Air Passenger Claim Rejected

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.’

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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.”

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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.’

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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.”

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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.’

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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.’

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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.”

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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.”

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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.”

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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.”

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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.”

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