Cabinet aides last night refused comment on documents indicating ex-Industry Minister Navdeep Bains was “pressing” an Ontario firm’s proposal for a multi-million dollar federal contract. Staff and executives with the company exchanged twelve phone calls and emails in two days: “Only pressing on this as it came directly from the Minister.”
“Cannot” Disclose $5B Deals
Details of billions’ worth of secret contracts with vaccine manufacturers cannot be disclosed, the Public Health Agency said yesterday. Managers said signed agreements had confidential clauses that must not be revealed to the public: “There must be something in these contracts you don’t want Canadians or the Opposition to see.”
Forecast 7 Years To Recovery
The commercial air sector will take up to seven years to recover from the pandemic, the Commons transport committee was told yesterday. Air travelers have been warned to expect higher costs long after Covid-19 runs its course: “We have borrowed heavily.”
Public Is Angry & Frustrated
Canadians under lockdown are angry and frustrated with cross-border holidayers, a senior Liberal MP wrote in an email to constituents. MP Anthony Housefather (Mount Royal, Que.) said cross-border travelers should expect restrictions to remain in place for months: “While I understand snowbirds are not just like any other traveler, I do not believe most Canadians see it that way.”
Bonuses Totaled $1,695,895
The Department of Public Works in five years paid nearly $1.7 million in bonuses to executives managing a bungled payroll system that cost taxpayers billions. “Ensuring public servants are paid accurately and on time is a top priority,” wrote cabinet.
Let People Choose, MPs Told
Canadians want freedom to choose what internet content they use and enjoy, a retired Alberta broadcasting executive yesterday told the Commons heritage committee. MPs are conducting hearings on a cabinet bill proposing first-ever regulation of the internet: “Do we need controls, or do we let people decide for themselves?”
MPs Demand Vaccine Terms
MPs yesterday demanded public release of contracts signed with vaccine manufacturers amid uneven distribution of medicines in Canada. Cabinet declined: “The federal government refuses to release a single word in a single contract it has signed.”
Covid Spa Resort Cost $115K
The Department of Fisheries yesterday said a six-figure expense at a luxury resort and spa was no holiday. Staff billed for training crew at the same time cabinet told Canadians to “hunker down” and stay home: “Parts of the resort utilized by the inshore rescue boat personnel were closed to other guests.”
$1M Chair Giveaway For 20%
A single department, Public Works, spent more than a million buying work-from-home office chairs and desks for twenty percent of its employees, say Access To Information records. A government-wide pandemic chair giveaway cost more than $36 million: “We will continue to maximize telework for the foreseeable future.”
Québec Asked For Too Much
Staff in the Prime Minister’s Office grumbled Québec asked for too many rationed medical supplies only days into the pandemic, internal records show. A national emergency stockpile had virtually run out after the Public Health Agency threw away millions of masks and other items months before: “Hey, we asked for this stuff and we’re not getting it.”
Fears Dissent Leads To Riots
A federal bill banning hurtful comments on Facebook and Twitter is necessary to avoid violent anti-government protest, says Heritage Minister Steven Guilbeault. Testifying at the Commons heritage committee, Guilbeault lamented attacks on the public service and federal agencies: “Canadians are asking the government to step in.”
Kielburgers To Get Summons
Craig and Mark Kielburger will be summoned back to testify before MPs over negotiations with cabinet for a $43.5 million grant. Members of the Commons ethics committee said the Kielburgers will be treated as “hostile witnesses” if they don’t volunteer to take questions: “The committee shall summon these witnesses should they not respond.”
53% Of Residents Got Cheque
The Canada Revenue Agency paid $2,000 CERB cheques to more than half the residents of one remote Yukon hamlet, according to Access To Information records. Yukon had the highest rate of CERB payments of any jurisdiction last year: “Once we see annual income tax returns we can determine if payments were correct.”
Warned Not To Talk To Press
Jesse Moore, a Nairobi millionaire whose company received $15.4 million in taxpayers’ aid, in a confidential email told employees to beware Blacklock’s accounts of his business dealings. International Trade Minister Mary Ng refused comment.
“Our company continues to be the target of false reporting,” Moore wrote in a staff email marked “DO NOT FORWARD.” “In recent months M-Kopa has been subject to untruthful and highly misleading articles written by Blacklock’s Reporter. These have since been repeated by a small number of blog sites in Kenya.”
Immediately following the email directive, Minister Ng’s office ended all contact with Blacklock’s over the Kenyan venture. Ng approved the financing. Cabinet in a January 15 Ministerial Mandate letter had pledged not to blacklist media. “Foster a professional and respectful relationship with journalists,” said the letter.
Moore is the Canadian CEO of M-Kopa Holdings Ltd., a Kenyan door-to-door sales company that received millions in federal funding. It was the first recipient of aid by FinDev Canada, an agency launched by cabinet in 2017 on a $300 million mandate to promote international development.
Access To Information documents and other records show FinDev bought $15.4 million worth of shares in Moore’s company without consulting its chief investment officer – the job was vacant at the time – and without disclosing financial details of company operations.
Moore’s company had two-year losses of $51 million when it received the funding. Moore as CEO held stock options worth $633,000 and received a six-figure salary, the equivalent of $397,500 a year including bonuses.
M-Kopa sells Kenyans home appliances, cellphones and household loans at interest rates calculated at 254 percent a year, a rate outlawed in Canada under the Criminal Code. Both Moore and FinDev have declined to answer questions on executive pay, interest charges and other details of M-Kopa operations.
In his email to staff, Moore mistakenly claimed he had contacted Blacklock’s. “M-Kopa and FinDev Canada have sought corrections and offered factual information which has been repeatedly ignored by Blacklock’s editor,” wrote Moore.
“In response to their unprofessional and unethical journalism practices, we have found no value in engaging with them any further,” wrote Moore. “If you do have any questions or concerns about something you read online, do know that you are always welcome to reach out to myself. If you see any misleading articles in the media or social channels, you can contact our communications team.”
“I ask everyone to not let these baseless claims distract us from the important work we do,” said Moore. “We all know what we are achieving, and the truth of our impact should make us all very proud.”
FinDev has not detailed staff contacts with Moore prior to funding his company. The agency censored a total 2,730 pages of records concerning Moore’s company under Access To Information.
By Staff 
Feds Widen Anti-Trust Probe
Competition Bureau investigators are widening an anti-trust probe in farm chemicals, according to Federal Court records. The Bureau since 2019 has alleged the nation’s largest chemical manufacturers targeted a start-up discounter that promised farmers low-cost pesticides: “If anyone thinks socialism is going to feed the world just call Russia.”



