$10,000-A Day Bill On Strikes

Federally-regulated employers would be fined $10,000 a day for hiring replacement workers in a strike or lockout under a New Democrat bill introduced in the Commons. The bill’s sponsor, a former postal worker, said the current law is unfair: “Prove the tone in Ottawa has really changed”.

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Transcontinental Rail Subsidy Should End, Says Fed Report

VIA Rail should strip passenger subsidies outside its core business in Ontario and Québec, effectively doubling fares on its iconic Canadian transcontinental service, says a federal report. The proposal followed an admission from the CEO that trains now run later than ever: “This is just not attractive to passengers”.

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Seek Sweeping Rail Changes

Farmers will lose the last remnants of federally-regulated freight rates, and railways and shippers will pay more to transport chemicals and other hazardous goods under sweeping amendments to rail regulations proposed by a federal report. “We’re looking at it,” said Transport Minister Marc Garneau.

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Dairy Cited For ‘Astounding’ Health Claims On Chocolate

Dairy Farmers of Canada are being criticized at the Senate for marketing sugar-added chocolate milk as a drink of champions. The head of a Senate examination of childhood obesity described milk producers’ health claims as astounding: ‘It would take an ordinary person 90 minutes to work off that many calories’.

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Warn On Smoking & Driving

A cabinet pledge to legalize marijuana must be accompanied with new laws on cannabis-impaired drivers, Liberal senators have been told. Police executives yesterday said driving under the influence of the drug is a public safety issue: “It exists”.

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Dibs On 2017 Copyright Act

One of Canada’s largest media unions is pressing for broader copyright protection for its 22,000 members. Parliament in 2017 will review the entire Copyright Act. One confidential federal memo noted industry-wide lobbying is already underway: ‘We need to get ahead of the curve’.

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Bank Beats Suit On 1934 Law

The Bank of Canada has won a five-year court battle challenging its practices under a 1934 law. A federal judge struck down a lawsuit to force the Bank to issue interest-free municipal loans, though the provision remains on the books: ‘They make a claim of conspiracy’.

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Spend Millions On Salt, Sugar

Canadians consume hundreds of millions of dollars’ worth of snack foods and sugary beverages, according to figures detailed in a trademark dispute. The disclosures precede a long-awaited Senate report on obesity and processed foods: ‘Industry’s self-regulation is insufficient’.

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Warns Pesticide Rules ‘Risky’

Health Canada practices in licensing pesticides have put human health at risk, says the Commissioner for the Environment. Julie Gelfand yesterday said regulators have been too slow in assessing the safety of farm chemicals already approved for sale: “There is risk to human health”.

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Heritage Canada Faulted On 150 Plans; ‘It’s A Huge Issue’

The heritage department should recast plans for Canada’s 150th anniversary after marking French colonial conquest of First Nations as a milestone in Indigenous history, says a Liberal MP. A department guide rated Samuel de Champlain’s travels among the Huron as an Aboriginal achievement: “Indigenous history started when Champlain showed up”.

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Appeal White Refugee Claim

The Department of Citizenship has successfully challenged an immigration board ruling that white South Africans be granted refugee status in Canada. The board concluded a Caucasian family that fled to Alberta deserved sanctuary under the Immigration & Refugee Protection Act: ‘They were targeted by criminals for being white’.

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No Gov’t Blacklist For Bribery

Cabinet will not explain why it granted a waiver to the country’s largest engineering firm from being blacklisted over a 2014 bribery scandal. The public works department had vowed to suspend any contractor implicated in fraud or corruption: “The department is unable to discuss specifics”.

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