MPs are questioning whether to wind up a Crown corporation so dysfunctional it failed three audits and fired its CEO. Members of the Commons public accounts committee yesterday cited “jaw-dropping” misconduct at the agency: “This is a Crown agency. Wow.”
MPs To Hold Steel Hearings
The Commons industry committee will vote to hold hearings on development of a national steel policy. Steelmakers blame cheap state-subsidized imports and weak procurement policies for Canada’s declining share of world production: “Is Canada going to be in steel?”
MPs To Rewrite Spam Law
Anti-spam legislation has failed to combat malicious emails, MPs yesterday told hearings of the Commons industry committee. A statutory review of the 2014 law is expected to result in amendments: “Everybody has told us it is way too broad.”
Union Visits Too ‘Emotional’
The Federal Court of Appeal has ruled union organizers have no automatic right to hold jobsite walkthroughs or meetings during business hours. The ruling followed complaints from a Health Canada manager that discussion of union business made staff “emotional” and talkative.
Gov’t Completes Carbon Tax Analysis; Won’t Release Data
The Department of Natural Resources has completed a confidential analysis on potential “negative economic impacts” of the national carbon tax on forest products companies and other sectors. Staff yesterday would not release the study. Forestry mills put costs at up to $275 million a year: “For some mill operators it will have a significant impact.”
Won’t Prosecute Corporations
The Department of Public Works proposes to waive prosecution of corporate criminals as too costly and time-consuming. Federal agencies earlier dismissed sanctions against Canada’s largest engineering firm for offshore bribery and illegal campaign contributions: “I don’t want a bureaucrat to simply be able to cut a deal behind closed doors.”
$100M/Yr For Coolant Regs
New Environment Canada regulations on a common coolant will cost supermarkets, appliance distributors and foam manufacturers the equivalent of $100 million a year. Cabinet yesterday served notice the greenhouse gas rules will take effect in 2018: “Upfront costs would be incurred in some cases.”
Privacy Not A Police Matter
The RCMP yesterday told a Senate committee that privacy breaches are not a police matter. Research by the Privacy Commissioner concluded Canadians want to see penalties for the loss, theft or unauthorized use of personal information: “While unfortunate, it’s not necessarily a crime.”
Will Try Again On Access Act
Cabinet says it will rewrite an Access To Information bill dubbed regressive by MPs and the federal Information Commissioner. The bill tightens disclosure of public records despite a 2015 Ministerial Mandate promise to make documents open by default: “You promised to be different.”
Smurf Cartoon Led To Firing
A Yellowknife court has awarded a $50,000 judgment for defamation in the case of an office hoax over a Smurf cartoon. Two staffers of a Tribal Council were fired over the 2015 incident: “Damages must reflect the harm done.”
Pharmacare Vetoed 246 to 43
The Commons last night rejected a motion to negotiate a national pharmacare program with provinces. MPs dismissed the proposal by a vote of 246 to 43: “There are a lot of moving parts.”
Liberals Question Spam Law
Liberal MPs are questioning the effectiveness of a federal anti-spam law. Members of the Commons industry committee yesterday heard complaints the 2014 regulations pester legitimate business without curbing malicious emails from foreign spammers: ‘I’m wondering about the efficacy of the whole exercise.’
Protests Over Work Cameras
Unifor yesterday appealed to MPs to amend a cabinet bill exempting train crews from federal privacy law. The legislation, sought by crash investigators, mandates installation of video and voice recorders in locomotives: “It’s going to hurt.”
Tax Credit Called A Windfall
The Department of Finance says a Conservative bill offering tax credits to restore heritage buildings would merely subsidize corporations and wealthy homeowners. The bill, endorsed in principle by MPs, would cost $55 million a year: “Their default position is always ‘no’.”
Gov’t Joins Israeli Tax Probe
The Canada Revenue Agency is seeking confidential records as part of an international probe of alleged tax evasion through Israel’s largest bank. Auditors filed Federal Court applications seeking client information at the Royal Bank, the Bank of Montreal and Toronto Dominion: ‘The Minister seeks verification.’



