Charities are entitled to compensation for libel that harms their reputation, says the Yukon Supreme Court. A judge awarded $50,000 in damages to a local charity that “has a reputation it seeks to maintain and uphold in the Yukon,” she said.
Okayed Millions On A Say-So
A federal agency in an internal memo admits it did no “due diligence” before sinking millions of taxpayer dollars into a money-losing Kenyan cellphone company. FinDev Canada, the agency that approved the spending without parliamentary scrutiny, withheld the memo for six years under the Access To Information Act: “We will need to ensure the rationale for our involvement is articulated clearly and convincingly.”
Immigration Rate Defies Cap
Immigration levels in the first third of the year outpaced Prime Minister Mark Carney promised cap on quotas. Figures released by the Department of Immigration for the first 120 days set a pace that would see nearly 400,000 new landed immigrants in 2025: “The system isn’t working.”
No Mention Of China Orders
Canada must “source domestically for federal contracts,” Public Works Minister Joel Lightbound said yesterday after touring a British Columbia shipyard. He made no mention of outsourcing shipyard jobs to China through a billion-dollar contract currently under investigation by the Commons transport committee: ‘We’re creating a prosperous economy.’
‘Genocide’ Reference Deleted
Parks Canada yesterday without comment deleted all reference to “genocide” in its latest historic site designation of an Indian Residential School. The agency as recently as last February 12 called the schools “cultural genocide.”
$50M Business Was All Cash
Auditors are within their rights to estimate actual income of all-cash businesses, the Québec Court of Appeal has ruled. Judges upheld a reassessment of $30,031,393 in taxes and penalties against Sami Fruits, a retail chain that grew from a single fruit stand in Montréal: “Sami’s way of operating and accounting did not keep pace with the company’s growth.”
Warns Of Religious Violence
Canadians rate religious extremism a greater threat to public order than neo-Nazis, says in-house research by the Canadian Security Intelligence Service. It follows numerous anti-Semitic street protests and the 2023 assassination of a Sikh nationalist in Surrey, B.C.: “Overall six in ten, 57 percent, feel Canada is more dangerous.”
Up To 35% Predict Recession
Up to a third of stock analysts predict a recession by year’s end, the Bank of Canada said yesterday. Its survey of market participants followed Governor Tiff Macklem’s assurance there will be no recession in 2025: “What is the probability of real GDP growth in Canada being below zero at the end of 2025?”
Vote Conflict Wasn’t Cultural
An Elections Canada report debunks cabinet claims a fixed date for balloting had to be delayed due to conflicts with the Hindu calendar. One day was as conflicted as another, says a newly-released report on the proposal Opposition MPs called a pension grab under the guise of cultural sensitivity: “The date was moved not for any cultural event.”
Pulled Third Of Desk Phones
About a third of desk phones have been permanently disconnected at federal offices, says a memo by the government’s IT department Shared Services Canada. And more than 91,000 government-issue cellphones were found to be unused, figures show: “The average monthly cost of unused phone service plans was $253,832.”
Rewarding Work At Low Pay
Postsecondary graduates typically find work they enjoy in their chosen field but at lower pay than they hoped, says a tracking study by the Department of Employment. Fewer than a third of graduates expressed regrets, said the report released yesterday: “What are student debt loads at graduation and three years later?”
Warning On Green Fuel Regs
Cabinet’s own green fuel regulations may leave Canadians more reliant on American gas and diesel imports, says a briefing note by Environment Minister Julie Dabrusin’s department. Canadian makers of products like biodiesel were struggling to meet expected demand under a federal mandate, it said: “Canada’s low carbon fuel industry is struggling.”
VIP Kenney At $470 Lib Meet
Former Alberta premier Jason Kenney will join speakers at a Liberal-affiliated Ottawa think tank to discuss “national progress” at $470 a ticket, say organizers. Kenney’s host, Canada 2020, was formerly chaired by Mark Carney: “Be part of the conversation.”
Spending $114K On Feelings
The military is awarding a six-figure, sole-sourced contract for psychometric training to “provide insights into core emotional motivations and fears,” according to the Department of National Defence. Managers hired a British consultant who also sells workshops on self-esteem and romantic relationships: ‘It has its roots in a deeply spiritual journey.’
Pay Hike Partly Meets Pledge
A $2 billion retroactive pay hike for the Canadian Armed Forces covers about a fifth of the sum required to meet Prime Minister Mark Carney’s NATO pledge, figures show. “This is part of the strategic investment to meet NATO’s two percent defence spending target,” said Carney.



