Need ‘Cultural Shift’ On Tax

The Canada Revenue Agency in an Access To Information memo says the country needs a “cultural shift” to boost tax collections. Release of the memo follows research that about a quarter of taxpayers consider it worth the risk to cheat on their yearly returns: “Part of the problem is the Canada Revenue Agency itself.”

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Question 50,000 Jobs Claim

The Department of Industry is hiring consultants to verify its job creation claims under a billion-dollar subsidy program. Industry Minister Navdeep Bains has claimed 50,000 new jobs, though similar forecasts have been inflated: “You’re making an assumption.”

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Try To Block Senate Reports

The Department of Veterans Affairs has fought against the admissibility of Senate committee reports in Court as mere hearsay. Aging veterans waging a class action lawsuit sought to put in evidence the findings of a Senate investigation that warned of inadequate medical care: “This case seems unique.”

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Won’t Disclose Aid To China

The Department of Foreign Affairs yesterday would not disclose how much it continues to give in foreign aid to China. The Conservative Party proposed to cut global aid spending by 25 percent including contributions to wealthy dictatorships. China has a $13 trillion economy and $10 billion space program: “Information is not available at the present time.”

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Blank On Fisheries Reform

The Department of Fisheries in an Access To Information memo says it has no suggestions on how to curb foreign influence in the multi-million dollar commercial Pacific fishery. Cabinet never responded to a May 7 report by the Commons fisheries committee that complained of concentrated ownership: “We’ve created a modern-day feudal system.”

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Judge Reviews Sex Complaint

A federal judge has ordered the Canadian Human Rights Commission to investigate the complaint of a bank employee who alleged staff exchanged “sex for favours”. The Federal Court faulted investigators for a slipshod review of the case: “All these young guys with very little qualifications are getting promoted.”

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A $2M Move To Jerusalem

A Conservative Party proposal to move Canada’s embassy to Jerusalem from Tel Aviv would cost $2 million, the Parliamentary Budget Office said yesterday. Then-Prime Minister Joe Clark promised a similar move forty years ago but shelved the plan on protests from banks and Bombardier Inc.: ‘We perfectly understand it cannot be acceptable to Arab countries.’

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Board OKs Cannabis Firings

A labour board has upheld the firing of two federal employees arrested for possession of marijuana in 2015. The married couple failed to uphold ethical standards expected of staff, said the Public Sector Labour Relations and Employment Board: “I didn’t think I would get caught.”

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Vets Wait Longer Than Ever

The Department of Veterans Affairs says it cannot explain a near doubling in wait times to process disability benefit claims. The department’s report contradicted public remarks by Veterans Minister Lawrence MacAulay: “You can never be sure.”

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$7B In Higher Tax Revenues

The Liberal Party forecasts an increase of nearly $7 billion in tax revenue next year with most gains anticipated through spending reviews and closure of undefined tax loopholes. “The whole point here is to be completely transparent,” said MP Ralph Goodale (Regina-Wascana), co-chair of the Party platform committee.

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‘Moral’ Duty To Repay Loan

An Alberta judge in an unusual ruling has overturned a bankruptcy court decision and ordered an ex-student to repay thousands in loans. Court of Queen’s Bench Justice Douglas Mah called repayments a “moral obligation” to taxpayers: “Her sole purpose for the bankruptcy was to avoid her student loan debt.”

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Paid Them More Than MPs

A Crown bank approved high fees to consultants totaling nearly $9 million in six months. Twenty-two consultants were paid more than an MP, according to Access To Information records at Export Development Canada. The agency censored hourly rates it approved for contractors: “Parliament doesn’t pay too much attention.”

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Dep’t At A Loss For Words

The Department of Finance in an Access To Information memo says no “simple set of words” can fulfill a promise to cut inefficient fossil fuel subsidies. Cabinet has vowed to overhaul aid for oil, gas and mining companies by 2025 but has yet to calculate what subsidies are worth: “Difficult things are difficult.”

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