Federal hiring practices are buried in paperwork, says a Public Service Commission survey of government managers. Nine out of 10 rated it “burdensome.”
Doctors Have Plenty: Minister
Doctors have “huge advantages under our tax system” and can afford to pay more, Health Minister Mark Holland said yesterday. His remarks followed a warning from the Canadian Medical Association that changes to capital gains tax rates would cost most doctors nationwide: “A nurse should not be paying a higher marginal tax rate than a multimillionaire.”
Rideau Hall Called The Gov’t
Governor General Mary Simon had staff contact Attorney General Arif Virani’s deputy before holding a conference in support of a Liberal bill on internet censorship, records show. “The Governor General is a force for good in this country,” Virani wrote in denying partisan interference.
Bank Predicts Fallout To 2027
Interest rate hikes will make many mortgage holders poorer for years to come, a Bank of Canada report said yesterday. Researchers estimated by 2027 disposable incomes for borrowers will be lower on average: “Pressure on consumption from rate hikes could last longer than the rate hike cycle itself.”
Debtors Include MP’s Friends
Marijuana dealers owe more than a quarter billion in unpaid tax, new figures disclose. Tax delinquents include an insolvent cannabis dealer whose paid directors included Liberal MP Yasir Naqvi (Ottawa Centre), parliamentary secretary for health: “The total amount of unpaid cannabis excise duties has continuously been rising since legalization.”
Claims It Was Secret Mission
An Arctic patrol vessel HMCS Margaret Brooke was on a secret military mission when it docked in Cuba, Defence Minister Bill Blair said yesterday. There was nothing inappropriate in calling on Havana at the same time as the Russian navy, said Blair: “This was a military mission.”
Flood Of CBC-TV Complaints
The CBC was flooded with a record number of complaints last year over its Mideast coverage with thousands citing anti-Jewish bias, says a report to the board. Audience complaints numbered 4,785 last year, “a 45 percent increase in volume from 2022.”
Vote Pact Prompts Complaint
The Prime Minister’s vote pact with New Democrats has prompted industrial employers to file a formal complaint with a United Nations agency. Employers say cabinet breached a labour rule it ratified more than a decade ago: “The Government of Canada has engaged in conduct that is in clear breach of its obligation to consult.”
MP’s Bill Would Jail The Liars
Witnesses who lie to parliamentary committees face a minimum six months’ jail and threat of a $50,000 fine under a private bill introduced Friday. “It is a mechanism to restore Canadians’ confidence in our democratic institutions,” said Conservative MP Michael Barrett (Leeds-Grenville, Ont.), the sponsor.
Drugged Driving’s Common
Drug-impaired driving is now commonplace since Parliament legalized marijuana six years ago, says in-house Department of Health research. Findings were drawn from questionnaires with daily cannabis users: “Legalization increased social acceptance.”
One Region Hits EV Targets
Arctic Canada now has a total 34 public charging stations for seven electric vehicles, says the Department of Natural Resources. Yukon, Northwest Territories and Nunavut combined are the first region to achieve 100 percent charging capacity: ‘This represents a ratio of less than one electric vehicle to charger.’
Sunday Poem — “Beef”
Canada’s cattle industry
receives federal support.
Investments
in forage improvement,
breeding programs,
insurance coverage.
Helping farmers stay innovative,
expand market opportunities,
manage business risks.
Meanwhile,
Canada’s new food guide
warns of items
that undermine healthy eating.
Like,
sugary drinks,
margarine,
red meat.
By Shai Ben-Shalom

Review: Shunned
Hundreds of thousands of Canadians have criminal records, typically for drug and property crimes. Many become model citizens. A few even wind up in Parliament. Retired two-term Liberal MP Ivan Grose (Oshawa, Ont.) was a convicted bank robber. The late New Democrat MP Frank Howard (Skeena, B.C.) was jailed for armed robbery as a youth. Ex-Conservative MP Guy Lauzon (Stormont-Dundas, Ont.), a recovered alcoholic, had two convictions for drunk driving.
Yet exceptions don’t make the rule, note authors of After Prison: Navigating Employment And Reintegration. Many parolees are shunned in the workplace long after their debt to society is paid. Authors cite one employers’ survey that found most considered parolees to be weak, lazy or dishonest.
“Gainful employment, in essence, provides the foundational ‘building block’ that former prisoners require to transition successfully into society post-release,” authors write. “Employment, beyond a means to sustain a lifestyle in a free society, is a central source of identity.”
Most employers in Canada are small businesses. They have neither the interest nor capacity to be agents of social change. Very few parolees are hired by the Correctional Service of Canada, just as very few medically-released veterans are hired by the Department of Veterans Affairs. The irony is noted.
After Prison is a frank assessment of hard realities. Editors Rose Ricciardelli and Adrienne Peters of Memorial University acknowledge many parolees are not ideal job applicants. Most at sentencing are high school dropouts with addictions. A survey of parolees in Ontario found many who had never used the internet.
“Industries that were the least likely to hire former prisoners were in the areas of finance and insurance, scientific and technical services, public administration and health care,” write authors, citing a tracking survey of parolees in Virginia from 1999 to 2003.
All prejudices aside, authors argue persuasively that stigmatizing parolees is so plainly counterintuitive it is not obvious why large employers don’t try harder. “Incarceration often excludes former prisoners from the mainstream economy, which forces them to turn to secondary markets and informal economies where they are more vulnerable to reoffending,” explains After Prison.
Even wrongful conviction is stigmatized. Authors recount a study in which 1,000 emails by a fictional applicant were sent to employers with Job Bank postings. Applications that cited a wrongful conviction drew a 28 percent response. Applications that mentioned no contact with the judicial system whatsoever attracted a 39 percent response.
“Employment provides releasees with heightened self-esteem, feelings of independence, financial stability and pro-social responsibility,” write authors. “However, employment is hard to come by for former prisoners.”
After Prison is a scholarly appeal to a society that still believes in second chances.
By Holly Doan
After Prison: Navigating Employment and Reintegration; edited by Rose Ricciardelli and Adrienne M.F. Peters; Wilfrid Laurier University Press; 320 pages; ISBN 9781-77112-3167; $39.99

Says Public Deserves Refund
Taxpayers out millions’ worth of sweetheart corporate subsidies have a right to expect their money back, Deputy Industry Minister Simon Kennedy said yesterday. Kennedy’s testimony followed an investigation that counted 186 conflicts at the board of Sustainable Development Technology Canada: “Funding was provided and it needs to be recovered.”
Feds Admit Carbon Tax Costs
Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault yesterday released data confirming the carbon tax is a net cost for the economy. The figures contradicted repeated claims by cabinet that its tax was revenue neutral and created jobs: “Why did you wait until today to release it?”



