Major Flood At Nt’l Archives

The national archives suffered a “major flood” in 2018 that damaged books and records but withheld information from the public. The agency yesterday denied any parts of its collection were ruined, though an auditors’ report cited “damage” and photos obtained through Access To Information showed an inch of water pooled on the floor: “Water is pouring in.”

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Insurer Wins Marijuana Case

Insurers may reject claims by homeowners who fail to report marijuana on the property, the British Columbia Court of Appeal said yesterday. Judges upheld the refusal by Wawanesa Mutual Co. of Winnipeg to honour payouts under a $1.37 million policy to a cannabis grower: “Would it matter if I grew tomatoes or cucumbers?”

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Rate Cut Worth $25 A Month

A cabinet promise to cut cellphone bills by a quarter would save Canadians $11 to $25 a month, according to CRTC data. Legislators have grumbled over weak federal regulation of rates for mobile service plans: “It’s basically a cartel, let’s face it.”

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Feds Hunt For Child Labour

The Department of Public Works yesterday said it will launch a top-to-bottom review of current contracts to ensure no federal goods are made by children or slave labour. A private Liberal bill to ban all imports of forced labour goods lapsed in the last Parliament: “Ethics cost money.”

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Mistaken Raid Costs $195K

Environment Canada has paid $195,000 to settle out of court with a family-run business over a mistaken raid by RCMP and wildlife officers. Lawyers argued the department owed a “duty of care” to protect the public from overzealous federal agents: ‘It was based on speculation, innuendo and half-truths.”

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CBSA Admits 27,405 Searches

The Canada Border Services Agency yesterday said in a two-year period it searched more than 27,000 travelers’ cellphones and iPads, the highest figure disclosed to date. MPs have sought greater privacy protection from random searches of personal data: “It’s basically your life history and all your records.”

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Alberta Man Wins E.I. Claim

An Alberta manager denied Employment Insurance benefits after he was fired in a desk-pounding confrontation with his boss has won a Federal Court appeal. Under the law, workers fired for “misconduct” cannot claim jobless benefits: “The allegation of harassment needed to be considered.”

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Hard Questions For Diplomat

MPs yesterday voted to summon Canada’s ambassador to China for unprecedented questioning in nationally televised hearings. Conservatives have depicted Ambassador Dominic Barton as an apologist for the Chinese regime while Canadians are jailed without charge in the People’s Republic: “I have no problem with tough questions.”

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“Buy Canadian” For $20M

The Department of Agriculture yesterday said it will spend up to $20 million on a Buy Canadian food campaign. The initiative comes eight years after the biggest beef recall in Canadian history: ‘It’s to instill pride and confidence in the country’s food system.’

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City Apartments 99% Full

CMHC says apartment vacancies in Victoria are below one percent for some units, the lowest rate of any major city in the country. The rental shortage coincides with near full employment: “It’s getting to that really, really tight point.”

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Bleak For English In Québec

Less than a third of English-speaking Québecers are confident their young people will stay in the province, says Department of Canadian Heritage research. Statistics Canada has forecast Québec will shrink to twenty percent of Canada’s population within a generation: “Five years from now access to provincial services in English will become worse.’

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Union Sues For Defamation

The Canadian Union of Postal Workers in a rare lawsuit accuses B’nai Brith of defamation. “A union may now sue to defend its reputation,” ruled an Ontario Superior Court judge: “This is a case in which the defamation action appears to have merit.”

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