Canada has become a leading importer of shark fins used as an Asian-style delicacy, the Senate fisheries committee was told yesterday. A private Conservative bill would ban fin imports: “Millions of sharks are left to die each year simply to meet the demand for shark fin soup.”
Defend Cash For China Bank
Finance Minister Bill Morneau last night defended a cabinet bill to invest millions in a Chinese-controlled infrastructure bank headquartered in Beijing. Members of the Senate national finance committee questioned Canada’s purchase of less than a 1% share in the bank for US$199 million: “Why are we funding pipelines in Asia?”
RCAF Triathlete Lost Benefits
An air force veteran injured in a car wreck on the way to work has lost a bid for disability benefits. A federal judge rejected the appeal on technical grounds: “I say to people, you must never give up.”
MPs Fault Equifax Managers
MPs yesterday faulted Equifax Canada Inc. over service offers it’s made to 19,000 Canadian customers whose files were hacked. The credit agency told the Commons privacy committee that victims are entitled to an apology, and a year’s worth of $50,000 identity theft insurance at no charge: “What happens after that 12 months?”
Former Aide Breached Code
A former Canadian Red Cross manager broke a federal Code Of Conduct by contacting MPs and the Prime Minister’s Office, says the Commissioner of Lobbying. There was no penalty. The RCMP investigated but did not file charges: “Obviously it is not something to be taken lightly.”
Border Bill A Privacy Worry
A cabinet bill permitting unlimited searches of cross-border travelers’ cellphones by U.S. Customs must be amended, says Privacy Commissioner Daniel Therrien. The Commissioner yesterday told the Senate national security committee that government reassurances on the bill are meaningless: “Individuals should think twice.”
Judge Cites CRA On Bullying
A federal judge has cited the Canada Revenue Agency for whitewashing employee complaints of harassment. The Agency made only a “very cursory investigation” before dismissing one woman’s allegations of workplace bullying by managers: “It is important not to trivialize harassment.”
MPs Want More Print Ads
A Commons committee yesterday recommended federal agencies resume advertising in Canadian print media. Publishers earlier shamed MPs for spending more ad dollars with Google than Canadian newspapers: “It seems to be going south.”
Wants More Migrant Labour
Agriculture Minister Lawrence MacAulay says a federal review of a farm migrant workers’ program should not curb use of foreign labour. The department earlier acknowledged “criticism from some groups” over abusive practices: “We need the workers.”
Vow Cheaper Drugs In 2019
Health Canada is promising the public cheaper prescription drugs with the first major revisions under the Patent Act since 1987. The proposals are not retroactive, and would not take effect until 2019: “Canadians are not getting value for money.”
Gov’t Toxic Clean-Up Costly
A single federal agency is budgeting nearly $400 million to clean up contaminated Crown lands. The cost of remediating all known contaminated sites is estimated at ten times as much: “There is never any guarantee we won’t find more.”
Railway Bill A Privacy Storm
Legislation to exempt train crews from federal privacy law is a “perfect storm” on workplace surveillance, says a senator. The cabinet bill would mandate locomotive video and voice recorders sought by railways: “They are important issues.”
143-Year Election Law Ends
An 1874 provision of the Canada Elections Act requiring candidates to post cash deposits is dead. Cabinet confirmed it will not appeal an Alberta Court of Queen’s Bench ruling that struck the law as unconstitutional: “More Canadians, not fewer, should be able to participate.”
CRA Admits It Hid Figures
The Canada Revenue Agency admits it knowingly misrepresented public data by claiming a 6 percent inaccuracy rate in answering taxpayers’ questions at federal call centres. Internal reviews showed the rate was at least 20 percent. Auditors said the actual fail rate went as high as 84 percent: “There hasn’t been an apology.”
Arctic Food Reform Delayed
Long-promised reforms to an Arctic food subsidy must wait another year, says Northern Affairs Minister Dr. Carolyn Bennett. The department’s own research shows Northerners don’t trust the program that costs taxpayers $78.3 million annually: “What would it look like if it actually met the needs?”



