First Tax Impact Study Due

The first parliamentary report on the impact of a national carbon tax is due in three weeks. The Senate energy committee yesterday served notice it will report by March 9 on the effect of cabinet’s greenhouse gas emission targets: “When will the government face the music?”

This content is for Blacklock’s Reporter members only. Please login to view this content. (Register here.)

Pot Grower Got $50K Grant

A medical marijuana grower received a $50,000 grant in the name of industrial research, say Access To Information records. An MP who co-authored a 2014 Commons health committee report on cannabis described the subsidy as inappropriate: “I wouldn’t invest any government money in the production of marijuana.”

This content is for Blacklock’s Reporter members only. Please login to view this content. (Register here.)

$5B Damage From Digging

Accidental damage to buried utility lines costs up to $5 billion a year, the Senate energy committee has been told. Senators expressed support for a bill to create a national call-before-you-dig system: “There is really nothing but upside.”

This content is for Blacklock’s Reporter members only. Please login to view this content. (Register here.)

Cabinet To Amend DNA Act

MPs last night protested an 11th hour bid by cabinet to amend a DNA privacy bill already endorsed by the Commons justice committee. Members of all leading parties accused cabinet of gutting the legislation: “This action makes me more than a little bit angry.”

This content is for Blacklock’s Reporter members only. Please login to view this content. (Register here.)

Housing Party’s Over: CMHC

Regulators had to “remove the punch bowl” with new credit curbs on indebted homeowners, says the CEO of Canada Mortgage & Housing Corporation. However no additional restrictions are immediately planned, the Commons finance committee was told: “It is possible to have too much of a good thing.”

This content is for Blacklock’s Reporter members only. Please login to view this content. (Register here.)

Red Tape Pervasive, Irritating

Red tape is so pervasive even public servants find it irritating, says a Treasury Board report. One employee complained it took eight supervisors to sign off on a $200 travel claim: “Filling out a solemn declaration for a $3 bus ticket is not a good use of resources.”

This content is for Blacklock’s Reporter members only. Please login to view this content. (Register here.)

Highest Sick Leave In Ottawa

Employees at an obscure federal agency average more than 18 sick days a year, the highest rate in the public service, say Access To Information records. The average government-wide was 11 days annually: “There’s always some bad apples in every crate.”

This content is for Blacklock’s Reporter members only. Please login to view this content. (Register here.)

CBSA Cited For Unfair Fine

A federal tribunal has cited the Canada Border Services Agency for improperly levying a $1,300 fine on a Québec woman. The traveler was penalized for carrying a half-kilogram of beef in her luggage, though she admitted to the purchase on her Customs Declaration form: “I have never been to school and therefore cannot read or write.”

This content is for Blacklock’s Reporter members only. Please login to view this content. (Register here.)

Prisoners’ Vote Cost Tory MP

The prison vote likely cost a tough-on-crime Conservative MP his seat in the last election, according to newly-released data. A lawyer who won a Supreme Court decision granting inmates the vote said the outcome does not distract from fairness of the ruling: “There are a lot of bad people who aren’t in prison, and they still get the vote.”

This content is for Blacklock’s Reporter members only. Please login to view this content. (Register here.)