Armed Forces Find Bad Press

Fewer Canadians have a “high level of trust” in the Canadian Armed Forces, says in-house research by the Department of National Defence. The public overall had a positive opinion of the army, navy and air force but noted it received plenty of “bad press.”

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Dep’t Clawing Back Billions

More than $2 billion in Canada Emergency Response Benefit payments have been clawed back from undeserving applicants, says the Department of Employment. The billions were deducted from tax refunds or Employment Insurance cheques: “A total 1,108,676 clients have fully repaid their debts.”

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‘This Is 90% On Government’

Access Copyright, one of the country’s largest collectives representing 13,000 authors, yesterday said it will lay off staff and cut budgets due to the loss of millions in royalties under an Act of Parliament. Cabinet has yet to adopt a 2019 recommendation of the Commons heritage committee that it curb free photocopying under the Copyright Act: “Actual people are losing actual jobs.”

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30% Felt Pressure To Comply

Almost a third of Canadians complain they felt pressured to comply with public health orders during the pandemic, according to in-house Department of Health research. And a tenth say they sought advice or counselling for mental health support: ‘Some touched on anxiety over surveillance by public authorities.’

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Bank Surprised By Food Costs

High interest rates, the highest in 22 years, will continue into 2024, Bank of Canada Governor Tiff Macklem said yesterday. Macklem said he has “been surprised” by persistently high prices for groceries: “Meat’s up six percent, bread’s up 13 percent, coffee’s up eight percent, baby food’s up nine percent.”

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Found Millions For Bonuses

The Bank of Canada paid out nearly $27 million in raises and bonuses last year even as it admitted bungling forecasts, records show. Access To Information figures obtained by the Canadian Taxpayers Federation showed nearly half the Bank’s staff are now paid more than $100,000 a year: “We got some things wrong.”

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“Inspiring Leader” In Court

The CEO of taxpayer-owned Trans Mountain Corporation is in Federal Court for alleged “abuse of process.” Dawn Farrell, Calgary’s “inspiring business leader” of the year, is accused of ignoring a federal order to release public records under the Access To Information Act: “The CEO is in violation of her legal duty.”

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Ex-MP Wins Right To Protest

Crown prosecutors have dismissed a charge against former Conservative MP Derek Sloan (Hastings-Lennox, Ont.) over breach of pandemic lockdown orders, lawyers for the Justice Centre for Constitutional Freedoms said yesterday. Sloan was confronted by police after attending outdoor protests: “I am proud to have stood against this.”

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Warned PM To Let Strikers Be

Leaders of the nation’s labour federations yesterday warned the Prime Minister not to invoke any emergency legislation to end a British Columbia port strike now in its 12th day. Cabinet enforced a back-to-work order to end an earlier strike at the Port of Montréal after five days: “Legislation would be a serious misstep.”

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Blair Will Not Name Names

Privy Council President Bill Blair yesterday refused to name underlings he blamed for mishandling a “top secret memo” on Chinese espionage in Canada. Blair was repeatedly asked for names after acknowledging his own department was responsible for the error: “Who was supposed to print this off and show it to you?”

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Must Fix “Housing Injustice”

Cabinet must address “housing injustice” with new laws and policies, says the Federal Housing Advocate. Marie-Josée Houle in a report to Parliament faulted current programs as a “sorry disappointment” with tent cities surrounded by urban wealth: ‘I visited a shelter not far from a sparkling new luxury condo building.’

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No Excuses, Airlines Told

Airlines cannot blame factors they “should have known about” to deny passengers compensation for poor service, federal regulators said yesterday. The Canadian Transportation Agency itemized excuses it would no longer accept under Air Passenger Protection Regulations: “People are tired.”

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Don’t Rely On Forecasts: Feds

The Department of Finance says its budget forecasts “should not be viewed as a prediction of the future,” according to a letter to the Parliamentary Budget Office. The admission follows cabinet’s raising of its debt to GDP ratio in what Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland had called “a line we will not cross.”

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