Canadians are divided over treatment of drug addiction, says in-house research by the Department of Health. A report summarizing new public opinion surveys was completed weeks before cabinet announced it was lifting a 1911 criminal ban on opioids and cocaine in British Columbia: “I don’t have much sympathy.”
Letter To “Dear Canadians…”
Governor General May Simon yesterday in a 1,300-word letter to Canadians said she has an important job. The letter addressed “Dear Canadians” comes ahead of Commons committee hearings into Simon’s expenses: “I think we all find it absurd.”
Find Job Claims Were Inflated
A billion-dollar program launched five years ago by then-Industry Minister Navdeep Bains did not come close to creating the 50,000 jobs it promised, says an internal audit. Even a lower estimate of 11,000 jobs was unverifiable, said auditors: “You’re claiming it. Where can we find that?”
Standing On Guard For Water
Canadians rate foreign demand for our plentiful fresh water as one of the biggest threats to sovereignty, according to Department of National Defence research. Parliament eight years ago passed a private Conservative bill banning the bulk export of Canadian water: “Fresh water could make the country a target for future conflict.”
Bill Was Hurry Up Then Wait
A cabinet bill on paid sick leave that was pushed through Parliament as a Covid emergency will not fully take effect for 17 months. Hurried passage prompted Senate grumbling that scrutiny of pandemic measures had become a “rubber stamping process.”
Convoy Hearings On Internet
Public hearings of the Freedom Convoy inquiry will be livestreamed on the internet for all Canadians to see regardless of whether TV networks broadcast proceedings. Internet publication of cabinet secrets is still under review, said the Public Order Emergency Commission: “Yes, the Commission plans to stream all its public hearings.”
Pandemic Impact At Church
Covid lockdowns sharply cut church attendance, Statistics Canada said yesterday. The Public Health Agency within days of the pandemic’s outbreak recommended cancellation of masses and prayer meetings: “Some people reported that because of the pandemic they prayed more or their faith got stronger.”
Say Tax Cases Take Too Long
Prosecution of tax cheats takes too long, says a Canada Revenue Agency report. Auditors warned the Agency runs a risk of seeing scofflaws beat criminal charges due to lengthy delays: “Cases rarely go to trial within eighteen months.”
Personality Profile Of Voters
Elections Canada paid researchers more than $84,000 for personality profiles of federal voters. Working-age women are typically “planners” while rural Canadians are “in control as opposed to stressed,” said a report: “Personas were born out of conversations with Canadians who shared their opinions.”
Old TV In Peril: CRTC Report
The next three years will determine whether the Canadian TV system survives, says a CRTC report. Research pointed to loss of viewership and advertising to internet broadcasters like Netflix and YouTube: “How much time do we have? Best guess given current trends: three years.”
Lost Track By The Thousands
The Department of Health lost track of thousands of computers under haphazard IT management, say auditors. The department’s Public Health Agency was earlier cited for keeping inventory by hand at nine warehouses leased to stockpile emergency pandemic supplies: “With hindsight would I have liked it to have been different?”
Need French To Save Canada
Saving the French language is fundamental to preserving the nation, says a federal briefing note. A cabinet bill pending in the Commons promotes use of French-language computers and French-speaking managers in the federally regulated private sector: “The French language is threatened.”
A Sunday Poem: “Vote”
Election time
in the City of Ottawa.
I check the list of candidates.
They all promise the same
as others before them:
more jobs, better roads, low taxes.
But
who will confess
they have no solution
to homeless shelters
who will disclose
there’s no definitive deadline
for the Light Rail Transit project
who will admit
they cannot reroute trucks
away from the downtown core
who will acknowledge
organic garbage recycling program
doesn’t meet its goals
who will confirm
the city’s $2 billion debt
is here to stay
who will remove
the dead squirrel
from Alta Vista Drive
(Editor’s note: poet Shai Ben-Shalom, an Israeli-born biologist, writes for Blacklock’s each and every Sunday)

Couldn’t Give Away Millions
Claims of economic damage from Freedom Convoy protests were so inflated cabinet couldn’t give away half the millions it budgeted to compensate businesses, records show. One compensation fund saw 82 percent of grant money go unclaimed: “Up to 1,900 businesses in Ottawa could potentially receive support.”
Admits Judge Was A Friend
Public Safety Minister Marco Mendicino yesterday said he was careful to avoid any interference in the federal appointment of a personal friend as a judge. “I recused myself,” said Mendicino.



