Judge Lifts Veil On Subsidies

Governments are entitled to “look beyond the corporate veil” in awarding subsidies, the Northwest Territories Supreme Court has ruled. The decision came in the case of a Yellowknife tour company denied a pandemic grant after its sole director previously defaulted on a taxpayers’ loan: ‘This is prudent management of public monies.’

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Pole Dispute Costs Bell $7.5M

Federal regulators yesterday fined Bell Canada $7.5 million for breach of the Telecommunications Act. The media giant was cited for unfair practices in denying rivals’ access to its telephone pole network for home hookups: “It is really a key issue of how companies get access.”

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E.I. Sick Bill Survives 174-151

The Commons yesterday gave Second Reading to a private bill to permit a year’s paid leave under the Employment Insurance Act for workers with illness or injury. “No one has ever gotten rich from being sick,” said the Conservative sponsor of the bill: “I do not need an expert to confirm that.”

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‘I Have Figures In My Head’

Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland last night called the Freedom Convoy a “core threat to the Canadian economy” but provided no figures to prove it. Members of a Special Joint Committee on the Declaration of Emergency challenged Freeland to justify cabinet’s use of the Emergencies Act against truckers: “I have many figures in my head.”

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Passport Staff Work At Home

The federal agency that manages passports has most employees, 70 percent, working from home, records show. Social Development Minister Karina Gould told reporters she sympathized with Canadians waiting months for travel documents: “I can’t give you a clear timeline in terms of when things are going to return to normal.”

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Vax Mandates End Monday

Cabinet effective next Monday will end most federal vaccine mandates for employees and travelers. Transport Minister Omar Alghabra said the decision reflected new science: “The decision is not based on something we woke up this morning and decided to do.”

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Three Parties OK Pension Bill

Three opposition parties yesterday announced a pact to speed passage of a bill to save pensions in cases of insolvency. MPs have tried and failed to pass similar amendments to bankruptcy law since 1975: “We hope to see this go to committee and beyond that to really do something.”

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See Tonnes Of Illegal Plastic

Federal inspectors have intercepted tonnes of illegal plastic waste exports in the past three years, records show. MPs voted in 2021 to abolish the black market trade but saw a ban lapse in the Senate: “It is clear we cannot continue to send our plastic waste overseas.”

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Mendicino Loses Crucial Vote

Public Safety Minister Marco Mendicino yesterday lost a key vote on a cellphone search bill. Nine of 12 members of the Senate national security committee rejected his proposal to designate “reasonable general concern” as justification to search electronic devices at border crossings: “We did not have one witness except the Minister and the officials say this was a good idea.”

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Public Cynical About $6B Aid

Most Canadians are cynical about foreign aid, says in-house research by the Department of Foreign Affairs. Taxpayers suspect aid typically “ends up in the pockets of corrupt politicians,” said a report: “Only one in four Canadians, 26 percent, believes government spending on international aid is effective.”

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Debate Gagged On Web Regs

The Commons yesterday by a vote of 174 to 146 imposed closure on the latest cabinet bill to regulate the internet. The motion was worse than anything attempted by Stephen Harper, said a Green MP: “I cannot think of a time that a motion this egregious was put forward in that era.”

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Overlooked 36 Million Acres

Climate change benefits of federal tree planting will be “slow at first,” says Natural Resources Minister Jonathan Wilkinson’s department. Staff cited new data indicating Canada already has so many trees the forest cover is 36 million acres larger than originally thought: “The current estimate of forest area in Canada is an improved estimate relative to what has been reported previously.”

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Bilingual Cost Was Lowballed

Estimates of a quarter-billion cost to expand official bilingualism to the private sector does not account for enforcement west of Ontario or east of New Brunswick, Budget Officer Yves Giroux said yesterday. Applying a new cabinet bill nationwide would cost much more, he said: “Do you think jobs will actually move outside of Québec as a result of this?”

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$237M Contract Was Surplus

Millions’ worth of Covid ventilators purchased through a former Liberal MP’s company were immediately warehoused as medical surplus, records show. The ventilators cost the equivalent of $23,700 apiece: “We needed an advance.”

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110 Frauds Inside Fed Agency

A total 110 employees of the Canada Revenue Agency have been investigated for fraud in the past five years, records show. Twenty were fired. It was the highest number of known fraud probes in any federal department or agency: “Data provided have been drawn from discipline records.”

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