Cabinet is concealing thousands of pandemic records including details of contracts and ministerial memos. Cabinet in one case breached a direct order from the Commons health committee to disclose briefing notes, while the Library of Parliament has refused to disclose files it admits are public documents: “They were not so busy that they could not busy themselves with redacting the documents.”
Drivers Save Billions In Fuel
Gas and diesel use fell by billions of litres last month as cabinet invoked stay-home orders, Statistics Canada said yesterday. The Commons finance committee was told recession-bound motorists should have no difficulty meeting greenhouse gas emission targets this year: “Go home and stay home.”
Subsidized Co’s To Be Named
Corporations with offshore accounts qualify for taxpayer grants under a $73 billion wage subsidy though they may be publicly named, officials said yesterday. MPs protested companies with accounts in tax havens should be barred: “They hide their millions.”
Expect Million Grant Claims
The Canada Revenue Agency expects a million employers or more to apply for wage subsidies starting Monday, April 27. Most claims will be automatically processed without audits under the largest pandemic relief program to date: “We are pretty confident.”
Worry About Germs: Speaker
The Speaker of the Commons yesterday said he’s closed public buildings to “avoid the spread of germs”. Opposition MPs ridiculed fears Parliament cannot safely do its work while other Canadians go about their business: “There’s talk about opening golf courses, for God’s sake.”
Says China Slows Shipments
Cabinet acknowledges “challenges” in shipping pre-paid pandemic supplies from China. The Department of Public Works confirmed Chinese authorities imposed new export controls that delayed deliveries of vital equipment: “We are seeing export controls change.”
Illegal Immigration Near Zero
Public Safety Minister Bill Blair yesterday said illegal border crossings that once peaked at more than 5,700 a month have now declined to zero. Blair credited enforcement of the Quarantine Act: ‘There have been fewer than ten who crossed and were directed back to the United States.’
Pandemic Parole For Inmates
Hundreds of federal prisoners have been paroled as a pandemic relief measure, says the Department of Public Safety. Staff would not release an actual number, but said no parolee posed a risk: “Literally hundreds of people have in fact been placed back in the community.”
Suspend Shareholders’ Meet
Companies under the Canada Business Corporations Act may postpone annual general meetings as a pandemic precaution, the British Columbia Supreme Court has ruled. The decision came on petition from a media company listed on the Toronto exchange: ‘This pandemic has reached into every person’s very existence.’
Facebook v. Privacy Chief
A federal privacy probe of Facebook Inc. was a fishing expedition that contravened an Act of Parliament, Facebook lawyers have told a federal judge. The corporation filed a Federal Court application challenging Canada’s privacy investigation as subjective and improper: “The report should be quashed.”
Gas Tax Didn’t Cut Emissions
The carbon tax did not lower greenhouse gas emissions, new data confirm. The Department of Environment blamed home heating in part for an increase in fuel use even as Parliament imposed the tax nationwide: “We believe in numbers.”
Food Prices Up “For Sure”
Consumers will see higher prices and less variety at grocery stores this summer without immediate pandemic aid for farmers, says the Canadian Federation of Agriculture. The group told the Commons finance committee trade disruptions and uncertain arrival of some 60,000 migrant farm workers will hurt production: “We’ve been careful about this in the press to not raise panic.”
Pull China Aid, Gov’t Told
Parliament must pull all foreign aid from China including millions spent in a Beijing investment bank, says Opposition Leader Andrew Scheer. New data show Canada sent more pre-pandemic foreign aid to the People’s Republic last year than it gave to Sudan or Zambia: “Stop being bullied and pushed around.”
Feds Issue First Mask Decree
Cabinet today is enforcing the nation’s first-ever mandatory face mask order, on airline passengers. All travelers over age two will be denied boarding without a mask though homemade versions may be acceptable, said the Department of Transport: “It is the passenger’s responsibility.”
Ask To Postpone Green Regs
The oil industry is petitioning cabinet to defer higher carbon taxes, a federal ban on plastics and other environmental regulations. New measures are now unaffordable, said the Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers: “It does not make sense.”



