An arbitrator has upheld a human rights complaint over the sale of a used car on Kijiji. Testy emails by a St. John’s auto dealer were found to breach the Human Rights Act: “Read the friggin ad.”
300,000 Electors Off The List
Nearly 300,000 names have been removed from the national voters’ list including dead people and foreigners, Chief Electoral Officer Stéphane Perrault said yesterday. Perrault promised to “clean up the list” by October 21 balloting, but would not commit to investigating how many illegal votes were cast in the 2015 campaign: “It’s not a no or a yes.”
Population Upheaval By 2048
Statistics Canada yesterday predicted Alberta will eclipse British Columbia as the third largest province, and Québec will shrink to 20 percent of the national population within a generation. New figures contradict data used to justify an earlier constitutional proposal to guarantee Québec 25 percent of seats in Parliament in perpetuity: “We opposed it and were called hysterical.”
School Grants To Cost $612M
The Parliamentary Budget Office yesterday said a Conservative Party proposal to increase federal grants for children’s education would cost more than $600 million a year but encourage private savings. The Department of Employment in 2018 complained millions of children are not enrolled in the federal program that offers cash grants to pay for college or university: “It still pays to start saving early.”
Air Advocate Loses In Court
A federal judge has dismissed a consumer advocate’s bid to challenge compensation orders for poor airline service. Only people with a “real stake” in claims can represent passengers, said the Federal Court: “I am not persuaded.”
Secret Study By Labour Dept
The Department of Labour commissioned secret interviews with non-union workers at federally-regulated job sites for unreported breaches of the Canada Labour Code, according to Access To Information records. The research is to conclude by September 28: “The final report will not be shared with the public.”
Libs Won’t Disclose Costing
The Liberal Party will not disclose independent costing of its campaign promises, the only major party to do so. Party headquarters yesterday would not take questions: “We are leaving it up to the parties.”
Bank Proposal Unpopular
Consumers are wary of a Department of Finance proposal to permit data mining by banks, says in-house research. The department since January 11 has reviewed the merits of what it calls open banking: “Almost all do not like it.”
Can’t Fire The Ombudsman
Cabinet has quietly rewritten terms of reference for a new corporate ethics ombudsman to prevent any future government from firing the officer. No reason was given for the change: “We are in what I call continuous improvement mode.”
Data Not Meant To Mislead
Environment Canada omitted 100 years’ worth of weather data from a federal website intended to illustrate climate change. Staff also used “modeling” instead of actual temperature readings to plot dramatic graphs, but said the result was not intended to be misleading: “It is simulated.”
Pro-Taxers Defy Election Rule
A pro-carbon tax group says it will not register with Elections Canada despite broadcasting YouTube ads ridiculing opponents. The Elections Act forbids unregulated advertising for or against any political issue during a campaign: “The provision does not apply to us.”
Candidate Cited On Ethics
A New Democrat candidate for the 43rd Parliament was twice cited for ethics breaches as a public office holder, according to records. “It was irresponsible and reckless,” wrote a City of Toronto Integrity Commissioner: “I just can’t believe it.”
Transit Credit Worth $229M
A Conservative proposal to revive a “green” tax credit for transit users would cost $229 million next year, says the Parliamentary Budget Office. A similar credit was repealed in 2017 after both the Green Party and Department of Finance dubbed it a waste of money: “There was no chance in hell.”
RCMP Deployed Rock Squad
Newly-declassified files disclose the RCMP in 1970 deployed a Rock Festival Task Force to photograph hippies and the “younger radical element” at concerts from Vancouver to Manseau, Que. Undercover officers compiled hundreds of photos in a redacted 1,551-page file: “Each agent should be equipped with a camera and approximately four to six rolls of film.”
More Colourful Candidates
Confirmed candidates for the 43rd Parliament include a minor hockey coach suspended for cheating at a tournament, and a former business manager fired for “unprofessionalism and incompetence”. Conservative and Green Party organizers yesterday did not comment on their nominees.



