Laid Off 24% Of Airport Staff

Almost a quarter of the nation’s airport security screeners were laid off as a pandemic cost savings, Canadian Air Transport Security Authority figures disclosed yesterday. The Authority said contractors were scrambling to rehire staff amid hours-long waits for travelers: “It is not a funding problem.”

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Says West-East Seats Skewed

Canada’s fastest growing provinces are short dozens of seats under electoral redistricting, the House affairs committee was told yesterday. A cabinet bill C-14 would guarantee Québec a minimum 78 seats and permit other provinces to gain additional representation: “The Band-Aid that we are applying today is only going to have to be ripped off.”

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Target Foreign Vote Meddlers

Chief Electoral Officer Stéphane Perrault yesterday recommended Parliament prohibit foreign meddling in elections prior to the start of a campaign. It followed a similar proposal in a private Senate bill that lapsed three years ago: “It is a critical exercise.”

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Need More Recruits: Anand

Defence Minister Anita Anand yesterday said the military will launch a new recruitment campaign for the army, navy and air force. Anand in testimony at the Commons defence committee made no mention of the recent loss of Canadian Armed Forces members due to a vaccine mandate: “We have to make sure we have the right number of people.”

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More Protests On Search Bill

Canadians’ paper mail would have more privacy protection than email under a cabinet bill pending in the Senate, a federal lawyer testified yesterday. Liberal-appointed senators have opposed Bill S-7 An Act To Amend The Customs Act: “What’s the worst that could happen if the legislation is passed?”

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Feds Had Plenty Of Warning

A federal agency had ample warning of rising passenger volumes before hours-long delays at airports, figures show. The Canadian Air Transport Security Authority knew for months that travel volumes were predictably doubling and tripling from 2021 levels: “Additional funding will be necessary.”

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Worry About Covid On Kids

The Public Health Agency yesterday said it will fund new research on the effects of Covid on the nation’s children. It follows an earlier report that school closures and lockdowns were more disruptive than the coronavirus: “There is much we still need to know.”

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Climate Travel Cost $101,712

Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault and five staff billed more than $100,000 to attend a United Nations climate conference, newly-released records show. Air fare for the six cost more than $37,000 including $11,246 for Guilbeault, who called for urgent action on climate change: “We need more environmentalists in the House.”

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1st MP Denied Seat Since 1947

A Saskatchewan Conservative MP is the first parliamentarian in 75 years to be barred from her Commons seat. MP Cathay Wagantall (Yorkton-Melville) said she was escorted off Parliament Hill Friday by the Sergeant-at-Arms after declining to disclose her vaccine status. The last MP barred from the House was a Communist spy: “There is nothing that validates this kind of behaviour.”

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Couldn’t Give Away Test Kits

Federal agencies are warehousing millions of rapid Covid test kits only weeks after Parliament voted to spend billions more with suppliers. Total spending on rapid tests is more than $4 billion to date including millions of kits the government could not give away: “We are just actually in the midst of loading up.”

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Find Voters Like To Be Asked

Federal candidates in Prairie provinces and Ontario were most likely to campaign door to door in the nation’s first pandemic election, new data show. An Elections Canada survey also found winning candidates were more likely to have asked for votes in person: ‘Despite the need for pandemic precautions 7 in 10 candidates interacted with electors by going door to door.’

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Sunday Poem: “Succession”

 

A recent poll
in the United Kingdom
asked people
who is best suited
to reign after Queen Elizabeth II.

Prince William came first,
winning a commanding 63 percent
of the votes.

The most favourite royal.

His father
must be proud.

 

(Editor’s note: poet Shai Ben-Shalom, an Israeli-born biologist, writes for Blacklock’s each and every Sunday)