Canadians will pay more for insurance if the Senate passes legislation restricting use of genetic tests, insurers warn. Industry executives said a bill to outlaw DNA “discrimination” will see all premiums rise: ‘The will go up dramatically’.
Atlantic Bankruptcies Are Up
Bankruptcy rates are climbing in Atlantic Canada amid caution of a “day of reckoning” on consumer debt. Consumer and business insolvencies increased in the region, including a New Brunswick consumer bankruptcy rate now at its highest level since 2005: “I can get anything I want and pay for it later”.
Safety Bill Is Up To Provinces
Transport Canada will leave a safety reform on truck designs to the provinces, says an MP. Advocates have proposed legislation to mandate truck side guards credited with saving lives: ‘We could have less heartbreak’.
Feds Probe Truckers’ Lament: Cancer, Diabetes And Obesity
The health and lifestyles of Canada’s 182,000 truck drivers are being studied by Transport Canada amid industry complaints of a national driver shortage. The department is commissioning a scientific panel to investigate truckers’ “wellness” noting common ailments and workplace hazards: ‘Their workplace is the road’.
Banker Promotes More Blacks
The Bank of Montreal has won a federal human rights case after claiming it promotes a disproportionately high number of black employees. The statistics were submitted as bank attorneys dismissed allegations of discrimination by an African-Canadian staffer: ‘Black employees were promoted in a higher proportion’.
Lobster Versus Aquaculture
Maritime fishermen worry federal regulators will lift a fifteen-year moratorium on new mussel aquaculture. The dispute follows a cabinet proposal to enact first-ever regulations sanctioning the use of chemicals in fish habitat: “We’re asking for a specific study”.
Feds Cite Threats: Dynamite, Sword Canes & Firecrackers
The Senate is upgrading security after citing a range of threats including plastic explosives, fireworks and “powdered sugar”. Senate administration said it will install seven new X-ray baggage scanners. Speaker Noël Kinsella did not comment: ‘It maintains a safe environment’.
A Tax Break For Tree Beetles
Canada’s 450,000 woodlot owners are appealing for preferential tax treatment due to devastation from pine beetles and the emerald ash borer. Owners seek the same regulations given dryland farmers for tax deferral in bad years: “Suddenly you have to sell all your assets”.
A Micro-Climate Bill Is Dead
Cabinet has signalled it will defeat a private bill to curb “urban heat islands” blamed for micro-temperature gains in large cities. MP Eve Adams, parliamentary secretary for health, described the bill as unnecessary: ‘There are companies in Canada that have figured this out’.
All-Party OK On Obesity Bill
Canadians will observe a first-ever national exercise day next June 6 under a private Conservative bill drawing all-party support in the Commons. MPs praised the initiative by Senator Nancy Green Raine, 1968 gold medal-winning Olympic skier: ‘Inactivity is killing us’.
Civil Servants Live Longer
Federal civil servants live longer than other Canadians – up to a full year longer, says a federal report: ‘It’s white-collar versus blue-collar’.
Caution On Eco-Review Bill
Yukon critics are cautioning the Senate over another federal initiative that grants local authorities new management of environmental risk assessments. A government bill reassigns responsibility for reviews of oil, gas and mining projects from the federal cabinet to Whitehorse: “We often get it wrong”.
Public Records @ $38 A Page
A federal board has charged the equivalent of $38 a page to release public records. The Canada-Newfoundland & Labrador Offshore Petroleum Board billed $4,452 to release 118 pages of public documents to a Calgary businessman: “It’s a mug’s game”.
‘Concern’ On Feds’ Database
A parliamentary committee is questioning whether the RCMP improperly shared non-criminal fingerprint records with police agencies across Canada. The Mounties collected the data from foreign students, immigrants and overseas applicants for work permits: “Making the regulations was unlawful”.
Injury Claim Nixed At Court
The Supreme Court has declined to hear a case of workplace compensation for unusual injuries. The litigation involved a tradesman who complained of tendonitis and carpal tunnel syndrome after decades on the job: ‘Claims are accepted, claims are refused’.



