A federal report acknowledges sales of electric cars in Canada remain marginal despite millions in cabinet support for the industry. Researchers counted a 0.59 percent market share for electrics nationwide: ‘It remains low.’
Surveillance Bill Is Amended
The Senate transport committee yesterday vetoed a cabinet proposal to grant railways random access to everyday surveillance video of train crews. Opponents called it a clear breach of privacy rights that set a precedent for workplace monitoring by Canadian employers: ‘It is a violation of railway industry workers’ right to privacy.’
Gaps Cited In Climate Plan
Environment Commissioner Julie Gelfand says auditors may examine cabinet’s carbon tax to determine its actual impact on emissions. The Department of Environment has failed to say what reduction it expects from a $50 per tonne tax on carbon: “It’s quite clear there is a gap.”
Rewrite Rail Bill For Shippers
Shippers would gain new rights on railways under amendments to a cabinet bill yesterday approved by the Senate transport committee. Senators voted to compel railways to disclose confidential cost data in answering shippers’ complaints: “Well, who wouldn’t?”
Vow Quick Action On Steel
Canada should brace for a renewed flood of dumped Asian steel this summer, say the United Steelworkers. Cabinet yesterday promised new measures to block the transshipment of unfairly-priced steel imports through Canada to the U.S.: “We need to act quickly.”
Couldn’t Ply Seaway At Dusk
A federal judge has overturned the suspension of two St. Lawrence River captains who refused to pilot an oversized container ship by night. The ruling follows a Transport Canada review on expansion of the 1959 seaway to accommodate modern vessels: ‘The captain was willing to sail at night only with authorization in writing.’
Nt’l Shark Fin Ban “Urgent”
The Senate yesterday opened final debate on a Conservative bill to make Canada the first industrialized country to ban shark fin imports. The Commons narrowly defeated a similar New Democrat bill five years ago: “Stop the carnage.”
CRA Defends Audits After ‘Malicious’ Court Shaming
The Canada Revenue Agency yesterday said it has “quality assurance” that audits do not target small business. The claim at a Commons finance committee hearing followed a March 2 Court ruling that cited auditors for malicious prosecution of a family-owned restaurant: “It is true we have some issues with respect to litigation.”
Fear Pot Lineups At Border
Legalizing cannabis could lead to longer lineups at Canada-U.S. border crossings, Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale yesterday told the Senate national security committee. American authorities have raised concerns about Bill C-45, said Goodale: “Their greatest concern is the potential for congestion.”
Calls Pharmacare ‘Difficult’
Pharmacare “is difficult”, Finance Minister Bill Morneau yesterday told the Commons finance committee. Cabinet has ordered a one-year review of a pharmacare plan with provinces after rejecting a similar 2017 motion in the Commons: “We’re not totally aware of what the best solutions will be.”
No Sale On Postal Banking
Liberal and Conservative MPs yesterday opposed a motion for Commons study to revive postal banks. The Canadian Bankers Association and credit unions earlier lobbied against any reopening of post office banks that operated for a 101 years, until 1968: “They were not looking for competition.”
Not Much Red Tape Cut
Federal agencies introduced major new sets of regulations at the rate of six a week last year, says the Treasury Board. The accounting comes three years after Parliament passed a bill intended to reduce red tape: “Tracking of ins and outs under the rule operates much like a bank account.”
Real Estate Still Mismanaged
An internal audit cites continued federal mismanagement of foreign real estate six years after cabinet ordered a cleanup. Auditors in one case complained they could find no details of $35.8 million in phantom investments listed as “projects” by the Department of Foreign Affairs: “Information is not always accurate.”
Top Job For A Fake Diploma
A jobseeker using a fake diploma was hired as a national health care administrator by the Canadian Coast Guard, say Federal Court records. The deception was not discovered for six years until a supervisor did a Google search: ‘She had not taken any courses at this university, which in fact does not exist.’
Cannabis Data Questioned
Federal claims that cannabis use is commonplace among young Canadians is contradicted by the Public Health Agency’s own data, according to documents. A 2010 high school questionnaire cited as the main source of data said teenagers were more likely to drink beer than smoke marijuana: “Drinking seems to be more socially acceptable than cannabis.”



