Fracking is inherently risky but poses only a “mild” peril in triggering earthquakes, a fracker has told the Senate transport committee. Cabinet has exempted industry from disclosing toxic chemicals used in shale gas drilling: “At the end of the day there is still risk”.
Bookkeepers Jailed In Fraud
Federal prison sentences for a pair of Vancouver tax preparers underscores a need for federal registration of all bookkeeping firms, says an industry group. The British Columbia case followed discovery of other multi-million dollar frauds: “Maybe you shouldn’t be in the business”.
A Poem: “Brothers In Arms”
The sale of arms to Saudi Arabia:
approved.
Armoured vehicles bound for the
National Guard,
protecting a pattern of tyranny and
human rights abuse.
Also on the export list:
education.
A male-only campus
in the city of Jazan
– owned and operated by
Ottawa’s Algonquin College –
offering math, English, and
engineering programs.
Training the regime’s technocrats.
And even:
potatoes.
Rich in starch,
potassium,
magnesium.
Nourishing solders,
security forces,
possibly even members of the
royal family.
Perhaps that’s what friends do.
(Editor’s note: poet Shai Ben-Shalom, an Israeli-born biologist, examines current events in the Blacklock’s tradition each and every Sunday)

Novelist Wins Copyright Suit
The Canadian author of a bestselling Holocaust novel has won a copyright lawsuit. Producers of a 2009 documentary film sought $6 million in damages from the Toronto author and her publisher. One historian who participated in the case described the verdict as astonishing.
“This should have been a slam dunk,” said Jack Granatstein, former editor of the Canadian Historical Review. “Not only is the documentary proprietary, but it’s the family’s story for God’s sake.”
Producers of the U.S. documentary No. 4 Street Of Our Lady sued after novelist Jennifer Witterick used the film’s theme as a basis for her book. The film documented the experience of one producer’s Jewish grandfather who was hidden by a Catholic farmwife in Sokal, Poland during the Second World War. The documentary was shown at numerous international film festivals including a 2012 screening at Toronto’s Holocaust Education Week, where it was seen by Witterick.
Federal Court heard that Witterick later downloaded the film and acknowledged her 2013 novel My Mother’s Secret was a “fictionalized version” of the fact-based story, wrote Justice Keith Boswell. Producers alleged thirty similarities between the film and the novel including the name and biographical details of the heroine; the fact that Jews were hidden under a kitchen floor and a pigsty loft; and a snippet of dialogue:
- • In the film, a German soldier who takes a Jewish infant remarks: “It doesn’t matter; we’ll get the mother later anyway”;
- • In the novel, the incident is recounted: “‘Doesn’t matter,’ says the German soldier. ‘We’ll get the mother later’.”
“It’s very odd to me that anyone looking at both of them would not see the straight-out plagiarism,” said Granatstein. “I read the book and watched the movie. With minor tinkering it was clear they were very much the same.” In an affidavit Granatstein said it was “inappropriate” for the novelist not to credit the filmmakers, the Court noted.
Justice Boswell dismissed the Copyright Act claim, noting no author can claim ownership of facts, even a personal narrative involving family members. “Facts are facts and no one owns copyright in them no matter what their relative size or significance,” the judge wrote. “Any alleged distinction between small and large facts is an artificial division.”
Peter Jacobsen of Bersenas Jacobsen LLP of Toronto, lawyer for the novelist and her publisher Penguin Canada Books Inc., said the judgment is an “important” interpretation of Canadian copyright law. “It reaffirms that freedom of expression allows an author to use historical fact,” Jacobsen said.
“What you cannot do is take the expression,” Jacobsen said. “Ms. Witterick did not take long quotes; there is no plot such as in the documentary; and the novel has a romantic element. In terms of expression, the two are totally different.”
Witterick, a Bay Street money manager, self-published My Mother’s Secret as her first novel before it was contracted by Penguin Canada as a Globe & Mail bestseller. Witterick told the Court that large portions of her novel were fictional and “drawn from her own experiences and imagination”.
Filmmakers said they spent three years researching their $100,000 project, including traveling to Florida and Israel to interview eyewitnesses.
By Jason Unrau 
MPs Seek Air Canada Memos
Conservative MPs are seeking confidential briefing notes and other records in alleging a “sweetheart deal” between Air Canada and the Department of Transportation. MPs filed Access To Information requests regarding a bill that protects the airline from liability for breaching an Act of Parliament: “Something changed”.
Migrant Permits Down 85%
The number of minimum-wage migrants permitted into Canada fell 85 percent last year, says the Department of Employment. The decline followed a 2014 crackdown under the Temporary Foreign Worker Program: ‘We all know the program was a scandal’.
Bill Creates Nt’l Fire Database
Statistics Canada would compile a first-ever national fire database under a private bill introduced in the Commons. The proposal followed a Natural Resources Canada forecast of more catastrophic wildfires: “I think it will save lives”.
Standard Drug Labels Sought
Health Canada should monitor guidelines on plain labeling of prescription drugs, says the chair of the Senate social affairs committee. New research by the University of Waterloo confirmed typical pharmacy labels are more difficult to read, particularly for millions of Canadians over 65: “Labels currently in use are not following guidelines”.
Gov’t Vows Partisan Ad Ban
Cabinet promises to immediately ban overtly partisan advertising by federal agencies. Government research showed past billboard and TV campaigns were costly but largely ineffective: “From this day forward government advertising using tax dollars is unacceptable”.
Face Senate Logjam On Bills
Cabinet faces a Senate logjam in attempting to speed passage of bills rushed through the Commons under closure. Legislation targeted for quick approval include a bill to allow unions in the RCMP, and another to grant Air Canada a liability waiver for breaching terms of its privatization: “Every vote now for us is a free vote”.
Post Panel Gets 6-Figure Pay
Cabinet is paying $1.3 million in bonuses and travel expenses for three months’ work by a panel of executives hired to study the post office. The Department of Public Services acknowledged more than half the task force’s entire $2 million budget will be paid to panel members under contract: ‘Per diem rates are confidential”.
Oil Consumption To Rise 22%
Greenhouse gas emissions will rise based on historic trends and current regulations, says the National Energy Board. The agency yesterday predicted a 22 percent increase in fossil fuel consumption by 2040: “I just don’t know how we’re going to meet our targets”.
Bill OKs Out-Of-Court Deals
Automakers in breach of safety laws may negotiate settlements with Transport Canada under new legislation introduced in the Senate. The bill sanctions out-of-court settlements with automakers: ‘It’s an important new element’.
See Eco-Tax On Gas Guzzlers
Cabinet will not meet its climate change targets without far-reaching policies like a federal levy on gas guzzlers and more investment in rail, a Senate panel has been told. Analysts said carbon taxes alone will not reduce greenhouse gas emissions: “Extra fees on light trucks would help”.
FINTRAC Censured In Court; Secret Fines Unfair, Arbitrary
A federal judge has cited the government’s anti-terror financing agency for procedural unfairness. The ruling followed a six-year government prosecution of a halal butcher who wired $50 cash payments to families overseas: ‘Think of the taxpayers’ money that was spent on this case’.



