Takes 13 Years To Catch Up

The Department of Finance estimates it takes immigrants about 13 years to work their way up to the Canadian average on employment income. “New immigrants have a more difficult time,” said the memo to Finance Minister Bill Morneau.

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$5M Won In Copyright Case

A federal judge has issued a $5 million award in a copyright case. The default judgment cited an internet TV operator for ignoring years’ worth of warnings to stop the broadcast of bootlegged programming: “There is no reasonable explanation.”

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Sunday Poem: “Hawking”

 

Like Einstein before him

Newton before him

Galileo before him

Copernicus before him

da Vinci before him

Aristotle before him

he couldn’t find the answer to:

“Does this make me look fat?”

 

(Editor’s note: poet Shai Ben-Shalom, an Israeli-born biologist, examines current events in the Blacklock’s tradition each and every Sunday)

Fed Bias Inquiry At VIA Rail

VIA Rail faces an inquiry by the Canadian Human Rights Commission into alleged discriminatory hiring practices against women, according to Court documents. The railway in its last Annual Report described itself as a “leader in diversity”.

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Juice Lobby Protests Guide

Lobbyists have pressed cabinet not to write fruit juice out of the Canada Food Guide, according to Access To Information records. The industry fears lost sales in the $1.6 billion-a year trade after a 2016 Senate committee report on obesity described 100% fruit juice as “little more than a soft drink without the bubbles.”

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Wants Carbon Data Disclosed

Cabinet should disclose any data it has on the financial impact of its national carbon tax, says the former chair of the Senate energy committee. Access To Information files indicate regulators as early as 2016 calculated costs and impacts on jobs, but would not release the information: “Our economy is going to hell if we continue to do this.”

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See Pressure On Fed Pensions

A typical federal employee will now spend as many years in retirement as they do in the workforce, says a pension report. Chief Actuary Jean-Claude Ménard said longer life spans are putting “upward pressure” on public service pensions: “For recent retirees, average working life is less or equal to average retirement life.”

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Feds’ Fake News Cost $577K

Ten federal agencies last year paid a national broker almost $577,000 to distribute newspaper stories ghostwritten by government employees. The payments came as Heritage Minister Mélanie Joly lamented “fake news” in Canada. Joly’s office yesterday did not comment.

Records show agencies paid $576,623 in seventeen separate contracts to News Canada Inc., a Toronto-based broker that distributes “ready-to-use, timely lifestyle content that is free of charge and copyright”, according to a management statement. Unsigned stories were identified only as “News Canada” content. Blacklock’s found weeklies from Alberta to Québec that republished items without any advisory they were written by communications staff with government departments and agencies.

Examples included Achieve Your Long-Term Financial Goals With Your Home Equity, a story placed by the Financial Consumer Agency advising homeowners on how to apply to banks for lines of credit. The item did not disclose the federal Agency draws 77 percent of its $17.6 million annual budget from banks and other lenders.

Pesticides In Canada, a story written by the Pest Management Regulatory Agency, told readers: “When used properly, you can be assured there is no risk to human health or the environment.” The story failed to note ongoing Agency reviews of three common neonicotinoid pesticides regulators have cited as environmentally toxic.

Debunking The Latest Health Fads And Myths, a News Canada item ghostwritten by the health department, said: “If you think cannabis can help relieve symptoms you are experiencing, talk to your doctor about cannabis for medical purposes”. A separate Health Canada story Teaching Your Kids To Make Healthy Choices advised readers to “start having conversations” about cannabis with children as young as 12. Neither story identified Health Canada as the author or co-sponsor of legislation to legalize marijuana.

Watch These Five Real Estate Trends placed by Statistics Canada told readers: “The condo boom continues”. An item written by staff at the Taxpayers’ Ombudsman headlined Taxpayers’ Ombudsman Reveals Top CRA Service Issues read, “You have probably heard of someone getting frustrated with the CRA” and explained how to file a complaint. The story failed to mention the Ombudsman dismissed 3 out of 4 complaints last year.

Minister Joly in a 2017 interview with La Presse described fake news as a “concern”. Other government members publicly expressed similar worries. “What is a journalist? Today with issues like fake news and so forth, there is a great deal of concern about that,” Liberal MP Kevin Lamoureux (Winnipeg North), parliamentary secretary to the Government House Leader, told the Commons last September 19.

“Freedom of the press is something we should never take for granted,” said Lamoureux. “We understand it is a fundamental pillar to good governance, to the whole issue of democracy.”

The Department of Canadian Heritage did not comment. Staff in a July 6, 2017 Memorandum To The Minister described fake news – including “state-sponsored” content – as a public policy issue. “Creators of fake news are non-traditional sources, i.e. not journalists; individuals on social media; individuals not preoccupied with facts,” said the memo obtained through Access To Information.

“Characteristics of fake news” include content that writers are “quick to create and share, and are not constrained by research or fact-checking,” wrote Joly’s staff; “The issue is complex and there is not likely one single, easy solution. (There are) limitations to actions that governments can take, e.g. cannot decide what is fake news.”

“Access to accurate information from diverse perspectives underpins our democratic institutions,” said the memo.

Joly’s department did not pay for distribution of ghostwritten stories in 2017. Others that did were Health Canada (spending a total $239,741); Statistics Canada ($61,071); the Department of Public Safety ($47,331); Industry Canada ($41,420); Commissioner of Official Languages ($37,064); Canada Revenue Agency ($35,166); the National Research Council ($30,307); Department of Immigration ($26,600); Commissioner of Privacy ($21,974); and the Financial Consumer Agency of Canada ($16,950).

By Tom Korski

14% Of Restaurants Audited

Restaurant owners suffer a high rate of tax audits, according to Canada Revenue Agency records obtained through Access To Information. A total 14 percent of all restaurants nationwide have been targeted by auditors since 2013: “Canada Revenue Agency dedicates too much energy to minor issues with small businesses and individuals.”

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Sued On Copyright, Library Seeks To Explain Copyright

The Library of Parliament, defendant in an ongoing federal copyright lawsuit, yesterday announced it will host a seminar to educate parliamentarians on copyright. The notice made no mention of the Federal Court case in which librarians admit to copying others’ work without permission or licensing fee.

The seminar Understanding Copyright For The Parliamentary Context “will provide an overview of copyright law with particular attention to issues raised in a parliamentary context,” wrote staff. “Representatives from the Senate, House of Commons and Library of Parliament will begin with an introduction to intellectual property law and copyright in general.”

The Library was named in a copyright suit by Blacklock’s three years ago after the publisher discovered staff knowingly copied work by cut-and-paste email to the CBC. Staff admitted the practice in a Statement Of Defence filed in Federal Court.

“As a library, we expected that a minimal amount of redistribution to clients would be permissible as is the case with our other electronic subscriptions,” Gilles Villeneuve, electronic services librarian, wrote in a 2015 email to the plaintiff.

Undisputed evidence showed Villeneuve bought a $157 password to Blacklock’s content, then confidentially distributed the publisher’s work by email. The Library at the time paid large licensing fees to other news media for content distribution including $59,337 to Sun Media; $31,392 to iPolitics; $22,052 to Bloomberg Finance LP; $18,000 to the Hill Times; and $17,676 to The Canadian Press.

Records showed a second librarian, Lindsay-Erin Beatty, also bought a single Blacklock’s password using a Google Mail account in the name “whimsylinds”. Beatty is manager of a Library unit called the Current Awareness Team “responsible for the development of the Library of Parliament’s electronic media monitoring service”.

The Library in its Statement Of Defence claimed unauthorized copying of publisher’s works is permitted under a Government of Canada Photocopying License and a provision of the Copyright Act that allows private copying of literary works for personal research purposes.

Library staff yesterday said the April 20 copyright seminar would address “questions about ownership of copyright”, and “use of copyrighted material by parliamentarians.” Invited guests were urged to submit questions in advance.

Seminar lecturers are parliamentary legal counsel Suzie Seo and Brandon Potter; Library analyst David Groves; and Élise Hurtubise-Loranger, Library general counsel. A joint parliamentary Library oversight committee is scheduled to meet April 19 for the first time in three years.

By Staff

Maybe Try Asbestos Tourism

A federal agency says tourism is a possible job creation scheme for mining towns hit by asbestos bans. The agency Canadian Economic Development for Québec Regions acknowledged there has been slow take-up of federal funding for diversification by former asbestos miners: “Tourism products and activities remain possible.”

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Gov’t Quiz 40% Over Budget

The Department of Canadian Heritage yesterday confirmed it fast-tracked subsidies for a failed Canada 150 venture even as a contractor skipped production deadlines. Records show spending on the $805,000 scheme went 40 percent over budget: “The final financial report will be submitted on June 1.”

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Crown Corp. Still For Sale

Cabinet says it is still attempting to privatize the nation’s only federally-owned coal export terminal after years of effort. Access To Information documents indicate an initial bid to sell Ridley Terminals Inc. fell through following First Nations protests in 2013: ‘To proceed with this sale is contrary to law.’

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Home Peril Ignored, Say Feds

Health Canada research shows most homeowners exposed to radon, even at unsafe levels, do not make necessary repairs to reduce their risk of exposure. Radon accounts for 16 percent of annual lung cancer deaths, second only to smoking: “Too many people remain unconvinced about the hazard of something that is invisible.”

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Auditors Target Beer Sales

Canada Revenue Agency is expanding a search for retail tax evaders using beer receipts. Agency lawyers asked that a federal judge issue an order for the names and addresses of bars licensed through Brewers Retail Inc.: “This is a very important topic.”

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