The CEO of a green energy firm that has yet to turn a profit despite millions in subsidies yesterday thanked the Commons finance committee for taxpayer grants. MPs are investigating the scope of federal aid to corporations worth $5.5 billion a year nationwide: “If somebody’s throwing money out a window, stand next to the window.”
Sees Support For Plastics Ban
Environment Minister Jonathan Wilkinson said cabinet is prepared to follow Rwanda’s lead in banning single-use plastic bags. Wilkinson in testimony at the Commons environment committee did not comment on the cost to consumers: “Canadians are far ahead of us on this.”
Fear ‘Power Grab’ In Senate
Liberal Senate appointees yesterday were accused of engineering a “power grab” to strip the Conservative caucus of its budget: “Why are they getting more money?”
Feds Made Money On Tariffs
Parliament pocketed more than a hundred million in tariff revenue that was promised to compensate industry, the Parliamentary Budget Office said yesterday. Finance Minister Bill Morneau repeatedly said the treasury would not profit from special tariffs imposed in 2018: “These surtaxes are generating significant revenues, yes.”
Dept Installs ‘Wellness Room’
The Department of Finance billed taxpayers for yoga mats and medicine balls to equip an office “wellness room”, say Access To Information records. Managers rushed the spending with hours left in the fiscal year in a “March Madness” phenomenon that sees federal agencies burn through unused budgets before they expire: “Let’s get this in place as soon as possible.”
No Junkets, Wary Of Coughs
Cabinet yesterday recommended Canadians avoid international travel and step back two metres from each other when coughing to avoid the coronavirus. The advice came as the World Health Organization declared a global pandemic: “Currently everything is okay, but we have to prepare.”
China Sent In Tax Collectors
Chinese tax collectors have threatened Canadian trade offices overseas with hefty reassessments, say Access To Information records. One former Canadian ambassador to China has recommended all trade commissioners be pulled out of the People’s Republic amid worsening relations: “We have to brace ourselves for years of difficult relations.”
“Fed Up” With Gov’t Secrecy
Information Commissioner Caroline Maynard yesterday said less than a year after Parliament rewrote the Access To Information Act, the system has so many holes Canadians are “fed up”. Maynard told the Commons ethics committee complaints over concealed records have more than doubled: “There are holes across the entire system.”
Cannot Account For Billions
The Department of Infrastructure cannot account for billions budgeted for public works, the Commons finance committee was told yesterday. The Parliamentary Budget Office said it tried and failed since January to have the department disclose a list of new roads, bridges and utilities financed by taxpayers: “If they know they aren’t telling us.”
Inquiry Into Gov’t Job Claims
The Department of Industry says Canadians “gain wealth” from corporate subsidies but can’t explain inflated job claims. The Commons finance committee yesterday opened an unprecedented inquiry on the scope of aid to companies: “Is it true?”
Studied $100M Fertilizer Tax
The Department of Environment hired consultants to study a multi-million dollar green tax on farm fertilizer but dropped the idea on a warning of industry protests. “Don’t share outside of department,” read handwritten minutes of a staff meeting obtained under Access To Information: “Negative response likely.”
Few Telemarketers Punished
Fewer than one percent of telemarketing complaints result in enforcement action by federal regulators, the CRTC yesterday confirmed. Executives told the Commons industry committee the point of the National Do Not Call List was not to punish unwanted callers: “I mean, cases do take time.”
35,000 Rules And Counting
Federal agencies enforce about 35,000 regulations with new ones added at the rate of one a day, the Treasury Board yesterday told the Commons committee on government operations. MPs complained of modest savings from a 2015 law that promised to cut red tape: “Regulators regulate. That is what they do.”
Says Mao Did ‘Great Things’
A former Canadian ambassador to China yesterday praised Mao Zedong for achieving “great things”, and claimed personal freedom in the People’s Republic has improved for decades. Howard Balloch, ex-Chretien appointee, made the remarks in testimony at the Commons Special Committee on Canada-China Relations: “Freedoms in China grew substantially.”
No Comment On Police Probe
The Commons ethics committee yesterday by a 6-4 vote rejected further hearings on SNC-Lavalin Group Inc. influence in the Prime Minister’s Office. However Lobbying Commissioner Nancy Bélanger confirmed she reviewed complaints the Prime Minister breached federal law with possible recourse to an RCMP probe: “I would not want to jeopardize the integrity of any police investigation.”



