Health Minister Patricia Hajdu yesterday said her department will take delivery of first shipments of 35,000 doses of a newly-approved Covid vaccine by Saturday. Most Canadians will not have access to vaccination for several months: “I am not going to quibble about doses and when they are arriving.”
VW Settlement Rated “Weak”
A federal out-of-court settlement with Volkswagen over polluting diesel cars shows Canada is “hesitant, weak and inadequate” in enforcing its own laws, the Commons environment committee was told yesterday. The Department of Environment settled with VW at a fraction of billions paid by the automaker in the United States: “This was a sophisticated illegal scheme.”
Sank Millions More In Kenya
A federal agency yesterday confirmed it quietly put millions more into a money-losing, door-do-door sales company in Nairobi. Taxpayer spending at M-Kopa Holdings Ltd. of Kenya to date totals $15,400,000: ‘We are informed about M-Kopa’s business.’
Paid For Wi-Fi, Tennis Courts
Infrastructure Minister Catherine McKenna’s department approved subsidies for tennis courts, free Wi-Fi and Indigenous art exhibits in the name of public works, say auditors. “We build infrastructure for the next fifty to one hundred years,” McKenna earlier told the Commons.
No Bailout Without Refunds
Any federal bailout of Canadian airlines must be conditional on prompt cash repayment of tickets for cancelled flights, consumer advocates yesterday told the Commons transport committee. The Department of Transport has estimated passengers are owed billions: “They were forced to provide interest-free loans to the airlines.”
Bagged Moose At $4,358 Each
A federal moose hunt in a national park has cost taxpayers more than $4,300 per animal. The cull at Cape Breton Highlands National Park was launched in 2015 after staff complained of “severe moose browsing.”
Would Ship Liquor By Post
A Conservative bill to allow Canadians to buy interprovincial liquor by mail yesterday was introduced in the Commons. The bill would see consumers use Canada Post to bypass provincial liquor board monopolies: “There would be open free trade in this.”
Paid For China Business Tips
A federal bank hired consultants for tips on China’s “business practices” amid the arbitrary detention of two Canadian consultants in Beijing. The Business Development Bank yesterday would not say if its training included advice on avoiding arrest: “Our mission is to create more and better business.”
Hail Ethics, Forgot Wikipedia
Federal court managers in an ethics audit credit themselves with upholding “high standards” but omitted all reference to staff editing plaintiffs’ Wikipedia pages. André Bolduc, chief auditor at the Courts Administration Service, yesterday did not comment.
“The audit identified strong values and ethics practices,” wrote Bolduc. His Audit Of Values And Ethics concluded “employees must uphold high standards of values and ethics in their interactions with members of the public.”
The audit covered the period from 2014 to 2018. Blacklock’s in 2016 discovered an unidentified person at the Federal Court in Ottawa used a courthouse computer to edit its Wikipedia page. Blacklock’s then and now is a plaintiff in copyright actions against the Government of Canada.
The Courts Administration Service is exempt from the Access To Information Act and would not release details of the Wikipedia editing. “Disciplinary measures were taken against the employee,” Daniel Gosselin, then $267,700-a year chief courts administrator, said at the time.
Gosselin refused to name the employee who freelanced as a Wikipedia editor. “The measure taken took into consideration the employee’s wrongdoing,” wrote Gosselin.
Then-Attorney General Jody Wilson-Raybould in a letter to Blacklock’s said Court staff must operate “at arm’s length from the government,” and declined comment on the incident. Access To Information memos indicated Department of Justice staff were puzzled by the Wikipedia edits. “Who could have made the change?” wrote one staffer.
Court managers said their IP address was accessible by any of more than 620 employees and members of federal courts. Blacklock’s has never been able to confirm whether the Wikipedia editor was an employee or appointee directly involved in its litigation, now in its eighth year of case management.
Auditor Bolduc yesterday would not discuss the incident. “The audit found evidence the chief administrator, senior management and human resources places a high degree of emphasis on values and ethics and set a positive tone at the top,” wrote the auditor.
“An ethical framework ensures an organization’s corporate culture fosters ethical behaviour in its employees based on respect for democracy, respect for people, integrity, stewardship and excellence,” said the Audit Of Values. “It also contributes to maintaining public confidence and trust in the institutions of government.”
A Public Sector Values And Ethics Code mandates that all federal employees, including court clerks, “shall act at all times in a manner that will bear the closest public scrutiny, an obligation that is not fully discharged by simply acting within the law.” A 2017 Department of Justice memo Judicial Independence And The Courts stressed “courts must be independent.”
By Staff 
Accuse Feds Of Score Settling
Former Conservative MP Dean Del Mastro is petitioning a federal judge to examine a refusal by the Canada Border Services Agency to grant him a Nexus travel card. Del Mastro said the decision appeared to be score-settling by political opponents: “I have been a good person my whole life.”
Petition For Porn Crackdown
Attorney General David Lametti yesterday said his department is reviewing whether Canadian-based pornography websites breach the Criminal Code. Twenty MPs and senators including Conservative, Liberal and Green Party members yesterday petitioned cabinet to take action: “It is happening here in Canada.”
PM Agent Claims Witch Hunt
Justin Trudeau’s talent agent yesterday said he has been badgered by unnamed accusers over corporate sponsorship fees paid to the Prime Minister. Trudeau has acknowledged collecting $1,341,500 in speaking fees in the period from 2006 to 2012 including payments by federal contractors: “Have you ever been a member of the Liberal Party?”
Ex-MP’s Firm Needed Cash
A former Québec Liberal MP’s company needed an advance payment to meet a $237 million federal contract for pandemic ventilators. Frank Baylis said his firm had re-mortgaged buildings and asked bankers to extend lines of credit in weeks prior to winning the contract: “I didn’t speak to anybody to try and influence them to give a contract to Baylis Medical.”
Shutdown Unfair, Says Judge
Pandemic lockdowns unfairly punish small business while permitting big retailers to remain open, says an Ontario judge. “Small businesses can ill afford yet further losses in this horrible year,” said Superior Court Justice Frederick Myers: “Everyone sees the apparent unfairness.”
“Ever Failed To Tell Truth?”
A Department of Finance executive who dismissed the cost of a $43.5 million We Charity grant in a breezy email says she was just joking. Michelle Kovacevic, assistant deputy finance minister, was questioned by the Commons ethics committee: “Have you ever knowingly misrepresented the facts?”



