Ineligible Claims Cost $443M

Nearly half a billion in pandemic relief cheques were claimed by Canadians who weren’t entitled to them, says the Department of Social Development. Opposition MPs have questioned why payments were knowingly made to 221,320 people already receiving Employment Insurance: “When it’s obvious someone is not eligible, they shouldn’t ignore that.”

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More We Contracts Disclosed

The Privy Council Office yesterday refused to say why it awarded tens of thousands of dollars in undisclosed sole-sourced contracts to We Charity in 2019. The contracts were just below a regulatory threshold that would have made the awards public: “What were those contracts for?”

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$154K A Week To Hunt, Fish

A federal grant program is paying Indigenous people the equivalent of $154,000 a week to hunt and fish. The Department of Crown-Indigenous Relations yesterday did not comment on the subsidy intended to promote “consumption of traditional and country foods” in remote hamlets: “They will need equipment to go back to their traditional way of harvesting.”

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Cite Photocopying For Losses

Canadian publishers remain “fragile” and have lost more than $40 million in yearly domestic sales since 2012 changes to the Copyright Act, says a Department of Canadian Heritage report. Textbook companies publish fewer than half the titles they did before the Supreme Court approved wholesale photocopying: “Publishers indicate they have been damaged.”

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Bill To Regulate Swipe Fees

Another private bill to regulate retailers’ credit card swipe fees, the third attempt in five years, has been introduced in the Commons. The latest bill follows small business complaints of costly fees charged merchants: “Who do we work for?”

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No Home Tax Ever: Morneau

Finance Minister Bill Morneau yesterday promised cabinet will never under any circumstance tax Canadians’ primary residences. The pledge followed days of equivocation by CMHC over a $250,000 grant for a study by researchers who blamed current tax policy for “inequality and social division between renters and owners”.

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Health Chief Flew By VIP Jet

Transport Canada pilots logged thousands of kilometres flying Health Minister Patricia Hajdu back and forth to her riding on weekends aboard a VIP jet.  Liberals in opposition had criticized a Conservative finance minister for using the same aircraft: “It’s a classic case of do as I say not as I do.”

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Won’t See Pandemic Emails

The Commons health committee yesterday voted 6-5 to censor release of all records on the Public Health Agency’s management of the pandemic. Conservative and New Democrat MPs sought full disclosure of documents: “It’s just a shame, what we’re doing here.”

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Gov’t Alleges Online Fakery

The Competition Bureau accuses employees of Québec telecom giant Vidéotron Lteé of posing as customers in posting enthusiastic online reviews of company products. Bell Canada was earlier fined $1.25 million in a similar investigation: “I have reason to believe Vidéotron employees have engaged in deceptive marketing practices.”

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MPs To OK Disability Benefit

MPs today are expected to pass a billion-dollar pandemic relief bill for Canadians with disabilities. A similar bill to be introduced June 11 was withdrawn after legislators protested a jail clause for fraudulent claims under a separate program: “People with disabilities have been waiting way too long for this.”

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MPs Wary Of Fed Tax Study

Cabinet says it has no “current” plans to tax home equity. Lawmakers distanced themselves from CMHC-funded research on taxing residences as capital gains, a proposal one MP predicted would see homeowners “gathering with torches and pitchforks”.

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Offers $500 Or A Free Chair

Federal employees working from home are entitled to a $500 furniture grant or doorstep delivery of a free chair. The Department of Public Works did not explain why staff could not use their own chairs: “Overall costs of chairs delivered or purchased are not currently available.”

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Rules Are The Rules: Minister

We Charity should have registered as a lobbyist before seeking federal subsidies, says Employment Minister Carla Qualtrough. Opposition MPs have filed a formal complaint that the Prime Minister’s favourite charity failed to comply with the Lobbying Act: “Listen, I think we should always err on the side of caution.”

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No Jail Threat In 2021 Census

Statistics Canada says it’s counting on enthusiastic participation in a 2021 Census, the first since Parliament repealed a law threatening jail for Canadians who boycott the federal questionnaire. Prosecutions were rare and unsuccessful: “I want to see the list of Canadians who support putting people in jail for not filling out forms.”

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Tax Filers Owe Duty Of Care

Tax preparers owe a duty of care to clients, a British Columbia tribunal has ruled. One consultant who forgot to submit necessary paperwork was ordered to refund his client $4,626 in Canada Revenue Agency reassessments: “Buyer beware does not apply to this matter.”

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