Weekly Faces Rights Hearing

A campus newspaper faces a human rights hearing after rejecting free articles from a Sri Lankan-Canadian contributor. The University of Guelph’s Ontarion student weekly had appealed for volunteer writers to submit their work: ‘They lost interest when they saw me.’

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No Ancestral Waiver On GST

The Federal Court of Appeal has ruled ancient Indigenous trapping rights do not include exemption from the GST. The judgment is the second in two years that extended tax liabilities to First Nation suppliers conducting business off-reserve: ‘The obligation is to remit taxes collected from non-Indian customers.’

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Regulate Lawyers, Feds Write

The Department of Public Safety says regulators should consider new restrictions on lawyers as “enablers” of white collar crime. Attorneys described the research paper as outrageous: “There is nothing in the report to support the truth of the claims.”

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Report Clients On A Hunch

A federal agency says bank tellers should act on “hunch or intuition” in the lookout for suspicious cash deposits, even if amounts are trivial. The Financial Transactions And Reports Analysis Centre in a bankers’ guide said it sets “no monetary threshold” on deposits that must be reported to investigators: “It doesn’t really matter.”

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Gov’t Fights File Disclosure

Health Canada says even a judge cannot compel it to retrieve public records under the Access To Information Act. The claim in Federal Court documents follows a lawsuit by a retired researcher who alleges the department withheld data on the impact of wireless devices: “This has huge health implications.”

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Judge Orders CRA To Pay %

The Federal Court of Appeal has ruled tax collectors must pay interest on disputed funds collected in a reassessment. The Canada Revenue Agency was successfully challenged by an Alberta oilman ordered to settle a $12.75 million account: “The Agency is not a deposit-taking institution.”

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Public Skeptical Of Flu Shots

Only one-third of adults and 23 percent of children got the flu shot last winter despite a costly promotional campaign by the Public Health Agency of Canada, says in-house research. The Agency spent $3.5 million on vaccination awareness. Data show lingering public skepticism that vaccinations are ineffective or unsafe: “Vaccines do NOT cause sudden infant death syndrome.”

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Nice Letters Get More Taxes

The Canada Revenue Agency says an experiment with delinquent taxpayers shows “soft” letters appealing to individuals’ conscience get better results. The Agency’s Collections Directorate tested various collection letters on thousands of taxpayers with small debts: ‘It’s persuading individuals to comply without use of punishment.’

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Don’t Need A Real Lawyer

An appeal court judge has dismissed a ruling that a failed law school student cannot act as counsel in a civil trial. The decision was written by the same Prince Edward Island judge who earlier faulted “disturbing” fees charged by licensed lawyers: “When a client asks his lawyer for the time of day he doesn’t need to be told how to build a watch.”

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Dep’t Probes Car Shopping

Environment Canada is spending $75,000 on research to find out why car buyers choose certain models. Most drivers prefer larger vehicles that can handle winter, said the Canadian Automobile Dealers Association: “Their purchase decision is generally determined by what they need and can afford.”

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French Now A 4th Language

French is now a 3rd, 4th or 5th language in a majority of Western provinces, according to new Statistics Canada data. Census research showed for the first time since passage of the 1969 Official Languages Act, more Westerners speak Punjabi, Cantonese or Tagalog than French: “We have to be smart.”

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Court Rejects Migrant Hiring

A federal judge has struck down an appeal by one of Canada’s largest auto parts makers to hire temporary foreign workers. The Court ruled the fact few Canadian electricians want to work 12-hour shifts at $29 an hour was not sufficient reason to hire migrants: ‘It is a last resort.’

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Cannot Smoke In Private Car

The University of Regina will ban smoking in private cars on campus under a new policy effective September 1. The ban is the most sweeping of its kind since smoking was first restricted in transportation in Canada in 1975: “We are going to try to be a leader.”

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Few Guns Seized At Border

The Canada Border Services Agency seizes fewer than 600 guns a year on average at the U.S. border, according to an Access To Information memo. Prosecutions number fewer than 50 a year: “The number of actual firearms seized has remained relatively consistent.”

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