Liberal caucus members yesterday sat quietly for nearly an hour as Conservative MP Larry Brock (Brantford-Brant, Ont.) repeatedly described Prime Minister Justin Trudeau as a habitual liar. Speaking at the Commons government operations committee, MP Brock said Trudeau was a “very good liar” with a “penchant for lying.” No Liberal MP objected: “What’s the relevance?”
$250K Claim Just For Starters
Fraud charges against a federal contractor accused of stealing $250,000 are only the beginning, a Department of Public Works manager said yesterday. The theft of millions is suspected, MPs were told: “Is it not true at this very minute there are middle men just soaking Canadian taxpayers?”
Calls U.S. Protest “Political”
U.S. protests over the Government of Canada’s poor record on protecting copyright owners is merely a “political tool,” says a staff briefing note to Trade Minister Mary Ng. The United States placed Canada on its 2024 “watch list” over concerns on copyright thievery.
“It serves as a political tool to satisfy domestic U.S. stakeholders,” said the April 25 briefing note. “The United States has strong offensive interests in the protection and enforcement of intellectual property rights globally and in this report places countries alleged to have inadequate intellectual property laws in three escalating categories: ‘Watch List,’ ‘Priority Watch List’ and ‘Priority Foreign Country.’”
“Canada is on the ‘Watch List’ for 2024,” said the briefing note Special 301 Report On Intellectual Property Protection. “Canada does not recognize the validity of the report.”
Any complaint that the Government of Canada tolerates copyright theft “relies primarily on industry allegations rather than empirical evidence and objective analysis,” said the note to Minister Ng. “We continue to engage bilaterally and constructively on intellectual property issues with the United States.”
The United States Trade Representative in an April 25 Special 301 Report placed Canada on its “watch list” for numerous shortcomings in protecting copyright. “Levels of online piracy remain very high in Canada,” it said. Court rulings allowing mass copying of literary works had also “significantly damaged the market for educational authors and publishers,” it said.
Canadian authors and publishers have lost more than $200 million in royalties since a 2012 Supreme Court ruling allowed mass photocopying of books under the guise of “personal research.” One institution, York University of Toronto, admitted in Court documents it distributed 29 million photocopies in student course packs without payment or permission.
Department of Justice lawyers weeks after the “watch list” was issued also won a May 31 Federal Court ruling in Blacklock’s Reporter v. Attorney General that expanded copyright theft to include password sharing. The U.S. Trade Representative has not yet commented on the ruling.
Evidence in the Blacklock’s case showed a Parks Canada manager, Genevieve Patenaude, purchased a single password then shared it with anyone who asked, at least nine people. Justice Yvan Roy ruled that while Patenaude made an obvious “mistake” – Blacklock’s terms against password sharing were “plainly visible,” he said – passwords could now be shared by anyone for any “legitimate business reason” where there is “significant public interest in reading articles.”
Neither Minister Ng nor her department publicly discussed the impact of the password ruling. Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland told reporters June 19 that while she too shared password-protected news articles, “I am a huge believer in the value of the work that all you guys do, the work of professional, salaried journalists.”
By Staff 
Solar Panels A Pollution Risk
Solar panels pose a “significant pollution risk,” the Department of Public Works said yesterday. Landfilling of used panels too costly to recycle will see toxic chemicals leach into groundwater, it warned: “The volume of end of life solar panels will grow which will result in significant pollution risks.”
NDP’s Election Ready: Singh
New Democrats are now election-ready, Jagmeet Singh said yesterday. “We are getting close,” Singh told reporters while touring Northern Ontario where the Party stands to lose a veteran incumbent due to resignation and redistricting: “We are getting close to an election.”
Say “Denialism” Is To Blame
Indian Residential School “denialism” is undermining reconciliation with First Nations, says a federal memo. The Department of Crown-Indigenous Relations did not define the term: “We must not deny what happened.”
Find Issues With Latest IT Fix
There are “going to be some issues” with a federal IT project to digitize border collections of Customs duties, says a federal memo. Cost of the program under development since 2016 is more than $526 million: “There are no doubt going to be some issues.”
Railway Pays $8M Settlement
Canadian National Railways has agreed to pay $8 million for breach of the Fisheries Act, the Department of Environment said yesterday. The fine follows crude oil spills from two Northern Ontario derailments in the winter of 2015: “It was minus 30 degrees at the time.”
Charter Right In Traffic Court
Canadians’ Charter right to a speedy trial applies in traffic court, a Justice of the Peace has ruled. A charge of red light running against an Oakville, Ont. driver was dismissed after prosecutors waited too long to bring the case to court: “It is not a complex matter.”
‘Nt’l Decriminalization’ Cited
Cabinet was willing to “use all tools at our disposal” under its drug policy including “national decriminalization,” says a federal document. The memo to Addictions Minister Ya’ara Saks is dated just five weeks before British Columbia abruptly ended its experiment with decriminalized drug use on complaints of public disorder: ‘Tools include approaches to decriminalization.’
Gun Buyback Worries Gov’t
Public Safety Minister Dominic LeBlanc’s department is refusing comment over its hiring of forensic auditors to assess risk of a “national compensation program.” Staff would not confirm they anticipated millions in fraud and waste through a costly gun buyback scheme scheduled in 2025: “Help.”
Phoenix Failure Is Now $3.7B
The federal Phoenix Pay System failure has now cost taxpayers $3.7 billion and counting, the highest figure disclosed to date. The latest damages are cited in a Department of Public Works briefing note: “It gives us all kinds of lessons about how to build a better public service.”
Caution CBCers Over Tweets
CBC employees should not “feel compelled to weigh in on controversial news stories” on Twitter, says a network ombudsman. The advisory followed one CBCer’s tweet in sympathy with a Palestinian activist arrested for threatening to kill Jews and drink their blood: “The journalist should have included more context.”
Summer Jobs Plan Is Audited
A performance audit of the Canada Summer Jobs program is underway with investigators’ findings due by year’s end, says a federal memo. It is the first audit since program managers were accused of withholding hire-a-student subsidies from employers who did not subscribe to cabinet’s political views: ‘Follow-up focuses on religious beliefs.’
Sunday Poem: “Old Stones”
Old stones, ancient lines.
Boundaries.
Demarcated. Decimated.
The blind lead the Blinded.
Summer unfurls, thunder rumbles;
in the distance.
Special reports, queries.
Dimly perceived, a whiff of malfeasance.
Foundations laid bare.
A People laid bare.
Old stones, ancient lines.
There is nothing quite like a prairie sunrise.
By W.N. Branson 



