Union Grievor Is Vexatious

A tax auditor who waged a long legal battle against her union, the Canada Revenue Agency and courts is a vexatious litigant, a federal labour board has ruled. The dispute over a union’s right to obtain employees’ home contact information dated from 1992: “The complainant is not prepared to leave this matter alone.”

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Tax Ambiguity Worth $25,000

Tax Court has struck down a five-figure penalty for late payment after citing ambiguities between English and French-language versions of the Income Tax Act. The Court itself raised the issue in a routine appeal: “The French version is rather different.”

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Rail Wants Carbon Tax Break

Railways anticipate a sevenfold increase in fuel fees under a national carbon tax, says a rail lobbyist. Executives told the Senate agriculture committee that railways should pay less tax than trucking companies since they are more efficient: “But you guys can’t find out where the cars are.”

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Pirated Imports Unchecked

The Canada Border Services Agency reports it seized less than a million dollars’ worth of counterfeit goods last year. The Department of Public Safety estimates the trade in bootlegged trademarks is worth $30 billion annually: “I hope the government takes a very serious look at these numbers.”

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Mercury Bill Only Voluntary

Senators are questioning the value of a Commons bill to voluntarily discourage landfilling of compact fluorescent mercury lightbulbs. MPs passed the bill last January 31 after deleting a requirement that Environment Canada mandate a toxic disposal program on provinces: “Do we need to give a nudge every time?”

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$100K For Tenants’ Survey

The Department of National Defence spent nearly $100,000 surveying 2,000 renters on whether they like military housing. Only 28 percent said they were very satisfied living on base: ‘The objective is to measure customer satisfaction.’

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Sunday Poem: “Freshwater”

 

It was 1992

when the UN designated March 22 as

World Water Day.

 

Recognising those who face

water scarcity.

 

Things got worse since.

 

From California to the Middle East to South Asia,

groundwater reservoirs are depleting.

 

Droughts. Over-pumping.

 

Two billion live in river basins

where use exceeds recharge.

 

Streams dry up.

Lakes slowly die.

Swaths of countryside

reduced to desert.

Millions move to shanty towns

for loss of farmland.

 

Those who can,

desalinate sea water.

 

Meanwhile in Ontario, Quebec, New Brunswick, and B.C.,

communities stack sandbags, calling in the

military.

 

(Editor’s note: poet Shai Ben-Shalom, an Israeli-born biologist, examines current events in the Blacklock’s tradition each and every Sunday)

Says Foreigners Meddled In 2015 Vote: ‘How Do I Know?’

A Senate bill would close a “canyon-sized loophole” in federal law that permits foreign meddling in elections, says its sponsor. Senator Linda Frum (Conservative-Ont.) said the Canada Elections Act is so weak, even hostile foreign governments can influence campaigns: “This part gets tricky.”

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Electric Car Plan A Long Shot

A member of a federal advisory panel on electric cars says a government target to boost sales will be difficult. Cabinet has budgeted a total $182.5 million to promote plug-in recharging stations, though electrics account for less than 1 percent of auto sales: “It would be very, very challenging.”

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Must Pass Pot Law In A Year

Health Canada says Parliament must meet a July 1, 2018 date to legalize marijuana. The deadline is fixed though department memos said drafting of complex regulations requires more research: ‘Canada Day is our country’s birthday, not a festival for dope smoking.’

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Airline French Rule ‘Unfair’

A Transport Canada manager says a federal law requiring Air Canada to offer bilingual service puts the airline at a competitive disadvantage. The Commissioner of Official Languages in a 2016 Special Report To Parliament said the carrier is in habitual breach of the Act: “That comes at a cost.”

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Face Break-Up Of Budget Bill

Cabinet is trying to avert a break-up of its omnibus budget bill over Senate complaints of a rush to approve a $35 billion Canada Infrastructure Bank. Senators said the 292-page bill may be split or amended to tighten scrutiny of Bank funding and operations: “Look, it’s not a huge emergency.”

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