Cabinet last night had no new proposals to avert the apparent collapse of its signature climate change plan, the national carbon tax. Manitoba yesterday became the third province to oppose the measure. Two other pro-tax provincial governments were defeated in elections in the last 10 days: “Is the federal plan falling apart?”
Migrant Probe Targets Sports
The labour department has expanded an inspection crackdown on migrant hiring to semi-pro sports. Two Canadian organizations have been fined for breaching the Temporary Foreign Worker Program: “Is this some kind of prank?”
Judge Says Tax Law Not Fair
The Canada Revenue Agency will not refund a $1,108 Canada Pension Plan overpayment after a taxpayer missed the deadline for claims by 15 weeks. The system is not “necessarily fair”, said a Tax Court judge: “However, it is the clear intent of Parliament.”
Newborns Will Live To 100
Trends in health and mortality rates suggest Canadian newborns by the year 2200 can expect to live to 100, nearly double the average life expectancy in 1930. Chief Actuary Jean-Claude Ménard predicted the number of nonagenarians, people in their 90s, will skyrocket this generation: ‘Retirement will become even more expensive.’
Post OK To Reinvest Profits
Cabinet yesterday issued an order permitting Canada Post to suspend any future dividend payments to the federal treasury. The post office should spend all profits on improving service, it said. Management is also required to publicly disclose its budget plans: “We have had a process with very little real consultation.”
‘Do It Differently This Time’
The National Energy Board has until February 22 to complete a maritime environmental risk assessment on the Trans Mountain pipeline. Cabinet yesterday stopped short of imposing a similar deadline on talks with First Nations opposed to the megaproject, but said work must proceed: “We are going to do things differently this time.”
Can’t Find Tax Ombudsman
Taxpayers’ Ombudsman Sherra Profit paid a pollster $68,948 to confirm most Canadians never heard of her. The $2.3 million-a year agency was created in 2008 to answer taxpayers’ complaints: ‘The main challenge is actually reaching someone over the phone.’
Everybody Pays For Tariffs
Canadian steelmaker Essar Steel Algoma Inc. yesterday appealed to the Commons trade committee for help against U.S. duties. One factory owner told MPs’ tariff hearings that all Canadians are now paying for cross-border taxes: “Food bills have increased significantly.”
Predict Fed Pension Shortfall
Taxpayers face nearly $100 billion in unreported costs for federal employees’ pensions, the Commons government operations committee was told yesterday. A typical government staffer will spend as many years in retirement as they do on the job, according to data from the Chief Actuary: “We are storing up trouble for the future.”
Toxic Audits Poorly Focused
Environment Commissioner Julie Gelfand yesterday faulted regulators for targeting small business in enforcing a federal Chemicals Management Plan. Inspectors spent more time auditing dry cleaners than pulp mills, records show: ‘We would have expected other priorities for enforcement.’
No Cost Of Accessibility Bill
The Department of Public Works says it has not calculated the cost of compliance with a bill mandating barrier-free access at federally-regulated worksites. Expenses will be detailed later, Public Works Minister Carla Qualtrough told the Commons human resources committee: “You wouldn’t be suggesting that there’s a cost too high.”
Senators Like Tax Gap Bill
The Senate national finance committee yesterday approved a private Liberal bill compelling the Canada Revenue Agency to report on the value of unpaid taxes. The panel okayed the bill in eight minutes’ flat without debate: “What counts is really the long-term trend.”
‘Word Of Caution’ On Trade
Cabinet yesterday cautioned a tentative free trade pact with the U.S. is not finalized, and has not resolved tariff disputes that have cost Canadian industry billions. “A word of caution: we’re not at the finish line,” Prime Minister Justin Trudeau told reporters.
Judge Wouldn’t Hire Anglos
A retired Supreme Court justice last evening said federal agencies should stop hiring people who can’t speak French. Cabinet should also proclaim Ottawa an officially bilingual city, the Senate languages committee was told: “The Government of Canada is able to do that but I assume they don’t have the courage.”
Cabinet Didn’t Hire Veteran
Cabinet yesterday bypassed ex-military in appointing a former policeman to a senior $112,000-a year Senate post. The appointment, traditionally reserved for combat veterans, came despite two Senate committee reports and a 2015 Act of Parliament that claimed to promote the hiring of medically-discharged soldiers, sailors and air crew: “These are men and women who have served our country with distinction.”



