Cabinet yesterday re-announced a cut in corporate tax rates for small business. The rate will decline to 9 percent by January 1, 2019, a target set by the previous Conservative cabinet two years ago: “Well, that’s in our election platform.”
Pot Compliance ‘Challenging’
Health Canada says it has no advice for motorists on how to comply with new drug-impaired driving regulations. Understanding legal limits will be “challenging”, staff wrote in a regulatory notice: “This is really unprecedented.”
Sent Patient Files To Strangers
A hospital has been faulted for breach of the Privacy Act for repeatedly faxing confidential patient records to strangers. It is the third serious privacy breach by health authorities in Saskatchewan in the past five months, including one case that ended in a recommendation that patients consider a class action lawsuit: “I told them to go to hell.”
Threaten Taxpayer With Jail
A federal judge has threatened a bookkeeper with jail for refusing to comply with an audit. Jailing is uncommon in civil court: “A person who is ordered by a court to pay money may be imprisoned for contempt.”
‘Open Bar’ Credit Cost $2.7B
A federal tax credit once described by tax analysts as an “open bar” for corporations cost taxpayers $2.7 billion last year, according to a Department of Natural Resources report tabled in the Commons. Payments peaked at $4 billion before the previous Conservative cabinet cut the subsidy: “It is one of the most generous systems in the world.”
Sunday Poem: “Celebration”
Ottawa marks 150
in a year-long festivity.
I see it in my morning paper.
Arriving from France,
La Machine is marching
a spider and a horse-dragon
in a battle-of-the-giants.
They spit fire by the National Gallery,
by the Chateau Laurier,
and by the War Museum.
Coming from Quebec City,
Red Bull constructs
400 metre of downhill course
above the Rideau Canal locks,
gearing for the finals
of Crashed Ice World Championship.
And from England
a royal couple
on Canada Day.
The next pages,
colourful ads capture my attention.
A 10-day tropical splendor
in the Southern Caribbean.
A 20-night package
featuring Rio, Santiago, and Buenos Aires.
Or two weeks
in Rome, Monte Carlo, and Barcelona.
A dilemma.
Traveling far away, or
staying to enjoy
our own local treasures.
(Editor’s note: poet Shai Ben-Shalom, an Israeli-born biologist, examines current events in the Blacklock’s tradition each and every Sunday)

Feds Breached Charter: Court
A federal judge has ruled the Department of Citizenship breached the Charter of Rights in refusing to grant a Canadian citizen a passport. The Federal Court described staff conduct as severe and unwarranted: “This could happen to other people.”
First GM Fish Sold In Canada
A U.S. company has sold the first genetically-modified animal protein in Canada, according to data uncovered by advocacy groups. The engineered Atlantic salmon was unlabeled, and believed sold in Québec at the same time MPs defeated a private bill mandating labels on genetically-altered foods: “No one knows where this is in the marketplace.”
Price Of Groceries A Worry
Canadians are worried about rising food prices, according to research by the Department of Agriculture. The cost of groceries was repeatedly cited as a concern in a department survey, though pollsters didn’t ask the question.
RCMP Faulted By Fed Judge
The RCMP wrongfully fired an Alberta constable who admitted having sex on duty, says the Federal Court of Appeal. Management acted unfairly and relied on hearsay and inadmissible evidence, the Court ruled: “It’s not the first time.”
Budget Cover Cost $212,234
The Department of Finance spent nearly a quarter-million dollars on artistic themes for its 2017 budget, say Access To Information records. Costs included $89,500 for talent fees and photos of models posing as middle class Canadians: “It’s fresh; I love where this is going.”
Drone Fleet On The Border
The Department of Public Safety is buying a fleet of drones for deployment on border patrol. Staff said drones were needed in part for wildlife surveys, but declined further comment: “I wouldn’t be surprised if there are drones being used right now.”
Apple Inc. Sues On Copyright
Apple Canada Inc. has filed a federal lawsuit over the charging of royalties on music webcasts. The dispute follows a 2014 Commons committee report that complained composers’ work has become a “pennies business” with collapsing CD sales: ‘They are feeling the squeeze.’
Fingerprint Database Grows
The Department of Citizenship in 2018 will begin compiling the largest non-criminal fingerprint database in Canadian history. The initiative follows a 2013 pilot project approved by the previous Conservative cabinet to collect prints and photos from all temporary residency applicants: “Information will only be shared in a manner that respects Canada’s privacy laws.”
Carbon Tax A $6 Billion Hit
The national carbon tax will cost $5.8 billion next year, says the Conference Board of Canada. Annual revenues will rise to $30 billion by 2022, the equivalent of about $2,300 per household: “Policy makers really need to communicate to Canadians the scale of how this transformation will impact their everyday lives.”



