Won’t Curb Land Speculators

The Senate agriculture committee is dismissing any federal regulation of foreign purchases of Canadian farmland. Senators in a report concluded suburban sprawl, not offshore speculation, is to blame for rising land prices: “Does it really matter?”

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Pot Seizures Worth ½ Tonne

The Canada Border Services Agency annually confiscates nearly half a tonne of marijuana at land crossings and airport checkpoints, according to Access To Information records. The Agency has not detailed its enforcement plans if Parliament legalizes cannabis: “We only seize a small portion of that drug.”

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Bid Rig Trial Examines Diary

Crown prosecutors yesterday cited work diary entries by a former Library & Archives Canada manager as evidence of a bid rigging scheme. Prosecutors allege agency staff gave inside information to a favoured contractor in 2009: “There are a lot of coincidences that don’t fit.”

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Gov. Gen. Gets Downsized

Federal planners propose to downsize living quarters for the Governor General. Vice-regal appointees currently live in the palatial 95,000-square foot Rideau Hall, the biggest official residence in Canada: ‘It is a less than private space.’

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Count 10K Media Job Cuts

The Department of Canadian Heritage in a confidential memo counts 10,000 media job cuts nationwide in the past twelve years. Canadians should be resigned to less news coverage, the memo said: “Trusted media outlets are shrinking.”

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No Favouritism, Court Told

The judge in a federal $3.5 million bid rigging trial questioned the point of prosecutor’s questioning of casual 2009 meetings between contractors and Library & Archives Canada managers. Prosecutors allege three archives employees gave inside tips to a favoured consultant in breach of federal law: “Why do you say that?”

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Toxic Clean-Up Now $6B

Costs to clean up contaminated federal lands across Canada are now estimated at $6.3 billion, the highest figure to date. Environment Canada said only a fraction of more than 23,000 abandoned military bases, factory yards and other sites have been assessed: “If a site has not been assessed they don’t have to include it.”

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Gov’t Subsidy Lawsuit Lost

A judge has dismissed a legal challenge of millions in subsidies for Canada’s last federally-owned marine shipper. Grants to cover yearly losses by Marine Atlantic Inc. are a political decision, the Federal Court ruled: ‘The core of the complaint is subsidization is anti-competitive.’

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Poem: “Light Rail Transit”

 

In early February 2018

Ottawa marked its own

Groundhog Day.

 

The 2 billion dollar LRT project

– “On time and on budget” –

officially delayed.

 

Six more months of digging,

said the Mayor who, apparently,

saw his shadow.

 

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

Gov’t Fires Marijuana Users

The Department of Public Works has fired two employees for using marijuana on the jobsite. Staff yesterday did not comment. Cabinet has no guidelines for enforcement of workplace drug bans under its bill to legalize recreational cannabis: “Employees had consumed marijuana within working hours.”

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Trial Targets Free Lunches

Crown prosecutors yesterday alleged a former Library & Archives Canada manager breached a federal ethics code by accepting a free lunch from a contractor. The testimony came in a $3.5 million bid rigging trial at Ontario Superior Court: “You didn’t see any conflict?”

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Fed Tax Hike Worth $356M

Cabinet’s tax hike on family-owned businesses is worth about 90 percent more than the Department of Finance claimed, says the Parliamentary Budget Office. Analysts yesterday calculated an obscure tax rule that took effect January 1 will raise $356 million in new federal revenue this year, not the $190 million reported by the department: “We don’t know if, and how, the Department of Finance scaled its estimate.”

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Legal Dealings “Suspicious”

Three years after losing a Supreme Court judgment, a federal agency says it still wants lawyers to report on client transactions, according to Access To Information records. Staff at the Financial Transactions and Reports Analysis Centre (FINTRAC) complained of “suspicious” dealings in the legal profession: ‘Large cash transactions are not being reported.’

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Bootlegging In Prize Ribbon

The Canadian promoters of the Consumer Choice Award are in Federal Court alleging bootleg use of unauthorized prize ribbons. The company alleges one contractor improperly claimed it was a seven-year winner: ‘False representations undermine the credibility.’

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MPs Would Punish Railways

MPs yesterday demanded cash penalties on Canada’s two largest railways over service complaints. The Commons agriculture committee postponed til March 19 a full hearing on grievances by grain shippers: “The only thing CN and CP react to is fines.”

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