CMHC in Access To Information records for the first time acknowledged intense opposition to its promotion of a home equity tax. Staff in internal emails uncovered by the Canadian Taxpayers Federation concluded it was “not worthwhile” to pursue the idea: “Reaction both in the media and by the public was swift.”
Global News “On The Brink”
Global News is “on the brink,” an executive with the country’s number three television network yesterday told a Senate hearing. The assessment came despite millions in federal subsidies and a 38 percent profit margin in TV: “We can no longer do this alone.”
Tears As House Pays Tribute
MPs including one member who choked back tears yesterday lamented the Queen’s death at 96. Observances for a Day of Mourning Monday range from a moment’s silence by Toronto streetcar operators to church carillons at Anglican congregations nationwide that will ring out God Save The King: “Does it make sense to act as if someone we have only ever seen from a distance is a member of our own family?”
Researched Covid Scofflaws
Rates of compliance with public health orders varied widely nationwide, Statistics Canada said yesterday. Analysts said they were able to identify a handful of characteristics shared by Canadians who defied masking orders and other mandates: “Individuals aged 34 or younger were less compliant overall.”
Would Share Tax Data With Police: “A Very Bad Idea –“
The Canada Revenue Agency polled the public on sharing information from tax returns with police and debt collectors, records show. Taxpayers in an internal report called it a bad idea, something akin to “Big Brother.”
Call Internet Bill ‘Power Grab’
A cabinet bill to regulate legal internet content is a “power grab over human communications,” a former CRTC commissioner testified last night at Senate committee hearings. Bill C-11 would classify YouTube videos as TV broadcasts subject to mandatory regulation: “It’s a kind of reverse takeover of the internet.”
Fed Lawyers Too Complacent
The Department of Justice yesterday said giving legal advice to parliamentarians is not its job. The comment drew a rebuke from Senator Leo Housakos (Que.), chair of the Senate transport and communications committee: “Some have been in civil service for far too long.”
Injury & Death Claims Settled
Parks Canada has approved numerous out of court settlements involving injuries or deaths in national parks, says a report. “Serious incident reports” included an average 11 fatalities a year excluding motor vehicle accidents: “Twenty-one visitor safety-related legal claims were made against the agency.”
Clean-Up Plan Fails Audit
A costly federal program to clear derelict vessels from the nation’s lakes and harbours will not achieve its 2022 clean-up target, says an internal audit. The program was budgeted at $107 million: “We want to stop the runaround and have rules and regulations in place.”
Execs Won Quarantine Bonus
Executives at the Canadian Tourism Commission paid themselves five-figure quarantine bonuses even as tourism collapsed, records show. Access To Information documents obtained by the Canadian Taxpayers Federation detailed Covid bonuses and pay raises approved at the same time the Commission publicly lamented tourism bankruptcies: “We are facing the spectre of an industry in deep crisis with many parts of it on the brink of collapse.”
Fed Employees Fear Reprisals
Federal employees are increasingly unlikely to disclose corrupt practices out of fear of reprisal, says a report for the Public Sector Integrity Commissioner. “The reality is the workplace culture is dominated by an attitude that no one should ‘rock the boat,’” it said: “Participants described themselves as having ‘become less naïve,’ ‘more pessimistic,’ ‘more cynical.’”
$4B In ‘Target’ Inflation Relief
Inflation relief for lower income Canadians will cost about $4 billion, according to federal records. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau yesterday promised “a plan to deliver relief to millions,” mainly individuals earning under $49,000: “These will be the very first pieces of legislation we will introduce.”
Defying Hire-A-Veteran Law
Federal managers continue to resist an Act of Parliament that mandates priority hiring of medically-released veterans. A Public Service Commission report detailed numerous complaints from managers who would not hire ex-soldiers, sailors or air crew: “They were concerned about the impact on their flexibility.”
Day Of Mourning On Sept. 19
Some 283,000 federal employees are off work with pay Monday to mark the Queen’s funeral. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau yesterday encouraged provinces that regulate statutory holidays for most other Canadian workers to follow suit despite protests from small business: ‘It would be extremely costly.’
Only 35% Approve Of Lucki
Only a third of Canadians surveyed, 35 percent, say they trust the RCMP’s national leadership, according to in-house research. The low approval rating for Commissioner Brenda Lucki follows a string of incidents that left a bare majority of Canadians, 51 percent, rating the Mounties as an honest police force: “They award lower marks when it comes to the calibre of its leadership.”



