Billable Hours For 25% More

Federal IT consultants including sole-sourced contractors typically bill up to $1,000 a day, the Budget Office said yesterday. Costs are about 25 percent higher than if departments did the work themselves, wrote analysts: “It was very difficult to understand exactly the value for money.”

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$3,000 Fed Grants For Gazans

Gazan refugees in Canada will receive tax-free federal grants of $3,000 per adult and $1,500 per minor child, the Department of Immigration said yesterday. The grants are identical to those earlier approved for Ukrainian war refugees under an aid package that cost taxpayers $753.4 million as of last August: “We are being as flexible as possible.”

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Name Names, Inquiry’s Told

Canadians want the names of MPs and senators compromised by Chinese agents, the Commission on Foreign Interference said yesterday. The Commission in a report summarizing petitions it received from the public noted Canadians’ anger over a lack of transparency: ‘Identify and punish them.’

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Minister Rethinks Prorogation

Opposition parties bent on a federal election should first allow cabinet to pass more Liberal bills, Public Safety Minister David McGuinty yesterday told reporters. Parliament is currently suspended until March 24, one week before the end of the budget year: “Pass the legislation we need.”

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Vow Border Cops Are Ready

Federal police yesterday said they are prepared to fend off any rush of illegal immigrants from the United States once Donald Trump is sworn into office next Monday. Some 700,000 illegal immigrants currently reside in border states, by U.S. estimate: “How do we do that?”

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Mexico ‘Refugees’ Down 97%

Refugee claims by Mexicans have fallen 97 percent since cabinet reintroduced visas on airline passengers in 2024, Immigration Minister Marc Miller said yesterday. Neither Miller nor his department would detail figures but said the improvement was dramatic: “Do you regret not doing it earlier?”

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Dep’t Denies March Madness

A one-day purchase of more than $523,000 worth of furniture by Foreign Minister Mélanie Joly’s department last March 31 had nothing to do with the end of the budget year, staff claim in a briefing note. Federal managers have long denied “March Madness,” the hurried squandering of unspent funds in the final hours of the fiscal year: “You spend money you have rather than let it lapse.”

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Drinkers Don’t Listen: Report

Too many Canadians are ignoring federal guidelines on drinking, says a Department of Health report. About a fifth of adults, especially young Canadians in their 20s, were ignoring government recommendations on alcohol consumption: “Alcohol is the most commonly used psychoactive substance among Canadian.”

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Feds Polled Home Equity Tax

Cabinet quietly polled Canadians on a home equity tax even after promising it would not introduce the measure, records disclose. Cabinet aides commissioned focus groups on the question as Prime Minister Justin Trudeau attended an invitation-only meeting with home equity tax advocates in Vancouver last June: “We can all learn from each other.”

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MP Silent On 2015 Complaint

Government House Leader Karina Gould yesterday would not disclose records regarding a human rights case in which she complained of an inability to get along with co-workers. Gould is contemplating a bid to become Prime Minister: ‘She describes a series of incidents in which she believes she was treated unfairly.’

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Electric Car Mandate Is Kaput

Automakers and dealers alike yesterday said Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault’s electric car mandate is finished. Forecasts of ever-increasing sales are “a complete fantasy” after cabinet pulled $5,000 rebates for new buyers, said industry executives: ‘It is a made-in-Canada policy failure.’

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‘My Hands Are Soiled’: Adler

Senator Charles Adler (Man.) in a podcast interview said he is in disbelief “my hands would be soiled” with race hatred for First Nations. Adler, near tears with his voice breaking, said he was resigned to being known as a radio host who called Indigenous Manitobans lazy boneheads: “I am ashamed of myself.”

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Files Hidden To Protect Nazis

Federal archivists in an Access To Information memo say they are concealing more than a million pages of records on Nazi collaborators in Canada to protect “individuals determined to be innocent” of actual war crimes. Cabinet had promised German researchers in 2009 that all Holocaust-related files would be released: “People want answers.”

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