Suggest Auditors Try Google

The Canada Revenue Agency in an Offshore Compliance Audit Manual recommends auditors use Google and Facebook searches to find tax scofflaws. “The internet is a wonderful resource,” said the manual obtained through Access To Information: “Auditors should use their judgment.”

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Want Ethics Chief To Speak

Conservative MPs yesterday petitioned the Commons ethics committee to reopen televised hearings on SNC-Lavalin Group Inc. The committee’s Liberal majority last March 26 vetoed any investigation of complaints the Prime Minister and senior aides went to extraordinary lengths to quash a criminal prosecution of the company: “Canadians deserve fulsome answers.”

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Unaware Of Compensation

More than a quarter of passengers surveyed are unaware airlines are obliged to pay for lost or damaged luggage. The research at airports nationwide was conducted by the Canadian Transportation Agency prior to the July introduction of a passenger rights’ code: “Did you know airlines can be held liable?”

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Judge Explains Oil Spill Fine

A British Columbia judge has explained a seven-figure corporate fine for an offshore spill that breached three Acts of Parliament. The $2.9 million penalty over the sinking of the tug Nathan E. Stewart is equivalent to less than one percent of the operator’s revenues: “The offence was not intentional.”

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Count 49 Calls And Meetings

Senior Liberals including the Prime Minister and aides arranged at least 49 separate meetings and phone calls to discuss SNC-Lavalin Group Inc. legal troubles, Ethics Commissioner Mario Dion yesterday disclosed. The full extent of attempts to save the company from criminal prosecution is not known since officials concealed documents from investigators, wrote Dion: “The focus is on the Prime Minister.”

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Lavalin Still In The Money

SNC-Lavalin Group Inc. has continued to receive millions in federal contracts even as it sued the Government of Canada in an unsuccessful bid to avoid trial on bribery and fraud charges. Contracts totaling more than $15 million were awarded in six months, accounts show: “Why was SNC-Lavalin brought in?”

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Generics Are 25% Of Market

Canadians typically spend more on generic drugs than patients in Australia or the U.K., a federal agency said yesterday. Generics account for about 25 percent of drug sales, said the Patented Medicine Prices Review Board: “Canadians spent more on generic medicines than residents of any other OECD country except the U.S.”

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More Drownings In Pools

More Canadians drown in swimming pools than lakes or ponds, says the Public Health Agency of Canada. Analysis of years’ worth of hospital records confirmed June, July and August are the worst months for swimming fatalities: “The majority occurred in swimming pools.”

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Fed Climate Claim Unproven

There is no evidence climate change caused Canada’s costliest flood, says a Department of Environment report. Researchers said incidents of heavy rainfall are “rather random” with no detectable trends, though Environment Minister Catherine McKenna has cited extreme weather events as proof “climate change is happening now”.

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Cite Scandalous Trademarks

The federal trademark office in Access To Information records has detailed applications rejected last year as vulgar or scandalous. Under the Trademarks Act regulators may veto slogans or symbols: “Jeez-Us so nearly resembles as to be likely mistaken for Jesus and therefore would be offensive.”

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Pot User Challenges Eviction

Ontario’s Human Rights Tribunal in the first case of its kind in Canada will rule on whether landlords may evict tenants for keeping marijuana. Landlords complained Parliament’s 2018 legalization of cannabis would lead to years of court challenges over use in rental buildings: “Do I understand the Government of Canada would leave it totally to the courts?”

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Shippers’ Fees To Increase

The Coast Guard will hike icebreaking fees this winter with a “larger increase” planned in 2020, says a federal report. Auditors in the Department of Fisheries responsible for the icebreaker fleet said private shippers must pay more: ‘The cost is shouldered ultimately by Canadian taxpayers.’

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Mysterious Decline In Cash

The Bank of Canada is monitoring cash sales of cannabis after citing an unusual spike in consumer spending that coincided with legalization of marijuana last October 17. Researchers said the value of banknotes in circulation saw the largest one-month drop since 1935: “Legalization could appear to have had a significant impact on cash use.”

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Senate Audit Not ‘Thorough’

A spot audit of the Senate, the first of its kind since 2012, will exclude “thorough assessment of the expenses”. Members of the Senate budget committee ordered the audit June 13 following disclosures staff breached contracting rules: “It’s long overdue.”

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Falsified Best-Before Labels

A labour arbitrator has ordered a one-year suspension without pay for a supermarket clerk caught falsifying best-before labels. Managers disclosed they’d fired three employees for similar offences under the Food & Drugs Act that prohibits “misleading or deceptive” labeling: “These sorts of things get published in the media.”

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