members of the Commons heritage committee voted 11-0 to suspend all further hearings on the bill until Guilbeault explains federal regulation of videos intended for private viewing: “The government has gone too far.”

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Gov’t Speeds Mail Ballot Bill

Liberal and New Democrat MPs yesterday by a 176-155 vote cut short debate on a bill to allow mail-in election ballots to be counted even after federal polls close in an expected 2021 campaign. Elections Canada has predicted a hundredfold increase in mailed ballots this year: “What is the big desire to rush this bill through now?”

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MPs Want Facts On Lab Raid

MPs last night cited Iain Stewart, president of the Public Health Agency, for concealing facts over the January 20 firing of two Chinese scientists at a federal lab. Stewart invoked the Privacy Act in refusing to release uncensored records to the Commons Special Committee on Canada-China Relations: “What is going on that is being kept from us?”

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Trans Mountain ‘Profit’ $40M

Taxpayers made about $40 million on the Trans Mountain Pipeline since cabinet bought it for $4.5 billion, the Parliamentary Budget Office said yesterday. Financing costs, write-downs and construction delays were to blame for the low return, said analysts: “The Canadian approach will be to ensure that we make a profit.”

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Rights Claim On Furlough

The Canadian Human Rights Commission will formally intervene in a complaint over curbs to paid Covid furloughs for federal employees, the largest public service union said yesterday. Cabinet last November 9 restricted payments to employees who were neither sick nor working from home after costs reached $1.1 billion: “It is largely being used only when necessary.”

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Per Capita Net Debt Up 33%

The federal per capita debt jumped by a third last year to the highest rate in the nation’s history, says Statistics Canada. Each Canadians’ share of the net federal debt is expected to pass $23,000 this year: “There will be a day of reckoning.”

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MPs Scattering On Censor Bill

Heritage Minister Steven Guilbeault’s bill to regulate YouTube is stalled under Opposition filibuster as one Liberal MP acknowledged “not all Liberals are the same” on the legislation. The current bill would subject YouTube videos uploaded for private viewing to the same Codes Of Conduct as TV and radio shows: “Content individuals post on social media should not be regulated.”

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