The City of Melville, Sask., population 4600, has been asked to formally apologize for local gossip that turned into trash talk in a Facebook post. Saskatchewan Information Commissioner Ronald Kruzeniski said it was evident municipal employees were the source of “coffee row gossip.”
A Sunday Poem — “Nuke”
North Korea
is in the news again.
My cat and I yawn.
We already know
the Communists miniaturised the device,
but they have a way to go
before the toy can survive re-entry.
And Taepo Dong 2
– their longest-range missile –
cannot reach Texas, Florida, or Pennsylvania.
At most, it will hit the West Coast
and a few states in the Upper Midwest.
No one is going to war
over that.
(Editor’s note: poet Shai Ben-Shalom, an Israeli-born biologist, writes for Blacklock’s each and every Sunday)

CBC Executives Number 143
The CBC has 143 executive directors including eight directors of finance, nine directors of legal services and 26 directors of “technology and infrastructure,” according to Access To Information records. Individual pay and benefits were not disclosed though one former executive put his yearly bonus at $80,000: “That requires visionary talent.”
Electrics For In-Town Driving
Buyers in three cities account for most new electric car sales nationwide, Statistics Canada figures showed yesterday. New registration of electrics was sparse outside Vancouver, Toronto and Montréal: “More support is needed to help Canadians get behind the wheel.”
More Ukrainian Loans OK’d
Cabinet yesterday disclosed it approved another $500 million loan for Ukraine. The announcement came the same day Ukraine confirmed with creditors it suspended payments on its foreign debt: “It is in the national interest.”
Volunteers Saved 1,800 Lives
A low-cost volunteer program credited with saving nearly 2,000 people from drowning is threatened with declining membership and inadequate funding, says a Coast Guard audit. The all-volunteer Coast Guard Auxiliary dates from 1978: “Between 2015 and 2020 the auxiliary saved almost 1,800 lives.”
Gov’t Ponders Ocean Mining
The Department of Fisheries would consider any license application for ocean mining, staff wrote in a briefing note. Federal researchers have predicted little market for underwater mining in Canada since the country has ample minerals above sea level: “Seabed mining would be assessed based on the best available scientific knowledge.”
CBC Covid Bonuses At $30M
The CBC paid executives millions in Covid bonuses even as management complained of “immense pressure” with crashing ad revenue, records show. Bonuses were the equivalent of nearly $15,000 apiece: “It brings into serious question the judgment of executives in times of crisis.”
Found $10 Million For Tennis
A federal agency mandated to counter “slow economic growth” in Québec instead approved $10 million in subsidies for a Montréal tennis tournament, records show. The idea was to draw media attention to the province, said staff: “Funding for sporting events acts as a strategic lever.”
Can’t Cut Food Prices: Bibeau
Cabinet has minimal control over food prices, says Agriculture Minister Marie-Claude Bibeau’s office. However the Department of Agriculture acknowledged federal regulators raised wholesale prices for milk and butter at a rate higher than general inflation: “Federal governments deliberately have minimal direct involvement in managing food prices.”
Require A Vote To Expel MP
An MP who yesterday pleaded guilty to breach of the National Defence Act does not face automatic expulsion under Commons rules. Independent MP Kevin Vuong (Spadina-Fort York, Ont.) may only be stripped of his seat by a House vote: “I am proud to have served seven years now in our country’s largest naval reserve division.”
Paid For ‘Truth Day’ Holiday
An Ontario labour arbitrator has recognized National Day for Truth and Reconciliation as a paid holiday under a municipal union contract. Arbitrators across Canada have issued conflicting decisions on whether the federal holiday applies to others: “The matter was tried as a straightforward question of contract interpretation.”
Figures Contradict Tax Claim
Bus ridership nationwide remains below pre-pandemic rates despite record high gas prices, Statistics Canada data showed yesterday. The trend contradicts the rationale for a carbon tax that was to encourage commuters to burn less fuel, said the Canadian Taxpayers Federation: “They need to drive to support their families and the carbon tax makes that more expensive.”
Blame Slavery & Colonialism
A Department of Justice report blames Canadian slavery and colonialism for anti-Black racism though no Canadian Parliament legalized slavery and no Father of Confederation was a slaveholder. Canada remains the only G7 country never to maintain overseas colonies: “The oppressed status of Black people persisted long after slavery was abolished.”
Wore A Mask At His Trial
A Calgary judge has convicted a drunk driver though he was identified at trial while wearing a face mask in the prisoner’s box. “It was a fact known by everyone in the courtroom,” said the Court: “The person who answered the charge and entered the prisoner’s dock from the public gallery was wearing a face mask.”



