Sunday Poem: “The Storm”

 

Winds of 100 km/h
batter Quebec.

Nearly a million customers
without power.

Hydro crews
wear orange protective gear,
gloves,
and hard hats.

In compliance with Bill 21
there are no crosses,
Stars of David,
turbans.

Reinforcement teams
from Michigan
Ottawa
and New Brunswick
must have passed
Quebec’s value test
before touching
those live wires.

 

By Shai Ben-Shalom

Queen Was Racist: Appointee

A Toronto Star writer who advocated deposing the Queen as racist and opposed Canada Day as a celebration of “European, Judeo-Christian storytelling” yesterday was named Special Representative on Combating Islamophobia. Cabinet aides would not comment on the writings of activist Amira Elghawaby: “Time to wake up.”

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Cannot Count Wasted Billions

There is no current estimate of how many billions were wasted on the costliest pandemic subsidy program, the Canada Revenue Agency yesterday told the Commons public accounts committee. “It really was a first-time thing for everybody so there’s lots of lessons to be learned,” testified Revenue Commissioner Bob Hamilton: “It’s hard to say.”

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Pay $310,000 For Lies, Gossip

The federal prison system has been ordered to pay an employee $310,000 in damages for malicious mistreatment. Management peddled gossip and slander in falsely accusing a British Columbia guard of smuggling drugs, wrote a labour board arbitrator: “The employer’s conduct through the unfortunately lengthy saga from 2016 to 2020 was malicious, reprehensible, deliberate and shameful.”

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VIA Rail Versus Freight Cars

Better passenger service would require VIA Rail to gain priority over freight traffic on main lines, the CEO of the Crown agency yesterday told the Commons transport committee. “Railways dictate the priority,” testified Martin Landry: “Give, for example, greater priority for passenger train services.”

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Hear Rogers To Cut 4,000 Jobs

Rogers Communications will cut 4,000 to 5,000 jobs if cabinet approves its buyout of rival Shaw Communications, a Conservative MP yesterday told the Commons industry committee. MP Rick Perkins (South Shore-St. Margarets, N.S.) said he was told of massive layoffs by company insiders: “I’m told Rogers will actually cut 4,000 to 5,000 jobs.”

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Anti-Trust Fears Over Merger

The $26 billion buyout of two of Canada’s four largest telecom companies will impact consumers, federal anti-trust lawyers yesterday told the Commons industry committee. Rogers Communications’  proposed purchase of Shaw Communications of Calgary has passed all regulatory hurdles to date: “Just say no.”

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Not Two Sides To Every Story

A national scientific panel yesterday blamed media misinformation in part on the “journalistic norm” of presenting two sides to every story. Publicizing alternative viewpoints on issues like carbon taxes creates a “false balance of perspectives,” said the Council of Canadian Academies: “People perceive lower levels of consensus.”

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Vax Policy Was ‘Devastating’

Workplace vaccine mandates may have been “personally devastating” for some employees but remained lawful, a New Brunswick labour arbitrator has ruled. The decision came in the case of six utility workers suspended five months without pay after declining to show proof they were immunized: “They were faced with a difficult choice.”

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Dep’t Admits Misinformation

The Department of Infrastructure admits it misinformed Parliament and taxpayers under then-Minister Catherine McKenna. Budget reports tabled in the Commons and published online misrepresented hundreds of millions in spending: “How many times did the government put out misinformation?”

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Layoffs Overwhelm Subsidies

Newspapers have cut so many jobs that subsidies contingent on numbers of newsroom employees are 43 percent under budget. Taxpayers’ payroll rebates of $13,750 per staffer could not avert layoffs, data show: “The loss of even just one job is a tragedy.”

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$24,000 For Carney’s Group

Federal departments and agencies paid thousands to a Liberal-affiliated think tank chaired by Mark Carney, records show. The former central bank governor last May 26 was appointed chair of Canada 2020 to promote “ambitious progressive public policy solutions.”

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Wouldn’t Drop Vax Mandate

Emergency pandemic measures like vaccine mandates must not continue without lawful orders, says a privacy commissioner. The ruling came in the case of the Saskatoon Public Library that insisted employees continue to submit personal medical data long after mandates were lifted: “You are expecting me to comply with an invasion of my privacy.”

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