Few Canadian businesses see privacy breaches, only four percent, says a national survey by the Office of the Privacy Commissioner. A third of operators polled said they were “not at all concerned about a data breach”.
Covid Threats Target Senate
Senators are being cautioned to be careful opening mail after envelopes claimed to be infected with the coronavirus were sent to their Ottawa offices. The Parliament Hill alert is the first since a 2001 anthrax scare: “The risk of contracting Covid-19 from a mailed letter is considered as very low.”
‘Ambitious’ Green Plan Stalls
Cabinet will not launch a promised “ambitious” tree-planting blitz this year though it was proposed to create thousands of summer jobs. The Liberal Party in its 2019 election platform said planting hundreds of millions of trees a year would put 3,500 unemployed to work: “We will move forward.”
Rent Relief Program Fizzles
Pandemic relief for commercial tenants is so under-subscribed it will cost sixteen percent of what was budgeted, federal data show. MPs and tenants alike complained the program was badly designed: “It’s absurd.”
Senate Eyes Secretive Panel
The Senate will vote on a proposal to appoint a secretive super-committee of three members to oversee its $116 million yearly budget and control all audits. Suggested changes to Rules Of The Senate follow complaints of concealed spending and breach of contracting rules: “I am struck at how secret an institution the Senate is.”
Amazon Declines To Testify
Amazon Canada executives will not take questions on confidential terms of a multi-million dollar contract to distribute pandemic supplies, the Commons government operations committee was told. Cabinet awarded Amazon the $5 million contract on a claim the company was working without profit: “We’re trying to figure out what is the scope and scale of this arrangement.”
Pot Copycat Must Pay $30,000
A Vancouver cannabis shop must pay $30,000 and stop calling itself Herbs R Us, the Federal Court has ruled. The judgment is the third marijuana-related case under the Trademarks Act: “Adult-themed content said to include nudity and swear words is utterly inconsistent with the reputation of the Toys R Us brand.”
Sunday Poem: ‘Small Change’
Mom prepares her teenaged son
for the tournament.
She packs his bags
and puts spending money
in his wallet.
40 dollars.
She then takes another 20-dollar bill,
seals it in an envelope,
and writes “For Emergency Only”
in red ink.
She places this one at the bottom of his backpack.
The tournament went well,
and
there is still one dollar left in the wallet.
Mom is happy;
her son showed fiscal responsibility.
Until she learns that he bought pizza for the whole team,
and paid for it
by selling his hockey equipment
and dipping into his contingency fund.
“Why are you mad at me, Mom?
I balanced the budget, didn’t I?”
(Editor’s note: poet Shai Ben-Shalom, an Israeli-born biologist, examines current events in the Blacklock’s tradition each and every Sunday)

Gov’t Board Likes China Coal
The Canada Pension Plan Investment Board yesterday called itself a climate change leader despite millions spent buying stock in Chinese coal companies. “We are thinking about climate change,” Mark Machin, the Board’s $5.9 million-a year CEO, told the Commons finance committee: “We do believe climate change is happening.”
Feds Claim Covid ID Theft
A $60 billion pandemic relief program has attracted swindlers, identity thieves and shady tax preparers, the Canada Revenue Agency said last night. “Where we are focused is organized crime,” Assistant Revenue Commissioner Ted Gallivan told the Commons finance committee: ‘People have gone into senior citizens’ homes to make claims under those names.’
Anti-Corruption Was Skimpy
The Department of Natural Resources assigned a single employee and $100,000 in special funding to monitor corrupt practices by Canadian energy companies abroad, says an internal audit. The report cited skimpy resources in questioning the credibility of the program enacted by Parliament five years ago: ‘It’s difficult to know the full extent of compliance due to the hidden nature of corruption.’
Owes China State Bank $1M
MPs yesterday questioned terms of Chinese government bank loans to Foreign Minister Françoise-Philippe Champagne. The two-term MP owes $1.2 million to the Communist Party-run Bank of China: ‘These are matters of personal finance.’
Billed For Bowling & Bonbons
A federal agency billed taxpayers nearly $6,000 for a bowling party and Valentine’s Day chocolates, according to accounts. The Canadian Air Transport Security Authority described the expenses as necessary for “team building”.
Realtors Must Name Names
Realtors must name names of suspicious clients under new federal regulations introduced yesterday. The rules target offshore speculators and money launderers using shell companies to buy property: “A single transaction in the real estate sector could be used to launder a large sum of money.”
House Gridlocked On Jail Bill
Parliament yesterday ground into gridlock as MPs balked at a cabinet bill threatening jail for Canadians who falsely claimed pandemic relief cheques. “They are not normal times,” said Government House Leader Pablo Rodriguez.



