Student Aid 12% Over Budget

Pandemic relief for jobless students will go nearly $700 million over budget, the Parliamentary Budget Office said yesterday. The program intended for college and university students now pays benefits to high school graduates whether or not they’re enrolled on campus: “People have to get back to work.”

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Court Upholds Spam Law

Canada’s anti-spam law is constitutional, the Federal Court of Appeal has ruled. The decision came in the case of a Québec firm that filed for bankruptcy after it was threatened with a $1.1 million fine: “Spam is a nuisance.”

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Auditors Go Easy In Québec

The Canada Revenue Agency audits proportionately fewer businesses in Québec than any other province, data show. Small businesses in British Columbia, Ontario and Newfoundland and Labrador are twice or three times more likely to be audited: ‘It feels to the individual taxpayer like the CRA is focused on them.’

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RCMP Rejected Cams In 2015

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau yesterday proposed to discuss mandatory police body-worn cameras but stopped short of issuing a directive to the RCMP. A Conservative motion and Liberal Senate proposal to have all police wear cameras lapsed in Parliament over the past decade: “Why do police not want this?”

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Rental Arrears 10%, MPs Told

Rental arrears in public housing are running at about ten percent, a manageable level, advocates yesterday told the Commons human resources committee. Cabinet three years ago outlined a National Housing Strategy promising $2,500-a year rental aid to low income households in 2020: “No tenant has been forced to leave.”

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Gov’t Hunts For CERB Cheats

Canadians who falsely claimed to be jobless or refused work to qualify for $2,000 pandemic relief cheques face jail and five-figure fines. Cabinet will introduce legislation on penalties following suspiciously high claims for the Canada Emergency Response Benefit: “The numbers keep rising.”

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Still Rely On China Suppliers

Made in Canada pandemic masks promised “within weeks” will not be available through an anticipated second wave of infections by Labour Day, says the Department of Industry. “The work is not done,” said Mitch Davies, senior assistant deputy minister: “Obviously this is important.”

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Stay Afloat With 100% Grant

The Canadian Press is demanding 100 percent taxpayer grants, the equivalent of $500,000 a week, to offset revenue losses to year’s end. The news agency that calls itself the nation’s “trusted news leader” already received $1.3 million in sole-sourced licensing fees from federal agencies last year: “It would be most efficient if under such a program the grant be allocated directly to Canadian Press.”

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Hiring Migrants At 1,600/wk

The Department of Employment has continued to approve labour permits for temporary foreign workers at the rate of more than 1,600 a week even as unemployment climbed to a postwar high. The department in a report sought by one MP said it will begin rejecting migrant permits in hotel, restaurant and retail trades: “We need to stay focused.”

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CBC-TV Eyes Views In News

A CBC executive says the Crown broadcaster is reviewing ethics guidelines that forbid reporters from expressing “personal views” in the news. The internal email by Brodie Fenlon, editor in chief, was obtained by Press Progress. The CBC did not comment: “We are a beacon for that truth.”

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Jobs Riding On Plastic Regs

Thousands of recession-era jobs are riding on whether cabinet bans single use plastics, an industry lobbyist told the Commons industry committee. Regulations are expected in 2021.: ‘Surely you’re not saying a plastic bag has a significant positive contribution to our economy.’

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China Claims Quietly Erased

The Public Health Agency yesterday quietly erased China data from its pandemic reports as unreliable. Health Minister Patricia Hajdu earlier ridiculed questions over the plausibility of figures from the People’s Republic as an internet conspiracy: “We can confirm China was removed.”

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Invokes Privacy On Subsidies

Infrastructure Minister Catherine McKenna yesterday invoked “privacy and security reasons” for refusing to disclose locations of subsidized public works to the Parliamentary Budget Office. Analysts have tried for months to find proof of 52,000 projects claimed by McKenna: ‘They are mysterious.’

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