Vax Price Still A Gov’t Secret

The Department of Health yesterday would not comment on its continued concealment of what taxpayers were charged for Pfizer vaccines. An Access To Information copy of the 2020 Pfizer contract obtained by The Canadian Independent redacted the “price and payment” schedule: “When will the department divulge the costs?”

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It Was “Run By Unions”: PM

Newly-declassified records show Prime Minister Brian Mulroney complained to his cabinet that unions ran the post office. Ministers in a 1987 strike feared making a “martyr” of Jean-Claude Parrot, then-president of the Canadian Union of Postal Workers: “Everyone knew the post office had been run by the unions for a long time.”

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Threaten Exec With Contempt

Minh Doan, chief federal technology officer, yesterday was threatened with contempt of Parliament over evasive testimony regarding the $54 million ArriveCan app. Doan in two hours of cross-examination at the Commons government operations committee “struggled to give direct answers to simple questions,” said one MP: “Nobody believes you.”

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30 Calls On Unethical Dealing

Dozens of whistleblowers cited instances of unethical federal contracting in the past year, Procurement Ombudsman Alexander Jeglic said yesterday. The Ombudsman in his Annual Report to Parliament said complaints of sweetheart contracting were now common: “Questionable federal procurement activities have negatively impacted public trust.”

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Paperwork Costs $11K Apiece

A little-used federal debt mediation program benefiting a tiny fraction of farmers is costing taxpayers almost $11,000 per application, records show. Auditors questioned the value of the Farm Debt Mediation Service: “The cost of service delivery is increasing.”

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Find Trust In Media Tanking

Canadians rate media as less trustworthy than politicians or police, new Statistics Canada data showed yesterday. Lack of confidence in journalists’ integrity coincided with a $595 million bailout critics warned would fuel public skepticism.

Asked, “Using a scale of one to five where one means ‘no confidence at all’ and five means ‘a great deal of confidence,’ how much confidence do you have in the Canadian media?” less than a third of Canadians nationwide, 31 percent, expressed a “good or great deal of confidence in media.”

Canadians by comparison were more likely to trust Parliament (32 percent), the courts (46 percent), the school system (47 percent) and police (62 percent). Findings were drawn from Canadian Social Survey questionnaires.

The survey did not ask respondents to differentiate between one medium or another. Trust ratings in media overall were as low as 23 percent of Canadians aged 25 to 34 and only a quarter of Prairie residents.

Canadians with a “good or great deal of confidence” in reporters numbered as few as 24 percent in Alberta followed by Manitoba (25 percent), Saskatchewan (29 percent), Ontario and New Brunswick (30 percent), British Columbia and Nova Scotia (31 percent), Newfoundland and Labrador (33 percent), Québec (39 percent) and Prince Edward Island (42 percent).

Poor ratings coincided with Parliament’s 2019 amendments to the Income Tax Act that awarded $595 million in subsidies to cabinet-approved publishers. “As to independence of media and journalists, there are always concerns,” Pascale St-Onge, then-president of the Fédération Nationale des Communications of Montréal, testified at 2019 hearings of the Commons heritage committee.

“The media, the publishers, they are always beholden to the advertisers,” testified St-Onge. She is currently Minister of Canadian Heritage responsible for the bailout program.

Anthony Furey, then-Toronto Sun columnist, testified the bailout was harmful. “Canadians are wary of the idea that their government would somehow favour, influence or direct the media,” said Furey. “If the impression is left to linger that the government is forking over cash grants to their journalist buddies, trust in media will only plummet further.”

Media analysts testifying at 2022 Commons heritage committee hearings echoed the concerns. “Canadians are expressing unprecedented distrust towards the news and the reporters who deliver it,” said Jeanette Ageson, publisher of the Vancouver news site The Tyee. “Canadians need to know who is funding the news they receive and on what terms.”

“Trust in Canada’s media has never been lower,” testified Peter Menzies, former Calgary Herald editor in chief. Public mistrust was fueled by confidential subsidy terms with publishers, he said.

“The more government assistance news media gets, the more broken the relationship with readers becomes,” said Menzies. “The more that relationship is broken, the more subsidy will be required.”

By Staff

 

Promises Hands Off Podcasts

First-ever federal internet controls will not apply to podcasts or other content uploaded by individual “social media creators,” cabinet said yesterday. Exemptions were spelled out in a legal notice by Heritage Minister Pascale St-Onge: ‘The CRTC is directed not to impose regulatory requirements on podcasts.’

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Facing China Bank Questions

Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland faces questioning by MPs over dealings with a Beijing bank dubbed a Communist Party front. Freeland had promised to suspend work with the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank five months ago: “Where is our money?”

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Gov’t Hides Pandemic Audits

The Department of Health has completed more than 20 internal audits and reports on pandemic mismanagement but will not release them, records show. Data “revealed critical weaknesses and gaps,” said a department memo: “We continue to take stock of the lessons learned.”

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Would Federalize Firefighting

Parliament should consider federalizing firefighting after a record year for property losses, the Commons defence committee was told. Army volunteers were insufficient, said Alberta’s deputy premier: “As much as we love our armed forces they have very basic training when it comes to firefighting.”

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Passport Office Gives Itself B

The passport office in a report to Parliament graded itself a solid B for customer satisfaction. The claim followed mayhem at passport offices that saw record lineups with police summoned to quell angry crowds: “They claim some sort of success despite the disaster we’ve seen.”

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Judges Won’t Hear Vax Cases

The Federal Court of Appeal has dismissed as irrelevant five legal challenges of now-expired vaccine mandates for air and rail passengers. Lead plaintiffs in the case included People’s Party leader Maxime Bernier and Brian Peckford, former premier of Newfoundland and Labrador: “Courts should refrain from expressing opinions on questions of law in a vacuum.”

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