A Nova Scotia court has rejected a traveler’s claim for $25,000 against Air Canada for alleged theft of jewelry in luggage. The release of the judgment came as MPs opened final debate on a bill mandating the nation’s first statutory passenger bill of rights: ‘This is really something I wish had been done about ten years ago.’
1 In 5 Employees Harassed
About 1 in 5 federal employees say they have been victims of harassment at work, according to a Treasury Board survey. Forty percent of public servants questioned said they found their jobs emotionally draining: “The results are troubling.”
Gov’t Staff Like Access Curbs
Staff with two federal agencies yesterday complained to the Commons access committee of onerous public requests for documents. A cabinet bill would grant departments new powers to dismiss applications for records: “There should be some limit on that.”
Intro Shipwreck Liability Bill
Cabinet yesterday introduced legislation to force owners of all large ships to submit proof of insurance. The bill follows repeated attempts to clean Canada’s harbours of some 600 derelict vessels: “This has to stop.”
Costly Fuel Mandate Expands
Regulators are proposing to expand an ethanol mandate that’s seen producers receive subsidies of up to 10¢ a litre. Independent economists have rated the program a costly failure in meeting climate change targets: ‘The cost has been very high.’
Expense Probe At Gov’t Corp.
Access To Information records show the 2016 firing of a Crown corporation CEO followed a confidential probe of expenses and alleged “misappropriation” of travel rewards points. Authorities have refused to release details of an in-house forensic audit of the Freshwater Fish Marketing Corporation: “We ask that you not comment on whether there is an investigation.”
MPs Pass Drug Driving Bill
The Commons has passed a marijuana-impaired driving bill on warnings cabinet failed to address the impact on workplace drug bans. MPs approved the bill on a voice vote, with a formal recorded vote scheduled for later today: ‘They’ll blame the provinces when this thing becomes a complete national mess.’
Feds Reveal Record Payment
A federal agency has disclosed a record $31 million payment by pharmaceutical giant GlaxoSmithKline for irregular pricing in Canada. The voluntary compliance agreement is detailed in the latest annual report of the Patented Medicine Prices Review Board: ‘It’s a record, one-time excess revenue repayment.’
Predict Carbon Tax Closures
A national panel of economists says cabinet should consider subsidies for industries hardest hit by the 2018 carbon tax. The Ecofiscal Commission warned of so-called carbon leakage that would see exporters having to “eat those costs” or move production out of Canada: “It’s a thing you want to avoid.”
Say Tanker Ban Not Enough
Cabinet should expand a Pacific coastal oil tanker ban, witnesses have told the Commons transport committee. The bill codifies a voluntary ban adopted following the 1989 Exxon Valdez spill in Alaska’s Prince William Sound: “Our citizens deserve equal protection.”
Bankers Grilled On Equifax
Members of the Senate banking committee yesterday faulted the Canadian Bankers Association over a breach of customers’ data provided to Equifax Inc. Credit records on 8,000 Canadians were hacked: “How do you regain my trust?”
1874 Election Law Is Struck
Elections Canada says it will comply with an Alberta order that strikes a 143-year requirement that all candidates for Parliament post a cash deposit. The Court of Queen’s Bench said the law breached Canadians’ Charter rights: “Elections Canada implements the decisions of the courts.”
Spam Law ‘Anti-Free Speech’
Canada’s anti-spam law infringes on free speech and should be amended, the Commons industry committee was told yesterday. MPs will rewrite the 2014 law that sets broad restrictions on unsolicited email: “It does not distinguish between one-off emails and bulk emails.”
eBay Appeals For Tax Break
Executives with eBay Canada Ltd. are appealing for a hike in the GST-free rate for cross-border goods. Canadian retailers have denounced the proposal as an incentive to “literally shop anywhere else”.
Question Delays In Drug Act
Senators are questioning delays in Health Canada’s enactment of a drug safety bill passed in Parliament in 2014. The department earlier met with lobbyists to discuss a proposal to “reduce the burden” on drug companies: “Parliament passed this legislation without a dissenting vote.”



