Health Minister Jean-Yves Duclos yesterday could not explain a $150 million Covid contract from his own department to SNC-Lavalin Group Inc. The sole-sourced deal was finalized almost two years ago for “urgently” needed mobile hospitals that were never used: “We’re not getting a lot of clarity here.”
Xinhua Seeks Parliament Pass
Media directors of the Parliamentary Press Gallery yesterday met behind closed doors to consider membership for Xinhua, the official propaganda agency of the Chinese Communist Party. The Gallery said it had not discussed the matter with the Prime Minister’s Office: “The Gallery is not bound by any outside political considerations.”
Agency Defends Data Scoop
Public Health Agency monitoring of millions of cellphone users did no harm to privacy rights, the president of the Agency said yesterday. Dr. Harpreet Kochhar said managers at no time collected information that personally identified any of 33 million cellphone users: “No personal information was asked or was received.”
Claim MPs Pose Security Risk
Allowing MPs to read secret documents on the firing of Chinese scientists at a federal lab would be “endangering our national security,” Government House Leader Mark Holland said yesterday. Cabinet for the past year has defied multiple House orders to permit review of internal records detailing the January 20, 2021 dismissals: ‘Is that what this is about, your own hide?’
Bank Contradicts Audio Tape
Bank of Canada managers yesterday denied running a press enemies’ list though staff openly discussed it in a recorded Zoom call. Bank Governor Tiff Macklem’s director of communications Paul Badertscher in an email denied blacklisting Blacklock’s despite telling a deputy governor in an audio tape: “I do not want to be in a situation where we are allowing Blacklock’s to be asking us. So, yes, that’s where we’re at.”
Equity Tax Impact Unknown
Statistics Canada yesterday said it had no estimate of the impact of a federal home equity tax. A CMCH-commissioned study issued January 6 claimed tax revenues worth up to $6 billion a year could be used to finance affordable housing: “Stop commissioning studies on how to tax home ownership.”
Housing Jumps In Six Cities
Six cities saw house price gains averaging at or near six figures last year, Canadian Real Estate Association data showed yesterday. Members of the Commons finance committee reviewed the figures with Canada’s chief statistician: “Housing inflation is homegrown.”
Million Afghans Ask To Settle
More than a million Afghans have asked to settle in Canada, Immigration Minister Sean Fraser yesterday told reporters. Canada has accepted 6750 to date, said Fraser: “I use the point to illustrate the pressures the system is facing.”
Covid Is Real Rules Fed Judge
Covid is real, a federal judge has ruled. The Federal Court dismissed out of hand a claim by a Montréal stock trader who likened himself to Galileo in questioning conventional wisdom: “The comparison is unfair to the great Italian scholar.”
Bank Confirms Enemies List: “Oh, Is This On The Record?”
Bank of Canada Governor Tiff Macklem’s staff disclosed the agency runs a press enemies’ list in contravention of cabinet orders. Macklem’s director of communications said blacklisted media outlets like Blacklock’s were prohibited from questioning bankers while friendly reporters may call for tips on how to cover the news: “Oh, is this on the record?”
Pandemic Plans Were Wrong
Covid infection rates nationwide are much higher than the Public Health Agency expected, admits Dr. Theresa Tam, chief public health officer. The Agency for the first time acknowledged the entire basis of its pandemic planning, that fewer than one in ten Canadians would become infected, was wrong: “That’s a fact.”
Canadians “Going Nuts”: MP
People are “going nuts” over Covid, exasperated MPs told the Commons health committee. Legislators summoned Health Minister Jean-Yves Duclos for questioning this week on pandemic relief, lockdowns and quarantine measures: “It goes on and on.”
Carbon Tax To Slow Growth
Carbon taxes may slow economic growth for decades, says a Bank of Canada report. The outlook follows a Budget Office forecast that taxing fuel to lower emissions would cut workers’ net income: ‘Canada has unique needs as a vast northern country for heating and transportation.’
Labour Loses On Vax Privacy
Teamsters Canada has lost a challenge of a workplace vaccination order. The union appealed on behalf of an employee at the Toronto Maple Leafs’ home arena who was suspended without pay after declining to reveal his medical status: ‘Personal medical information should not be the subject of disclosure.’
“In Case Of Emergency”
Inside the building,
signs in English and French
direct me to First Aid stations,
fire extinguishers,
defibrillators.
By the boardroom,
bilingual copies of
Evacuation Plan
on display.
In each floor,
emergency exits and
fire safety doors
clearly marked.
English and French.
It’s been a long day.
I’m last to leave.
On my way out,
the cleaners.
They smile, greeting me
in Spanish.
I smile back.
(Editor’s note: poet Shai Ben-Shalom, an Israeli-born biologist, writes for Blacklock’s each and every Sunday)




