Travelers crossing the border with undeclared marijuana will be ticketed up to $2,000 effective at midnight tonight, says the Canada Border Services Agency. The crackdown follows warnings of “repercussions” when Parliament legalized cannabis in 2018: “Use of cannabis is common in Canada.”
Ease Immigrant Medical Rule
Cabinet proposes to allow immigrants with chronic health problems into the country so long as their medicare costs don’t exceed $106,000 over five years. Regulations had prohibited immigrants with heart disease, HIV and other illnesses as a burden to medicare: ‘It screens out too many people.’
Lawsuits Curbed Grant Policy
The number of rejected Canada Summer Jobs program applications fell 72 percent after Christian charities sued, records show. Cabinet had required applicants to swear they were pro-choice when seeking hire-a-student grants: “The most sinister threat to free speech is compelled speech.”
Nursery Was Nuisance, Said Public Advocate Of Daycare
Bank of Canada Governor Tiff Macklem, public champion of daycare, privately tried to block the opening of a nursery near his multi-million dollar Toronto home as a nuisance that would spoil the neighbourhood’s “charm” with traffic and garbage. Macklem yesterday did not comment. “It’s worth it for everyone to think about where their interests lie,” he said in a February 23 tribute to working mothers: “Governments could boost access to child care to help more women.”
Know Of 30,000 CERB Frauds
The Department of Employment yesterday for the first time admitted it paid millions in fraudulent claims for pandemic relief cheques. It followed a preliminary audit that found 30,000 suspected cases of fraud worth $42 million: “So many Canadians are making sacrifices.”
Dep’t Fails Another Audit
Auditors yesterday complained they can get only a “partial picture” of spending under a multi-billion dollar infrastructure program. “We needed to do a better job of showing our work,” said Infrastructure Minister Catherine McKenna.
Carbon Tax Left To Voters
Opposition Leader Erin O’Toole yesterday repeated a pledge to repeal the carbon tax after the Supreme Court upheld the fuel charge as lawful. Other tax opponents pleaded with cabinet to postpone scheduled increases worth the equivalent of an extra 40¢ per litre of gasoline: “The last thing they need is a new cost.”
MPs Seek Ministerial Emails
The Commons transport committee by an 11-0 vote yesterday ordered disclosure of confidential federal records regarding payment of billions in refunds to air passengers. The Department of Transport had feared “economic consequences” if airlines were forced to refund travelers: “It could be hundreds of documents.”
Pick Your Favourite For $61K
The Department of Agriculture spent $61,611 to ask 62 people to pick their favourite “Canada Brand” symbol. Researchers acknowledged the study was not useful: “A majority are at least somewhat satisfied with the program, although few are very satisfied.”
Judges OK Carbon Tax By 6-3
The Supreme Court today in a 6-3 decision ruled the federal carbon tax is lawful. The Court dismissed constitutional challenges by Alberta, Saskatchewan and Ontario.
“Climate change is real,” wrote Chief Justice Richard Wagner. “It is caused by greenhouse gas emissions resulting from human activities, and it poses a grave threat to humanity’s future. The only way to address the threat of climate change is to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.”
Justice Wagner said since climate change “has no boundaries” Parliament was within its rights in passing the 2018 Greenhouse Gas Pollution Pricing Act. The original Act capped the federal carbon tax at $50 per tonne, the equivalent of 12¢ per litre of gasoline.
“All it does is to require persons to pay for engaging in specific activities that result in the emission of greenhouse gases,” wrote Justice Wagner. “The Act leaves individual consumers and businesses free to choose how they will respond, or not, to the price signals.”
However three judges in dissenting opinions wrote the Act was a clear intrusion in provincial powers, and granted cabinet unprecedented powers to raise the tax at any time. “When an Act endows a select few with the power to rewrite, and thus re-engineer, a law which affects virtually every aspect of individuals’ daily lives and provincial industrial, economic and municipal activities, it goes too far,” wrote Justice Suzanne Côté of Québec.
“The Act as it is currently written employs a discretionary scheme that knows no bounds,” wrote Justice Côté.
Cabinet last December 11 announced it would use its powers under the Act to raise the carbon tax 240 percent to $170 per tonne by 2030. The higher charge is the equivalent of an extra 27¢ per litre of propane, 34¢ more per cubic metre of natural gas, 40¢ more per litre of gasoline, 44¢ for aviation fuel and an extra 47¢ per litre for diesel.
Justice Russell Brown of British Columbia in a dissenting opinion called the Act “a deep foray into industrial policy that falls within matters of provincial legislative authority,” while Justice Malcolm Rowe of Newfoundland and Labrador cautioned: “It is no simple matter to tinker with the Constitution.”
“The importance of the matter has nothing to do with whether it is a matter of national concern,” wrote Justice Rowe. Provinces regulate property rights, not Parliament, he wrote.
“The goal of the financial charges, ‘just paying money,’ is to influence behaviour, in this case both consumer and industrial,” wrote Justice Rowe. “The point is that ‘just paying money’ hardly captures the intended impact of the Act, let alone its potential impact.”
By Staff 
Health Dep’t Pays For Praise
Health Minister Patricia Hajdu’s department is paying people to say nice things about it on Twitter and Facebook. The department yesterday said it will pay minor celebrities to tout its work “as a trusted source of health information” on social media after being faulted for pandemic mismanagement: “We are continuously adapting and learning.”
No Refund On $700M Orders
Taxpayers will see no refunds on more than $700 million worth of pandemic ventilators the Department of Public Works bought from sole-sourced contractors but didn’t need. “I do have the Canadian taxpayers’ interests at heart when I am doing my job,” Minister Anita Anand said yesterday. “I am very, very concerned with that issue myself.”
Warns Of Internet Kill Switch
A first-ever federal proposal to block websites in the name of public safety is a “slippery slope” to curbing free speech, says a national internet manager. The CRTC seeks network-wide blocking of websites to limit botnets: “Technical measures to make the internet safer must not allow for a slippery slope towards blocking content or free speech.”
No Fault On Border Beer Run
A Customs officer suspended three days for allowing coworkers to cross the border to buy duty-free U.S. beer has won a federal labour board appeal. The practice was commonplace at a Coutts, Alta. crossing, the board was told: “I allowed what I had seen done over the years.”
House Rejects Climate Bill
The Commons by a 272-61 vote yesterday rejected a New Democrat bill to fix climate change targets in federal law. “We are running out of time,” said MP Leah Gazan (Winnipeg Centre), sponsor of the bill: “Our ability to survive depends on what we do.”



