Fishery Reforms Due June 21

The fisheries department will detail by June 21 a timeline for restoration of “lost” habitat protection, says Minister Hunter Tootoo. Cabinet has promised to repeal 2012 amendments to the Fisheries Act that limited the scope of regulations: “Before too long we’ll come out with a plan”.

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Employers Bid To Save Bills

Business groups are appealing to MPs to salvage some portion of two Conservative labour bills slated for repeal. The previous cabinet enacted the twin bills in 2015: “A gap exists in Canada with respect to the fairness of our union rules”.

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Cabinet Nixes Air Complaint

An unhappy Air Canada passenger has lost a bid to petition cabinet against airline surcharges. Ministers dismissed an appeal of a Canadian Transportation Agency decision that upheld the company’s right to bill passengers for fuel in the name of “air transportation charges”.

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MPs Hurry ‘Outsourcing’ Act

Parliament last night on a 165 to 131 vote approved in principle a cabinet bill waiving Air Canada’s liability for illegally transferring maintenance work out of the country. The Commons Liberal majority forced the Second Reading vote after cutting short debate. Cabinet denied rushing the bill to clear the way for new subsidies for Air Canada supplier Bombardier Inc.: ‘What other sweetheart deals are in store?’

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Sport Subsidy Under Review

The heritage department is reviewing its Own The Podium subsidy program in anticipation of the August 5 Olympics in Rio de Janeiro. The scrutiny follows disappointing results at the 2012 London Games that saw Canada finish behind Hungary and Ukraine: “This is a very important issue to me”.

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No Comment On Refit Plan

Cabinet will not commit to reviving a popular home energy refit program cancelled in 2012 due to the costly number of applications. Environment Minister Catherine McKenna said cabinet is “always looking for solutions” to climate change, but made no mention of reinstating the subsidy plan: ‘It’s not a trick question’.

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Feds Quiet On Border Project

A $400 million plan to privatize scores of Canada Border Services Agency land crossings is being endorsed by Conservatives. Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale has declined comment on the program quietly drafted by Agency management: “Just because it’s run by the government doesn’t mean it can’t be done better”.

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MPs Pressed On Equity Law

Parliament must legislate pay equity as a statutory right, union executives have told a Commons special committee. MPs are to report by June 10 on a House motion to develop a proactive federal pay equity regime: “Equity is a right, not an interest”.

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Say Police, Not Paramilitary

The RCMP is not a paramilitary group and should not be restricted from full collective bargaining, the Commons public safety committee has been told. Police delegates protested restrictions in a cabinet bill sanctioning a first-ever Mounties’ union: “This skews the whole process”.

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MPs Rushing Air Canada Bill

MPs are speeding passage of an Air Canada concession bill. The Commons transport committee agreed to interrupt ongoing hearings on rail safety to report the bill by May 16. Members would not say if quick scrutiny was tied to cabinet consideration of $1.3 billion in subsidies sought by Air Canada contractor Bombardier Inc.: “Move this thing along”.

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Most Stressful Job In Canada

Public service executives suffer more stress than most Canadians with 1 in 4 reporting burnout, says a Treasury Board memo. The document obtained through Access To Information lamented that civil servants live in an age of disruption: “Government is struggling to keep up”.

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Drug Plans Said Weak, Costly

The nation’s patchwork of drug insurance plans sees Canadians pay needlessly high costs for prescriptions, the Commons health committee has been told. MPs are studying the feasibility of a universal pharmacare plan though Health Canada has already vetoed the scheme this term: “At the end of the day it’s not free”.

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Won’t Reveal Tobacco Funds

An advocacy group funded in part by cigarette manufacturers is urging that cabinet take more steps to curb tobacco smuggling by First Nations. The National Coalition Against Contraband Tobacco would not disclose what financing it accepts from corporate sponsors: “You’ll have to contact my members”.

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Gov’t Drops Google Probe

The anti-trust Competition Bureau will not disclose how much it spent on a four-year investigation of Google Canada Corp. The Bureau yesterday dropped the case after conducting 130 interviews and reviewing thousands of pages of documents: “Are they big?”

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