Christian engagement rings are not a religious symbol even if blessed by a priest, a federal labour adjudicator has ruled. The decision came in the case of a Catholic mail clerk who claimed discrimination after being ordered to remove her ring at a Canada Post sorting plant though Sikh coworkers were allowed to wear silver bangles called karas: “My conscience has led me to be steadfast.”
Parliament Refits Up $153M
The budget for ongoing renovations to Parliament Hill buildings increased another $152.9 million last year, according to records. The Department of Public Works has yet to fix a final budget for the multi-billion dollar refit, the costliest in Canadian history: “I find it kind of bizarre.”
Try Again On French Fines
Federal agencies that fail to speak French should have to pay cash fines, says Language Commissioner Raymond Théberge. Cabinet has repeatedly rejected the proposal to levy penalties under the 1969 Official Languages Act: “I know it sounds odd to talk about linguistic police.”
A Poem: “After Hours”
I wonder if Cabinet members
and opposition leaders
get together in a local pub
at the end of Question Period
to celebrate another successful day
at the workplace.
Their daily show
perfectly delivered;
audience is kept excited,
engaged,
satisfied.
I deserve to know;
I am the one paying for it.
(Editor’s note: poet Shai Ben-Shalom, an Israeli-born biologist, examines current events in Blacklock’s tradition each and every Sunday)

UN Study Blames ‘Tar Sands’
A UN committee report says Alberta “tar sands” have poisoned the environment, and questioned whether companies were implicated in human rights abuses. The report described oil sands mining as “disturbing”, “alarming” and “troubling”: “Reports were received that Indigenous women have gone missing after alleging health impacts from oil sands operations.”
Warn Of ‘Zombie Businesses’
The pandemic has claimed hundreds of thousands of “zombie businesses” that are insolvent but unable to file for bankruptcy, the Senate national finance committee was told yesterday. Covid-19 shutdowns slowed proceedings in bankruptcy courts: “We’re only at the tip of the iceberg.”
Vets’ Paperwork Exasperating
Paperwork is so difficult for veterans filing legitimate claims for benefits that “I mightn’t be great at it myself,” Veterans Affairs Minister Lawrence MacAulay said yesterday. A backlog of claims by injured vets numbered 49,216 this year, according to the Budget Office: “These are people who served this country.”
On Lookout For China Labels
Canadian consumers should be on the lookout for China-made products and challenge importers to prove they are not relying on slave labour, the chair of the Commons ethics committee said yesterday. A separate subcommittee of Parliament on October 21 said it believed slave-made imports from China are sold here: “This is actually happening.”
Don’t Know The 2020 Deficit
Members of the Senate national finance committee yesterday complained information is so sparse Canadians can’t be sure of the size of the deficit. Parliament is the only assembly in Canada that has yet to see a 2020 budget: “Why is there no reporting?”
Keen On A “Climate Budget”
Cabinet just prior to the pandemic polled Canadians’ views on a “climate budget”, according to records. The concept fared badly in focus groups. A planned March 30 budget was cancelled and never rescheduled: “Many more felt it was a bad idea.”
35% Reported Mystery Voters
More than a third of election officers in the last federal campaign encountered voters whose names were missing from the National Register Of Electors. Data follow disclosures the voters’ list contained at least 312,000 names of ineligible electors including dead people and foreigners: ‘They were unable to be registered at the polling station.’
MP Had Lectured On Ethics
An ex-Liberal MP who left caucus over nepotism had been an outspoken critic of ethical lapses on Parliament Hill. “Canadians deserve better accountability,” MP Yasmin Ratansi (Don Valley East, Ont.) earlier told legislators.
Auditors Fail $103M Subsidy
Fewer than half of Northern families can afford a federally-recommended nutritious diet despite $103 million a year in grocers’ subsidies, say auditors. Investigators said the costly fly-in Nutrition North Program had little impact: “The subsidy focuses on the price of food and not the economic realities.”
China Envoy Wants Respect
Canadians have shown disrespect to the Communist Party and should use care in discussing the People’s Republic, says the Chinese ambassador to Canada. Cong Peiwu in an interview with an Ottawa periodical said he could not abide public criticism of his country: “Canadians do not respect the Chinese system.”
Pause For Remembrance Day
Blacklock’s Reporter today pauses for Remembrance Day observance with gratitude to all who honoured our country. Thank you for your service — The Editor.



