Careful With Leaks: Judge

Confidential government records remain private even if they’re leaked and republished on Facebook, the British Columbia Supreme Court has ruled. The decision came in the case of personal records obtained from Nanaimo City Hall: ‘The City was likely the source of the leak but I am not sure it matters.’

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Won’t Accept Foreign Mail

The post office yesterday said it will no longer accept any foreign mail for the duration of rotating strikes by the Canadian Union of Postal Workers, now in their 24th day. Management also took an unusual step of detailing a take-it-or-leave-it contract offer to workers: “We are unable to accept incoming items.”

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$49,500 For One Sweet Job

A Newfoundland & Labrador chocolate factory received thousands in federal grants to create a single job, say Access To Information records. Funding was approved as then-Tourism Minister Bardish Chagger called funding by the Atlantic Canada Opportunities Agency “quite motivational”.

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“Racism And Prejudice Exist”

An Ontario judge overseeing a murder trial has ruled defence counsel may ask prospective jurors if they don’t like minorities. The decision comes as the Senate considers a cabinet bill to ban peremptory challenges: “We would be naïve to assume none of the members of our jury panels hold some racist or prejudiced views.”

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Never Met Green Advisors

Environment Minister Catherine McKenna has yet to meet in person with her own federal Sustainable Development Advisory Council, a member told the Senate energy committee. McKenna joined in a brief phone call but “had a meeting come up or something”, senators were told: ‘Staff were the ones corralling us.’

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Botched Hearing Cost $347K

The Federal Court has thrown out a $347,386 wrongful dismissal award to a truck driver due to a botched Canada Labour Code arbitration hearing. A judge cited the arbitrator for “unjustified remarks” against the employer: “There is no doubt that he failed.”

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40% Chance Of Missed Target

The Department of Public Works says its property projects run late and over-budget about 40 percent of the time. The internal audit follow claims from the Clerk of the Privy Council that the department is 100 percent on-target on big projects: “We have the most effective public service on the planet.”

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No Cash For Air Complaint

A federal judge has thrown out another cash claim by a French-language traveler against Air Canada. The Supreme Court in 2014 ruled the airline was not obliged to pay damages for technical breaches of the Official Languages Act: ‘Harm is minimal.’

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