The Department of Employment is accused of gagging free speech in a second lawsuit over its Canada Summer Jobs program. The department to date has rejected 1,559 applications from employers who refused to sign a government oath: “We will not take it lightly.”
Energy Board Fears Violence
The National Energy Board is placing a rush order for security consultants amid ongoing protests against the Trans Mountain oil pipeline. The Board in a notice said it needs “protective measures” to safeguard employees: “This is unnecessary but not surprising.”
Feds Plot Victoria Tsunami
Federal researchers predict a major earthquake off the British Columbia coast could trigger a 16-foot tsunami that would destroy the provincial legislature. Tsunami modeling was done for the Canadian Coast Guard that operates a Victoria station 1.5 kilometres from the B.C. assembly: “The region is now considered under high risk.”
Electric Car Plan Is Costly
The Department of Natural Resources spent $62.5 million on 112 green vehicle charging stations, the equivalent of $558,000 each, says Natural Resources Minister Jim Carr. “We’re on a trajectory of growth,” Carr told the Commons natural resources committee.
Sugar Campaign Pushback
Health Canada faces a consumer pushback with a proposed campaign to have Canadians drink less soda pop. In-house research found most consumers don’t believe sweetened beverages like soda, fruit juice and chocolate milk are the leading source of sugar intake in the nation’s diet: “They do not feel compelled.”
Reforms Follow Missing $7M
The Department of Finance proposes new anti-fraud rules on federal safekeeping of unclaimed cash after Blacklock’s uncovered $7 million in suspicious payments from dormant savings accounts. No police were called after Bank of Canada staff admitted to paying millions in “high risk” claims: ‘How could an amount that size be paid out without an audit?’
Cabinet Rejects eBay Tax
Finance Minister Bill Morneau has vetoed a Commons trade committee proposal to charge GST on Canadian sales by foreign-based internet retailers like eBay. Small businesses complained tax-free electronic retailing hurt local storekeepers: “We need a taxation system that is fair.”
Anthem Rewrite Only A Start
Canadians flooded the Prime Minister’s Office with more proposed changes to O Canada after MPs voted for gender-neutral lyrics. Critics had warned of endless pleas for revisions once the anthem was opened to amendment: “Can’t you leave well enough alone?”
Post Rate Hike Worth $26M
A planned 6 percent rise in stamp prices will cost Canadians, mainly small business, a total $26 million next year, says the post office. The Crown corporation noted mail volumes fell by millions the last time it raised prices in 2014: “It makes no sense at all.”
PM Pays $100 Ethics Penalty
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has been fined $100 for another breach of Parliament’s ethics code, this time involving a gift from the Premier of Prince Edward Island. Neither the breach nor fine were disclosed until Parliament prepared to adjourn for summer recess.
“The Prime Minister has great respect for the work of the Commissioner’s office and will continue to follow his advice and guidance,” said Eleanore Catenaro, press secretary to the Prime Minister. The Commissioner did not comment.
Trudeau was censured for failing to disclose a 2017 gift from P.E.I. Premier Wade MacLauchlan, two pairs of leather-covered aviator sunglasses valued at some $700. The glasses were donated by an Island manufacturer, Fellow Earthlings Co. of Guernsey Cove, P.E.I.
Under the Conflict Of Interest Act all public office holders must disclose within 30 days any gifts valued at $200 or more. The Prime Minister paid his fine on June 18, nearly a year after skipping the deadline.
Trudeau was photographed wearing the handout eyewear on a subsequent 2017 visit to Vietnam. Staff blamed a clerical mistake for the breach of the Act.
“This was a gift from the Premier of Prince Edward Island,” said Secretary Catenaro. “As a result of administrative error, the proper forms were not completed and the gift was not declared within 30 days.”
Catenaro declined further comment. Premier MacLauchlan’s office did not elaborate. “The Premier is always pleased to showcase locally-made products,” said Mary Moszynski, spokesperson.
The Act permits modest fines up to $500. Penalties are typically nominal. Finance Minister Bill Morneau in 2017 was fined $200 for failing to disclose all his corporate directorships.
James Fitz-Morris, a former CBC reporter now director of communications for the Minister of Crown-Indigenous Affairs, was fined $200 for failing to sell penny stock in a Peruvian potash company. Dan Brien, communications director for the Minister of Public Safety, was fined $100 for ignoring repeated requests from the Ethics Commissioner to sell investments in a U.S. real estate fund. “I told them, ‘Oh, gosh, I’m sorry,'” Brien said in an earlier interview.
Commissioner Mario Dion in a March 7 letter to the Commons ethics committee sought amendments to the Act that would allow for stiffer penalties. “This would help to build trust with the Canadian public,” wrote Dion.
Trudeau’s sunglasses fine came six months after he was cited for accepting a $215,000 vacation on a private Bahamian island owned by the Aga Khan. The Prime Minister apologized for the holiday with family, staff and friends over Christmas 2016.
The Conflict Of Interest Code For MPs prohibits legislators from accepting gifts that “might reasonably be seen to have given to influence them in the exercise of an official power, duty or function.” The Aga Khan Foundation has received $330 million in federal grants since 1981.
“Neither Mr. Trudeau nor his family should have vacationed on the Aga Khan’s private island,” said the December 20 Trudeau Report by the ethics office; “Mr. Trudeau has a number of official dealings relating to the Aga Khan and his institutions where he was exercising an official power, duty or function.”
By Tom Korski 
Stamp Prices To Rise 6%
Canada Post is raising stamp rates 6 percent in a hike originally vetoed by cabinet three years ago. The rate increase would see consumers pay up to $1.05 to mail a domestic letter that cost 54¢ as late as 2010: “It hurts small business more than others.”
Accommodate Or Pay $20K
Federally-regulated employers are liable for compensation payments of up to $20,000 to individuals who suffer discrimination on the basis of ability. A cabinet bill says offences would include “attitudinal” barriers to the disabled: “The legislation has to have teeth.”
Seeks $30M Privacy Penalties
Corporations that flagrantly breach federal privacy law would be subject to maximum $30 million fines under a Commons bill. It follows complaints by the House privacy committee that scofflaws face few sanctions in Canada: “What we need is a regulator.”
MP Protests Corp. Crime Bill
A Conservative MP yesterday protested quick passage of a cabinet bill waiving jail time for white-collar criminals. The provision inserted in a 560-page omnibus budget bill passed into law without debate or committee scrutiny.
“I’m very disappointed that you can’t simply explain why this makes Canadians safer,” MP Dan Albas (Central Okanagan-Similkameen, B.C.) told the Commons finance committee. The amendment to the Criminal Code permits so-called “deferred prosecution agreements” that allow corporate executives to escape jail for bribery, money-laundering or other offences. A 2017 federal discussion paper acknowledged the practice is controversial.
Finance Minister Bill Morneau defended the bill. “We think it’s a prudent way to ensure we have companies pay the price for any wrongdoing in a way that allows us to ensure our economy continues to be successful,” said Morneau.
The Criminal Code amendment was inserted on the 531st page of Bill C-74 without comment by cabinet. It passed into law June 14. MP Albas noted the provision was never submitted to scrutiny by the Commons justice committee or Senate legal and constitutional affairs committee:
- MP Albas: “You’ve made it effectively where big corporations can get a get-out-of-jail card free for money laundering. Why do you think that makes Canadians safe?”
- Morneau: “Perhaps you can provide more detail on how you’ve come to this conclusion.”
- MP Albas: “Bill C-74, Division 20. You’ve made a change that includes a schedule in the Criminal Code that includes money laundering, that effectively gives large corporations a get-out-of-jail card. Do you not remember your own legislation?”
- Morneau: “How is it that you see this gives an organization a get-out-of-jail-free card? I’m trying to understand.”
- MP Albas: “A deferred prosecution agreement basically allows you to not have any consequences in a court of law for cases of proven, found money-laundering. Your legislation, Minister. How does that make Canadians safer?”
- Morneau: “Well, I think there may be a fundamental misunderstanding on your part of what we’re trying to achieve here.”
Division 20 allows prosecutors on finding evidence of corporate corruption to “establish a remediation regime” that would see executives escape a prison sentence in exchange for payment of a fine and “voluntary disclosure of the wrongdoing”. The agreements would require cabinet and court approval.
“We have a method that gets those organizations to pay the price of their criminality or their bad behaviour, and it doesn’t in any way negatively impact their employees, or other unwitting people that happen to work in those organizations,” said Morneau.
The Department of Public Works in a 2017 paper Expanding Canada’s Toolkit To Address Corporate Wrongdoing described prosecution of white-collar criminals as costly and time-consuming – “Investigations may take years,” wrote staff – but acknowledged no-jail agreements are controversial.
“The chief argument that has been made against deferred prosecution agreements is that they may not deter misconduct,” said Wrongdoing. “Some argue that agreements have become ‘a cost of doing business’, allowing corporations to buy their way out of trouble by paying a financial penalty and passing the costs onto the consumer.”
Commissioner of Elections Yves Côté in 2016 waived prosecution of Canada’s largest engineering company, SNC-Lavalin Group, after executives illegally funneled $109,616 in donations to the Liberal Party. A single manager, Normand Morin, retired executive vice-president, was charged May 17 with five counts of alleged illegal cash donations in breach of the Canada Elections Act.
By Staff 
More Carbon Tax Exemptions
Cabinet has quietly approved another carbon tax exemption, this one for commercial aviation in the Territories. A Conservative senator who won the concession predicted more appeals for tax waivers as the Greenhouse Gas Pollution Pricing Act takes effect: ‘The precedent has been set.’



