The Elections Commissioner is determining whether the post office breached federal law with a carefully worded mail-out justifying service cuts. All parties but Conservatives in the last Parliament pledged to halt cuts to home mail delivery: ‘We expect them to play by the rules’.
Count 432,000 Errors A Year
Federal tax collectors see nearly a half-million errors a year on Social Insurance Numbers, according to newly-released data. The figures include tens of thousands of invalid numbers submitted after cabinet cancelled the issue of SIN cards: ‘This could help’.
New Security After Jail Break
New security systems including “panic buttons” are being installed at a federal border crossing alarmed by last June’s escape of American fugitives near Québec. Canada Border Services Agency did not comment: “These are killers”.
Says Time’s Short On Strategy
A greying Canada will be calling for greater government assistance, says a new national study. The Institute for Research on Public Policy said Parliament’s stated aim of seeing pensioners avoid institutional care will require planning: “They don’t much care about whose mandate it is to do it”.
CBC Sued On Copyright; 2nd “Frustrating” Case In 2 Years
The CBC is in court for the second time in two years on complaints it breached copyright law. The Crown corporation is accused of broadcasting famous images of a 2014 winter storm without permission: “There is frustration”.
Trademark Feud Ends In Jail
A federal judge has ordered a businessman be jailed for violating the Trademarks Act and ignoring a court order to pay thousands of dollars in penalties. The unusual ruling follows three years of litigation: ‘It was brazen indifference’.
Seek All-Canada Energy Star
A national panel is devising Canada’s own version of the U.S. Energy Star program on efficiency. Executives commissioned Duke University to research an equivalent system for sub-Arctic industry: “We want to give ourselves the same benchmarks”.
Recession Clobbers Retailers
Canadian retailers in the first quarter of 2015 saw the largest three-month decline in employment of any sector in fifteen years, according to new Statistics Canada figures. The massive job losses coincided with layoffs and store closures at Future Shop, Sears Canada and other chains: “There is considerable restructuring going on”.
Gov’t Pondered USSR Exodus
Cabinet in 1958 considered stripping a minority religious group of its Canadian citizenship and paying to deport members to Russia, according to newly-released files. The mass exodus was requested by the British Columbia government, but never approved on fears of bad publicity: ‘It would be a mass movement by ship from Vancouver to Vladivostok’.
Counselling For 15,000 Staff
The Canada Border Services Agency is contracting psychologists to counsel 15,271 staff on workload and job stress. It follows Agency orders for credit and background security checks on all employees: ‘Counselling is voluntary’.
Panic Loan Terms Updated
The Bank of Canada is gaining new powers to buy U.S. Government bonds and other securities in case of financial panic. New regulations under the Bank Act are retroactive to September 25: ‘It’s like a pawnbroker will accept watches’.
Shelter Crisis Stark Say Cities
A “stark” crisis on housing for the nation’s greying population faces a new Parliament, say Canada’s cities. The Federation of Canadian Municipalities yesterday appealed for a national policy to shelter the aged: “We are now discussing how we can react to the aging population when we have known about it for years”.
Mounties Kept Tabs On Stars
The RCMP kept files on Paul Robeson, Maurice Chevalier and Pablo Picasso under a cabinet order to keep Communist subversives out of the country. Newly-released memos show cabinet rated Robeson risky, but feared looking “ridiculous” if it banned Picasso from visiting Canada.
Fifties-era Communist files of the RCMP Security Service and federal departments were released through Access To Information. Records show in 1956 the cabinet intervened to cancel a 17-city tour by Paul Robeson as a “United States Communist” though the singer had performed in Canada in 1945, 1946 and 1947.
Then-Immigration Minister Jack Pickersgill “raised this matter in cabinet on March 29 and his proposal to refuse entry was approved,” read a 1956 memo. The immigration department concluded Robeson’s Montréal agent Jerome Concerts & Artists Ltd. “is thought to be communist-controlled.”
“This was to be a straight concert tour and it was understood that Robeson would not attend meetings of any kind,” noted one memo; “Half the house has already been sold for the Ottawa appearance.”
A 1948 cabinet order permitted authorities to refuse a visa to anyone “seeking admission to Canada for the purpose of engaging in subversive propaganda” under the Immigration Act. The blacklist remains censored.
Jerome Myers, Robeson’s agent, protested the ban in private appeals to the Department of External Affairs. “To our knowledge not a single country in the British Commonwealth would today prevent Mr. Robeson from coming to present a concert tour,” Myers wrote. “We consider the Department ruling a high-handed and arbitrary interference in the concert management business and a denial of a renowned artist’s right to perform before the Canadian people.”
Files on Robeson date from 1952, when he scheduled a concert date in Vancouver. “I emphatically protest the entry of this man into Canada,” wrote Liberal MP Tom Goode of Burnaby, B.C. The department replied Robeson would be watched “if there is any suggestion he is going outside his sphere as a singer.”
“We’d Make Ourselves Ridiculous”
A 1950 invitation to Pablo Picasso to attend a Toronto convention of the Canadian Peace Congress prompted similar protests. “A confidential source reports that plans are being made,” the RCMP reported in a March 6, 1950 memo; “An unnamed ‘speaker from France’ has been promised.”
“The Communists have played a leading role in both the World Peace Congress and the Canadian Peace Congress and probably control both,” the Mounties said; “These movements follow the Communist line on international politics.”
“It is possible that Picasso may attempt to secure a Canadian visa and come to Canada to attend the conference,” the memo continued, describing Picasso as a “well-known artist”. Picasso never applied for a visa, to the relief of External Affairs Department staff.
“If…Picasso came to Canada he would presumably be engaged in addressing meetings and other public activities. He could obviously do less harm than a Communist who entered Canada secretly,” staff wrote; “We would make ourselves ridiculous in these matters as our friends south of the border so frequently do.”
The RCMP agreed to let Maurice Chevalier visit Montréal in 1951 though he was banned from entering the U.S. that year as a suspected Communist sympathizer. Chevalier had signed a Peace Congress-sponsored petition to ban the atomic bomb.
The Mounties in a June 19, 1951 memo depicted Chevalier as a harmless crooner duped by Reds: “Mr. Chevalier stated that he regretted having signed this petition, having done so without realizing its significance. This dishonest document has deceived a large number of people, including Canadian and United States citizens, and in view of these facts Mr. Chevalier’s signature to the document was not considered sufficient to prevent his temporary stay in the country.”
In Montréal Chevalier told reporters that “millions of Frenchmen have signed” the petition, and insisted he had no interest in politics. “Somebody came around asking if I was against the bomb, no matter who used it,” he said. “Well, nobody likes the atom bomb.”
The RCMP Security Service was formally disbanded in 1984 following disclosure of illegal activities.
By Tom Korski 
Feds Pressed On Pharmacare
Health Canada faces more demands for a national pharmacare plan. Delegates to an Ottawa conference of the National Pensioners Federation urged “meaningful” steps to Canada-wide coverage of costly prescriptions: “It is tragic and unfair”.
Union Sues On Worksite Peril
A federal board faces a court challenge on complaints it failed to properly investigate workplace health and safety complaints at Air Canada. The Canadian Union of Public Employees refused comment on its Federal Court application: “There was indeed a mixture of chemicals in the cabin air”.



