Environment Canada has quietly compiled a list of nearly a thousand chemicals, toxins and additives used by shale gas drillers nationwide. The department would not disclose the list, but states in a confidential memo it was compiled through “North American sources”. The memo was released through Access to Information: “Canadians have expressed concern”.
#1 With Grievance: ‘We Are Seen As Welfare Provinces’
Atlantic Canada has eclipsed Québec as a “hotbed” of the most aggrieved people in the nation, according to a confidential report for the Privy Council Office. The research concluded two-thirds of Atlantic residents are disaffected, the highest rate in the country: “We got shafted”.
Senators Ask A Year Later, Where Are Safety Audits?
A year after documenting shortfalls in safe shipping of petroleum, members of the Senate energy committee say Transport Canada has yet to adopt a “safety culture” in regulating railways: “You only get punished if something happens”.
Start-Up Rate Not Like 1983
Research shows a continued decline in the rate of new business start-ups in Canada, a trend dating from the 1980s. Statistics Canada concluded the trend mirrors similar declines in the U.S. and other countries: ‘It’s a maturing of the economy’.
30% Chance Of Quake Here
Vancouver has a 30% chance of seeing a destructive earthquake within 50 years, says the Office of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions. Ottawa and Montreal face a 15% risk. The confidential report warned local authorities should expect little help from cabinet: “There are concerns about the preparedness of the federal government”.
36% Want Immigration Cuts
More than a third of Canadians want cuts to immigration, according to confidential polling data by Citizenship Canada. The research shows people are more likely to advocate cuts when they’re told how many immigrants Canada takes each year: ‘The purpose was to measure attitudes’.
MP Eyes Carbon ‘Dividend’
MPs returning from summer recess September 15 will see a new private bill proposing a modified carbon tax with “dividend”. The Green Party said it will introduce legislation creating a fixed fee on pollution-generating fuels: “Is it going to cost us money? Absolutely”.
Bill Curbs Hot Times In Town
MPs will consider legislation to curb an “urban heat island” phenomenon identified by scientists. The private bill would see federal regulators act to curb punishing heat waves with promotion of urban parks and mass transit: “Save as much as 20% on energy”.
Forensics Land In Tax Court
Canada Revenue Agency has tried and failed to use forensic science in a Tax Court dispute one attorney likened to a TV crime drama. Auditors cited chemical ink analysis in claiming a B.C. trucking executive backdated a document to avoid $477,546 in payments: “It is not proper when so much is at stake to rely on unreliable, highly questionable techniques”.
Chemicals OK In Fisheries
The Department of Fisheries is detailing first-ever regulations sanctioning the use of pesticides and other chemicals in fish habitat. The proposal follows appeals from the aquaculture industry for exemptions from a chemical ban in the Fisheries Act: “We have to be able to manage pests”.
Few Piracy Cases — Again
The Public Prosecution Service will not say how much time and money it’s spent pursuing Canada’s multi-billion dollar trade in counterfeit goods. Prosecutors noted unspecified “economic crimes” took up 10% of the budget last year: “Counterfeiting is huge but I don’t think people are actually seeing it as a problem”.
Federal Standard Wanted
Armoured car guards are again appealing for standard, federalized regulations following the latest spectacular holdup, the second in ten weeks. Unifor, representing some security employees, said the thefts underscored the lack of regulation: “Here we go again”.
Agency Orders Credit Check On All Employees: ‘Security’
Canada Border Services Agency in a mammoth security sweep is ordering credit checks on all employees. A confidential management bulletin says reviews of workers’ debts, credit cards and mortgages are to determine the “trustworthiness” of staff. Blacklock’s could find no similar policy in any police department in Canada: “This is atrocious”.
Farm Chemicals, Road Salt Worse Than Fracking: Feds
Natural Resources Canada says in a confidential report that farm fertilizers, road salt and other everyday chemicals pose a greater environmental risk than shale gas fracking. The department did not cite any data supporting its claim, and the author declined an interview: “We’ll get back to you”.
Spy Agency Faces Questions
Advocates say pressing questions remain unanswered over federal disclosures a domestic spy agency improperly intercepted private communications by scores of Canadians. Communications Security Establishment Canada acknowledged it kept files on the private electronic conversations of 66 unidentified people: ‘Are we getting all the information?’



