Aquaculture firms have won long-sought amendments to federal law permitting chemical use in fish habitat, including coastal waters. Fisheries Minister Gail Shea yesterday enacted new regulations allowing use of licensed pesticides previously banned under the Fisheries Act: “There are serious concerns”.
First Terror Regs Take Effect
First regulations under Bill C-51 the Anti-Terrorism Act take effect August 1 with enforcement of a federal blacklist of passengers forbidden from air travel. Airlines must report any so-called “listed person” who attempts to board any domestic or international flight: “They did not do anything to actually fix the problems”.
“I Treasure A Good Hotel…”
A finicky federal appointee at the Asia Pacific Foundation billed for a $522-a night room at a luxury Vancouver hotel though “nice” accommodation was available just across the street at a 39% discount, records show. “I treasure a good hotel,” said the foundation’s chairman.
Warns Feds Fail On Research
The Department of Agriculture is losing ground in scientific research that made Canada a world wheat exporter, delegates have told an Ottawa conference. The criticism followed one industry report that concluded the nation “is slipping behind other countries” in agricultural science: “Where are the long-term ideas going to come from?”
No Science Justifies Federal Seal Cull Says Secret Memo
In a confidential memo one advocate called “unbelievable”, the Department of Fisheries says it has no scientific data to support Canada’s claims that seals are to blame for dwindling groundfish stock. The cabinet memo stamped SECRET said claims were “anecdotal commentary” and had no basis in research: “It is a classic case of putting pure politics ahead of science”.
Ruling To Affect 1M Workers
A pending Supreme Court hearing on legal firing under the Canada Labour Code will clarify rules for an estimated one million employees in federally-regulated industries, say legal analysts. Judges agreed to hear the case of an Atomic Energy of Canada Ltd. staffer fired without cause: “This has been a debate in legal circles for years”.
Lakes Changing With Climate
Climate change is already having a severe impact on some Canadian fish species, says new research. Data on more than a thousand lakes confirmed some have lost entire local populations of minnows over the past 30 years: “It is problematic if you value biodiversity”.
Hazard Regs Put Off Till 2019
A federal initiative to harmonize labelling of hazardous chemicals ongoing since 2011 will not be fully enacted till 2019, says a cabinet notice. The labour department said the program should replace “inconsistent and incoherent” regulations on handling of dangerous goods in the workplace: “We’re going to have more accidents”.
Army Targets Video Gamers
The military targeted video gamers with a 2015 recruitment campaign deemed “dark” and “aggressive”, according to in-house research. The Department of National Defence assembled focus groups to pre-screen the TV ads depicting guerrilla warfare with flash explosions, leaping paratroopers and “heavy breathing” sound effects: “You are preaching to the converted”.
Feds Hold Veto On Airfield Work; Require Public Notice
Transport Canada is detailing first-ever regulations to mandate public notice of all airport expansions with final approval of new construction resting with cabinet. The proposed rules follow a little-noticed clause inserted in a 2014 omnibus budget bill that drew protest from airport operators: “It may be expensive, it may be time-consuming”.
Lawyering At $1,130 An Hour
A federal judge has knocked down lawyering fees of up to $1,130 an hour claimed as costs by an insurance company that successfully sued the Canada Revenue Agency. The Tax Court lawsuit detailed expenses claimed by Bay Street lawyers, from four-figure hourly rates to expensive hotel bills: “Hypothetical rates do not meet the criterion”.
Egg Fix Lawsuit Dies In Court
A lawsuit alleging unfair trade practices in the federally-regulated egg trade have come up short at the Supreme Court. Justices declined to hear a case alleging two of the nation’s largest egg producers engaged in a “conspiracy” to drive out competition: ‘The case crashed in a deep ditch of dismissal’.
Federal Firing For Nepotism
A federal tribunal has upheld the firing of a senior civil servant for nepotism with the loss of $123,000 in benefits. Evidence showed the manager attempted to land government jobs for her son and her cleaning woman: “What is the problem?”
Feds Too Late On Toxic Scum
Environment Canada has begun “consultations” on curbing chemical runoff in the Great Lakes in a process experts describe as ineffectual. U.S. authorities have warned this summer could see one of the largest chemically-fed algae blooms ever recorded on Lake Erie. The toxic scum produces botulism harmful to marine life: “You need to know what you’re dealing with”.
Gov’t Eyes Fix Of 911 System
Canada’s telecom regulator is proposing national quality standards on emergency 911 networks described as fragmented and haphazard. The “reliability and resiliency” of the one-call service should be determined, said the CRTC: “There is a lot of work that needs to be done”.



