Only 11 percent of federally-inspected hydroponic retailers supplying the cannabis trade are in compliance with pesticide regulations, says a Health Canada report. The department yesterday did not comment: “It is a relatively new and rapidly growing industry.”
Not Hired Over Marijuana
Employers are legally entitled to refuse to hire cannabis users in safety-sensitive work, the Newfoundland & Labrador Supreme Court has ruled. The decision came in the case of a St. John’s labourer denied a job for smoking marijuana off duty: “Impairment of course is a relative term.”
Feds Bury Border Reforms
A cabinet bill to appoint an ombudsman for cross-border travelers’ complaints is still being drafted, says Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale. Cabinet buried an identical bill that passed the Senate three years ago: “Goodale has been telling us over and over that it’s coming.”
Lifts Gag On Bombardier Aid
A federal judge has rejected an attempt by Bombardier Inc. to conceal details of subsidies it received from the Department of Industry. The decision follows 10 years of review and litigation: “A careful balance must be struck.”
Count 277 Whistleblowers
A total 277 federal whistleblowers have complained of reprisal for reporting misconduct in the past two years, Public Sector Integrity Commissioner Joe Friday yesterday told the Commons government operations committee. “The tone truly is set from the top,” said Friday.
Ponder Fair Wage Blacklist
The labour department in a secret Access To Information memo says it is considering a blacklist of federal contractors that do not pay fair wages. It follows Parliament’s 2012 repeal of the Depression-era Fair Wages & Hours Of Labour Act intended to “prevent a downward spiral in wages and benefits”, wrote staff.
CBC Audience Down 27%
The CBC predicts an ongoing collapse in its local TV news viewership. The audience for local suppertime newscasts has fallen 27 percent in two years, and is now a fraction the audience of the CBC’s private competitors: “Canadians are taking their eyeballs and wallets somewhere else.”
Union Seeks Fixed IOU Dates
Federal payroll systems are so dysfunctional one union yesterday said it wants fixed IOU pay dates written into its next contract. “Crazy things happen,” said Debi Daviau, president of the 60,000-member Professional Institute of the Public Service.
Target Harassers At Senate
Senators are drafting a confidential harassment policy that would see appointment of a private law firm to hear staff complaints. The initiative follows the 2017 resignation of one senator accused of improper conduct by eight current and former employees: “We can’t have that.”
Calls Rules Vomit-Inducing
Countless regulations are enough to make small business gag, the Commons industry committee was told. One tax attorney cited an Alberta-mandated guide instructing employers on how to safely hire a rent-a-car: “It makes me almost throw up.”
Hearing Crashes On Lavalin
An uproar over the SNC-Lavalin Group Inc. probe forced an abrupt end to a routine meeting of the Commons finance committee. Liberal MP Wayne Easter (Malpeque, P.E.I.), committee chair, gaveled an adjournment after members began arguing over contacts with Lavalin lobbyists: “You can’t silence me.”
Flight Frazzle Cost Fortune
Sunwing Airlines Inc. spent more than a quarter-million dollars on late luggage deliveries to customers following nightmare holiday flights last April, according to documents filed with the Canadian Transportation Agency. The regulator cited Sunwing for breach of regulations after scores of flights were delayed: “Tensions began to rise.”
Can’t Prejudge Pipeline: Feds
Cabinet says it has no deadline to resume construction of taxpayer-owned Trans Mountain Pipeline following a second licensing approval by regulators. “We are not anticipating, basically,” an official told reporters: “We are not going to cut corners.”
‘I Don’t Know’, ‘Don’t Recall’
Senior officials yesterday told the Commons justice committee they cannot remember private meetings with lobbyists for SNC-Lavalin Group Inc. Michael Wernick, Clerk of the Privy Council, replied “I don’t recall” and “I don’t know” five times when questioned by MPs. Two Liberal appointees have resigned to date over allegations the Prime Minister’s Office sought to quash a criminal prosecution of the company on corruption charges: “Is that your testimony?”
Insurance Voided Over Pot
The British Columbia Supreme Court has upheld an insurer’s refusal to pay out a house fire claim after the homeowner refused to report marijuana plants on the property. It’s the first ruling of its kind since Parliament legalized home cultivation of cannabis plants: “Would it matter if I grew tomatoes or cucumbers?”



