Sunwing Cited By Regulator

Federal regulators are citing Sunwing Airlines Inc. for numerous breaches of regulations over nightmare holiday flights last April. In one case, the airline summoned police to calm rowdy travelers stranded more than six hours on the tarmac: ‘Police were urging passengers to remain calm.’

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Best And Worst In Red Tape

A business survey of municipalities rates the best and worst cities in Canada on red tape. Thousands told the Canadian Federation of Independent Business that time-wasting paperwork and petty bylaw enforcement is commonplace: “It has taken over 16 months to get a permit.”

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Auditors Check Gov’t Ads

Federal auditors are completing a review of government advertising, the first since cabinet shelved a law to ban partisan self-promotion. Then-Treasury Board President Scott Brison promised “future legislation” in 2016: “We are seeking to move with an immediate policy, a strong policy.”

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Data Contradict Kids’ Ad Ban

New Statistics Canada data question the effectiveness of a proposed federal ban on food and beverage ads targeting children. Kids’ sugar consumption is above the national average in Québec, where the country’s only ad ban has been enforced for 39 years: “Evidence suggests there is absolutely no correlation.”

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$4M On Private Solar Panels

The Department of Natural Resources yesterday approved a $3.9 million solar panel grant to a private builder to construct what it called the country’s first super-energy efficient apartment building. The grant is equivalent to $33,900 per apartment: “It costs quite a bit more.”

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Fear Privatization Pushback

Federal consultants warn of a public outcry if Parks Canada tries to privatize canal bridges and dams to save millions in maintenance costs. The cash-strapped agency commissioned the research after complaining of millions in unfunded repairs: “This would likely be met with significant pushback from the public.”

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Food Guide Draws Protests

Industry groups yesterday protested a new Canada Food Guide appears vague and arbitrary in attempting to write select supermarket items out of the national diet. Cream, butter, high-fat cheese and fruit juice are cited by Health Canada as foods to avoid: “We don’t want to lose the juice industry.”

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Billions At Stake In Fed Guide

Health Canada in a billion-dollar revision to its benchmark Food Guide is writing fruit juice, whole milk, butter and deli meats out of the nation’s recommended diet. Juice makers have warned of lost sales in the $1.6 billion-a year trade: “Water should be the beverage of choice.”

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$10M Legacy Gift For Ex-GG

The Privy Council Office says it approved a $10 million “legacy gift” sought by ex-governor general David Johnston before naming him as Canada’s first federal election Debates Commissioner. The funding went to a foundation that runs a Johnston Fund For Canada and accepts donations from corporate CEOs: ‘The purpose is an enduring legacy of the Rt. Honourable David Johnston.’

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Gov’t Ridicules GST Break

Cabinet yesterday ridiculed a New Democrat proposal to remove the GST on new construction of public housing. The Liberal Party in 2015 made an identical proposal in its election platform: “The NDP is going to have a policy on housing? Wow, that’s a first.”

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Won’t Disclose Bond Savings

The Bank of Canada will not disclose cost savings from the wind-up of the Canada Savings Bond program. The Bank earlier hired a consultant at $33.5 million to end the century-old sale of mom and pop bonds worth as little as $100 apiece: “We don’t have a dollar amount to provide.”

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Vet Complaint Wins In Court

A federal judge has upheld a six-year grievance by a Canadian Armed Forces member seeking compensation for injuries. The ruling follows a 2018 federal survey that faulted the Department of Veterans Affairs for poor treatment of soldiers, sailors and air crew.

“Unreasonable treatment,” Federal Court Justice Richard Southcott ruled in the case of an army volunteer denied disability payments for a back injury. The Court ordered the Veterans Review & Appeal Board to reconsider the case after dismissing the claim in 2018.

Gary Crummey, 52, of East Bay, N.S. applied for benefits after suffering a fractured spine in a fall from a rope bridge while training as a peacekeeper in Egypt in 2008. Crummey served with the military from 1983.

Crummey submitted X-rays and a doctor’s report that his injuries were related to military service and likely aggravated by marches and battle fitness testing that required carrying heavy packs over long distances. The Board dismissed the claim as “very speculative”, ruling it “does not have to accept all evidence presented by an appellant if it finds the evidence is not credible,” according to Court documents.

“If a person has experienced more than one-service related incident, each of which could be the cause of the injury under consideration such that a physician cannot identify which of these incidents is the precise cause, surely this cannot be a basis to find the physician’s opinion is lacking credibility,” wrote Justice Southcott.

Crummey could not be reached for comment. The Court noted under the Veterans Review & Appeal Board Act, members are to “resolve in favour of the appellant any doubt in the weighing of evidence as to whether the appellant has established a case.”

The Department of Veterans Affairs in a 2018 in-house survey of the general public found only 15 percent of respondents considered the department’s work as adequate. “There is a strong sense that Veterans Affairs Canada should be doing more,” said the survey report Canadians’ Awareness Of Veterans Affairs Canada’s Benefits And Services. The department paid $102,513 to Earnscliffe Strategy Group to conduct the poll.

“Opinion remains divided over how well Veterans Affairs Canada serves the needs of veterans,” wrote Earnscliffe. “However, more Canadians offer low performance ratings than high performance ratings.”

Data showed 28 percent of Canadians believe the department treats veterans poorly; 32 percent questioned if the department is honest with ex-military; and 39 percent were convinced veterans with medical needs were not getting they help they needed.

The research was prompted by complaints from veterans who “find it difficult at times to navigate the programs and services offered by Veterans Affairs Canada,” said Awareness. The department has had five different ministers in the past four years.

By Staff

Quiet On $111K Staff Claims

House of Commons administration is being honoured as one of the country’s best employers despite paying out-of-court settlements in staff harassment claims that cost more than $100,000 last year. Neither the Commons nor managers of the Canada’s Top Employers award would comment: ‘It’s a rich fabric of professionals working together.’

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Sorry To Bother You: Memo

The Department of Industry has reassured corporations of no “repercussions for our relationship” in concealing terms of taxpayers’ loans from MPs, senators and the public. The apologetic reference is detailed in Access To Information records. The department did not comment: ‘We let big corporations decide.’

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No Free Trade With China

Any free trade pact with Beijing is off the table after the arrest and detention of Canadians in the People’s Republic, says Ambassador John McCallum. “It is certainly not an issue that we are considering right now,” McCallum told reporters: “The Chinese government arrests people to use as bargaining chips.”

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