Postal Inspectors Number 25

Canada employs only 25 federal postal inspectors nationwide with limited powers to intercept contraband by mail, says the Department of Public Works. Cabinet has sought new powers for inspectors and police to open mail in transit: “With only roughly 25 postal inspectors, Canada Post’s ability to inspect the 240 million parcels it delivered in 2024 is limited.”

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Agent Fired For Moonlighting

A federal labour board has upheld the firing of a Customs agent who moonlighted as an airport bodyguard for VIPs. Commons committee hearings have been told moonlighting by government employees is commonplace: “Everybody has their day to day work and maybe they have a little side gig at night.”

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CBC-TV Show’s Not Evidence

Commentary in a CBC-TV program is insufficient grounds for a class action lawsuit, Québec Provincial Court has ruled. A judge dismissed a claim against the nation’s largest supermarket chains over allegations by a viewer who watched a cooking show: “The claim is based on a television program.”

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Dep’t Eager For Sharia Loans

Access To Information records show the finance department wanted to move “extremely fast” to adopt Sharia loans in Canada prior to the April 28 election despite repeated warnings the measure was impractical. Finance Minister François-Philippe Champagne’s office yesterday had no comment: “This file is moving extremely fast and it is somewhat sensitive.”

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Delay Foreign Registry To ’26

A public registry of foreign agents in Canada may not be in place until 2026 though Parliament passed it into law a year ago, says a memo to Public Safety Minister Gary Anandasangaree. No reason was given for skipping a June 30 deadline: “Establishing a new independent office takes time.”

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Criminals Target Jews: Report

Jews remain the leading target of hate crimes in Canada though they are less than one percent of the population, new federal figures confirmed yesterday. Release of police data followed introduction of a Commons petition to ban the swastika and street protests targeting synagogues and Jewish homes, shops and schools: “Numbers don’t paint the full picture.”

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Reforms To Deposit Insurance

Cabinet yesterday proposed major reforms to federal deposit insurance for the first time since extending coverage to foreign currency accounts eight years ago. Insurance limits currently are among the lowest in the G7: “There have been significant changes.”

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No Charter Claim In Military

A Charter challenge of vaccine mandates imposed by then-Chief of Defence Staff General Wayne Eyre has been dismissed by a federal judge. Incomplete figures show nearly 1,600 soldiers, sailors and air crew resigned, were discharged or faced discipline for defying Covid orders: “This may seem to be a harsh outcome.”

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Sharia Loans More ‘Inclusive’

Housing policy should reflect “the rich cultural mosaic of Canadian society” with Sharia loans, says a CMHC consultants’ report. Financing according to Muslim law “sets a precedent for inclusivity,” said the censored Access To information study: “The introduction of an element of Sharia law into the Canadian legislative regime would be a serious precedent.”

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3M “Temporary” Foreigners

Foreigners in Canada on temporary permits are the equivalent of 18.5 percent of the private sector workforce, newly released figures show. Immigration Minister Lena Diab’s department in a briefing note counted 3,049,277 temporary residents including more than 129,000 now in Canada illegally due to expired permits: “Will she admit they broke the system and it’s out of control?”

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Got $2M In Bankruptcy Court

Industry Minister Mélanie Joly yesterday announced $1.9 million in federal aid to a production company currently in bankruptcy proceedings. “Congratulations,” Joly said in announcing the subsidy for her hometown Just For Laughs Festival that owes creditors millions.

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Layoff Fears Spreading: Bank

Canadians fear job losses with a recession likely by 2026, says in-house Bank of Canada research. The new data released yesterday followed Governor Tiff Macklem’s forecast that another interest rate cut was likely: “Consumers, especially young people, continued to report a higher-than-average chance of losing their job.”

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Feds Weary Of Post Troubles

Any resumption of a postal strike would have a “significant and immediate impact” on millions of Canadians, says a Department of Public Works briefing note. The department released the document yesterday as the Canadian Union of Postal Workers voted on a final offer from management: “Like so many other businesses, Canada Post needs to adapt.”

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Feds Hire Digital ID Experts

Federal consultants have been hired at an undisclosed cost to centralize all public requests for federal documents into one digital ID system, says the Department of Social Development. The proposal is so complex it required “expertise we don’t have in-house,” said a department briefing note: “We are moving to next steps.”

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