Most federal prison breaks occur on summer Sunday evenings, typically involving escapees looking for contraband like cigarettes, says Correctional Service research. The prison system banned tobacco in 2008: “Approximately 75% of inmates in federal correctional facilities smoke.”
Gave $4M To Giant Utility
The Department of Industry gave a multi-million dollar grant to one of Canada’s largest utilities to develop electric vehicle motors, say Access To Information records. The subsidy appeared unnecessary, said one MP: “This government continues to give handouts to companies that don’t need it.”
Feds Admit Parks In Peril
More than a third of national park ecosystems, 36 percent, are in poor to fair condition due to loss of habitat, says a Parks Canada report. The list of nature preserves in peril includes some of the best-known federal parks: “It is a key measure.”
Flood Of Harassment Claims
Parliament Hill’s security service says it has been flooded with so many harassment complaints it must hire private investigators to clear the backlog. The $68.3 million-a year Parliamentary Protective Service yesterday would not detail the workplace claims: “We do not comment.”
Agency Probes Liar’s Loans
Canada Mortgage & Housing Corporation is conducting research on so-called “liar’s loans” in which homebuyers misstate income to qualify for bigger mortgages. CMHC in Access To Information records concluded outright fraud is rare, but more study is needed: “Further research in this area is warranted.”
Rush To Meet Pot Deadline
Federal authorities have not yet finalized a national order for roadside marijuana screeners just 11 weeks ahead of cabinet’s October 17 deadline to legalize recreational cannabis. The Department of Justice said it’s still evaluating devices after a pilot project showed screeners failed 13 percent of the time: “Details of those evaluations will remain confidential.”
“Political Beliefs” Complaint
A British Columbia tribunal has dismissed a human rights complaint on the basis of political belief. Seven provinces have outlawed discrimination on the basis of politics: “What greater freedom can there be?”
Red Tape Review, Again
Cabinet says it will review a 2015 law that promised to cut federal red tape. Union and business executives have described the law as ineffectual: “It was always a smoke and mirrors kind of thing.”
Poem: “Reading The Map”
Lyme disease spreads north.
Favourable conditions
from climate change
open new habitats
for the black-legged ticks.
Their heads
– less than a millimetre –
grasp what some advisors
in the Oval Office
don’t.
(Editor’s note: poet Shai Ben-Shalom, an Israeli-born biologist, examines current events in the Blacklock’s tradition each and every Sunday)

Manager Fired For Nepotism
A labour board has upheld the firing of a federal manager for nepotism. The biochemist with the Canadian Food Inspection Agency hired his brother-in-law at the lab, and awarded thousands in contracts to family-run businesses: “It is inconceivable.”
Bill Didn’t Curb Auto Theft
The number of stolen vehicles in Canada has increased eight years after Parliament passed a bill intended to curb the racket, new data show. Most provinces saw a rise in auto theft last year: “We need funding.”
Scams Put C.R.A. “At Risk”
The Canada Revenue Agency in an Access To Information memo says telephone scammers posing as tax collectors are so pervasive they’ve put the Agency’s reputation at risk. Canadians are hanging up on actual agents, the memo complained: ‘It is creating an issue.’
Only $20M In Oil Spill Fund
A compensation fund intended to save taxpayers the cost of cleanup from a catastrophic railway oil spill totals about $20 million after its second year. The fund was prompted by $409 million in claims from the 2013 Lac-Mégantic disaster: “An accident could cost $20 million or $100 million or a billion.”
Late Bid To Veto CPP Hike
A veto by Ontario’s newly-appointed Conservative cabinet could scuttle a 20 percent increase in Canada Pension Plan premiums approved by Parliament in 2016, says a business group. The Canadian Federation of Independent Business yesterday appealed for reconsideration of the premium hike: “This is our final Hail Mary pass.”
Public Wary Of Spy Agency
Canadians are wary of personal surveillance by a federal spy agency, according to in-house research by the Canadian Security Intelligence Service. More than 4 in 10 said they oppose more powers for CSIS in the name of national security. The data follow disclosures the agency spied on environmental groups, unions and former Alberta publisher Mel Hurtig: “It’s unbelievable.”



