Death Benefits Above Board

A federal program to pay military-style death benefits to police widows has been delayed until 2019. The Department of Public Safety hired a private accounting firm to run the program to avoid any hint of favouritism in payment of $300,000 grants, it said: ‘It demonstrates a fair and transparent decision-making process.’

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“Tell Us What You Think”

 

They want to consult “at length”

where to sell pot

in Ontario.

 

Will delay store openings

by half a year.

 

But

issue is important,

deserves stakeholder input.

Citizen involvement and

public deliberation

key to moving forward.

 

They do not consult on small things:

dropping Cap-and-Trade Program,

scraping Basic Income Pilot Project,

cancelling renewable energy contracts,

axing fund for school repairs,

suspending plans for overdose prevention sites,

slashing Toronto City Council by half,

repealing sex-ed curriculum, and

telling brewers

what the price of beer should be.

 

Campaign slogan

says it all:

 

For The People

 

(Editor’s note: poet Shai Ben-Shalom, an Israeli-born biologist, examines current events in the Blacklock’s tradition each and every Sunday)

Crown Co. Paid Image Maker

A Crown corporation charged taxpayers nearly $90,000 for an image consultant six weeks before the Christmas firing of its CEO, accounts show. The Freshwater Fish Marketing Corporation yesterday did not respond to an interview request: ‘It’s for general support in protecting the corporation’s reputation.’

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Senate To Speed Mail Bill

The Senate for the second time in 7 years faces a weekend sitting to pass back-to-work legislation to end a mail strike. Cabinet yesterday introduced a bill ordering the Canadian Union of Postal Workers to end rotating strikes under threat of $100,000-a day fines: “Here we are again.”

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Too Close To Fish Farmers

Environment Commissioner Julie Gelfand yesterday said she worries the Department of Fisheries is too close to aquaculture companies. Gelfand told the Senate fisheries committee the department is open to suspicion it favours salmon-farming corporations over traditional fishermen: ‘At what point do you say, stop?’

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Cash Police A Waste Of Time

The Senate banking committee yesterday questioned Parliament’s anti-money laundering scheme as ineffectual. Of nearly 100 million cash transactions analyzed in the period from 2009 to 2014, only two resulted in successful prosecutions: “It seems like a waste of time, actually.”

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Farm MPs Curse Twitter

MPs on the Commons agriculture committee yesterday faulted animal rights groups for “social media attacks” on farmers. Remarks came a day after Agriculture Minister Lawrence MacAulay said advocacy groups have a right to free speech: “I follow social media and you’re attacking me.”

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Spent $300K On Refreshments

A federal agency spent more than $300,000 on meals and refreshments in a two-month period, accounts show. The Canadian Institutes of Health Research did not reply to detailed written questions seeking an explanation of the billings. “Is this spam?” said David Coulombe, spokesperson for the agency.

Cabinet in an Inquiry Of Ministry tabled in the Commons disclosed the agency’s hospitality expenses totaled $300,185 from last May 14 to July 19. Expenses included $4,177 for meals at a one-day meeting of 22 people at Toronto’s Chelsea Hotel, the equivalent of $190 for each guest. Meal allowances for public servants on government business are only $90 per day for breakfast, lunch and supper.

The Canadian Institutes of Health Research have 120 staff. The grant-awarding agency is mandated to support medical research.

An unidentified employee charged $12 for a visit to Toronto’s Azure Lounge. The expense was billed as “executive recruitment”. Federal employees must obtain ministerial approval before charging taxpayers for alcohol, according to a 2017 Treasury Board Directive On Travel, Hospitality, Conference & Event Expenditures.

Employees also routinely hosted meals at Ottawa restaurants like the Baton Rouge Steakhouse & Bar, Victoria Trattoria, Play Food & Wine bar and restaurant, and Mamma Teresa Ristorante located six blocks from the agency’s headquarters. Staff spent a total $12,613 for meetings of “peer review committees” at Mamma Teresa at an average $53 a plate.

The Institutes of Health Research did not comment on whether charges included drinks. The restaurant sells $28 entrees and $11 Italian coffee.

The Italian eatery was once a favourite of former Privacy Commissioner George Radwanski, driven from office in 2003 for excessive spending. Radwanski dined at Mamma Teresa 14 times in two years, and rang up a total $12,200 in hospitality charges.

“He failed to exercise sound and reasonable judgment,” the Auditor General wrote in a 2003 Report On The Office Of The Privacy Commissioner. “He spent public money on travel and hospitality unreasonably and extravagantly without regard to prudence and probity. We found little value to the Office of the Privacy Commissioner and to taxpayers for expenditures on hospitality.”

Radwanski was acquitted on charges of breach of trust in 2009. He died of a heart attack in 2014 at 67.

Auditors noted federal employees may only bill taxpayers for meals and refreshments for “work sessions extending over meal hours or beyond normal working hours”: “It should not be provided during meetings of colleagues working closely together on a regular basis.”

The 2017 Treasury Board Directive states: “Hospitality can only be provided in situations where participation is required in operational meetings, training or events that extend beyond normal working hours.”

By Staff

Warns On Hockey Injuries

Hockey Hall of Famer Ken Dryden last night urged MPs to press minor sports officials for new measures to prevent concussions. Federal data show schoolboy hockey players aged 10 to 14 are the most concussion-prone children in Canada: “This is actually a bigger problem than we thought.”

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Privacy Breach At Royal Bank

The Federal Court has ordered the Royal Bank to pay a customer $2,800 for breaching privacy law. Staff tossed a client’s tax records in a manager’s desk drawer while repeatedly claiming the files were secure or destroyed: ‘She suffered some anxiety and stress.’

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MPs Kill Pay Equity Rewrite

The Commons finance committee by an 8-1 vote has rejected labour amendments to a Pay Equity Act. Union executives said a feared loophole in the bill would allow employers to cite “diverse needs” in refusing to correct wages for underpaid women: “It would be a serious betrayal.”

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Incompetence Angers MPs

The Commons public accounts committee in a report says it is “appalled and angry” over incompetence in the Department of Public Works. The remarks targeted the failed Phoenix Pay System estimated to cost taxpayers at least $1.2 billion: “It is extremely difficult to fire people.”

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Question New Holiday Cost

MPs should weigh the cost of a new federal holiday to honour Indigenous peoples, the Canadian Taxpayers Federation yesterday told the Commons heritage committee. Legislators have not detailed the expense of a New Democrat holiday bill endorsed by cabinet: “Statutory holidays are not free.”

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