Say “Canada” and most people in France think of wildlife, Céline Dion and maple syrup, says research by the Department of Foreign Affairs. Focus groups also cited darker perceptions of the country as a place where police take away Indigenous people to “make way for pipeline projects”.
Minister Used Contractor’s Jet
Intergovernmental Affairs Minister Dominic LeBlanc used a federal contractor’s private plane to attend medical check-ups. LeBlanc in a filing with the Commissioner of Ethics said he traveled with his wife, a New Brunswick judge, aboard a J.D. Irving Ltd. corporate jet: “I was accompanied by my spouse.”
“Banks Are Not Safe Either”
A mammoth privacy breach at one of the nation’s largest credit unions could happen anytime, anywhere, Desjardins Group CEO Guy Cormier yesterday told the Commons public safety committee. The leak of personal information on 2.7 million clients is blamed on a single employee: ‘It could happen again.’
Lost Millions On Crown Sale
Taxpayers have lost millions in the privatization of a Crown corporation, data show. A Prince Rupert, B.C. coal terminal valued at nearly a half-billion dollars in 2018 was sold for $350 million to American investors: “It would not be prudent.”
Gov’t Inflated Jobs Estimate
Actual jobs created under a new billion-dollar Industry Canada corporate loan program are a fraction of federal claims, according to Access To Information data. Records show the plan announced as “an investment in jobs” created about a tenth the number claimed by cabinet: “Recipients are not required to report on the number of jobs.”
Telecom Fees Still Climbing
Average telecom fees have climbed by more than twice the rate of inflation since 2014, according to the CRTC. Newly-released data follow a cabinet order to shield consumers from increasing charges: “I’m not convinced the CRTC has the fortitude.”
Green Hoax Detailed In Court
A multi-million dollar green energy hoax has been detailed in Ontario Superior Court. Shareholders poured a fortune into a Canadian patented pollution-free generator supposedly fueled by kinetic energy: “Investors were lining up.”
Firms Cheer Plastics Ruling
Plastics manufacturers are cheering a British Columbia Court of Appeal ruling that struck down a City of Victoria ban on single-use plastic bags. Some 55 other municipalities nationwide have introduced similar restrictions: “Victoria definitely demonized the product.”
Poem: “Bread And Circuses”
It was one of ancient Rome’s
greatest spectacles.
The military commander
who had led his forces to victory
received a hero’s welcome.
In front of him,
his chained captives
and the spoils of war.
Behind him, his armies.
Crowned with laurels,
the triumphal general
wore a purple and gold-embroidered regalia
that raised him to near-divinity.
Riding a four-horse chariot,
he held an ivory sceptre
with an eagle at the top
as the procession moved
thorough the cheering crowd.
Gold and silver coins
minted in his honour,
circulated throughout the empire.
I turn on the TV,
watch the Toronto Raptors’
homecoming parade.
Wonder if much has changed.
(Editor’s note: poet Shai Ben-Shalon, an Israeli-born biologist, examines current events in the Blacklock’s tradition each and every Sunday)

Bailout To Exempt Start-Ups
A federal panel that includes corporate publishers of the Winnipeg Free Press and Le Droit is recommending cabinet’s $595 million press bailout exclude start-ups and small family-run publications from getting federal aid. A panelist yesterday said executives seeking subsidies should have disqualified themselves from denying aid to competitors: “I do believe it is a conflict.”
Less TV Time Than Marxists
MP Maxime Bernier’s People’s Party of Canada is limited to less paid TV ad time than the Marxist-Leninists under a federal order issued yesterday. An arbitrator acknowledged the Canada Elections Act discriminates against new parties that did not run candidates in a previous campaign: “Everybody deserves a shot.”
Airport French Mandatory
Cabinet has approved regulations mandating French services at airports in all provincial capitals effective July 10, 2020. The proposal earlier drew protests from airport managers who questioned where they would find bilingual staff in cities like Charlottetown or Regina: “That is a big concern.”
Gov’ts Rated Bad Forecasters
Federal and provincial governments are terrible forecasters that routinely miss budget targets by billions, the C.D. Howe Institute said yesterday. Parliament has run deficits in 40 of the past 52 years and in 2016 repealed a balanced budget law: “Expenses and revenues typically come in above what governments promised.”
Pollsters Cite CBC Copying
Leading pollsters yesterday demanded the CBC stop copying thousands of dollars’ worth of research without permission or payment. The Crown broadcaster acknowledged lifting survey results for its own use, including data bought by other media.
“We are doing a public service,” said Éric Grenier, senior CBC writer. “Is data copyrightable? We choose how to report on it in our own way.”
Under the Copyright Act “literary works” including data compiled using proprietary software cannot be copied without payment or permission. Grenier said the CBC pulled data from private pollsters’ websites including research funded by competitors without paying licensing fees or asking permission.
“It is not required,” said Grenier. “We have the right to choose how we’ll use public information.” Digital ad revenues at the CBC totaled $42.6 million last year. Private pollsters’ data was also cited in network newsletters.
“On top of everything else, they are commercializing this with advertising,” said Nick Nanos, chair of Nanos Research Group. “They never asked permission or discussed terms of use, and they blatantly use our work and do it publicly.”
“They expropriated my work,” said Nanos. “It represents thirty years of expertise. That’s the fundamental issue.”
“Legally the CBC should be held to the same standard of copyright compliance as everybody else,” said Nanos, who does polling for CTV National News. “Ethically they should be held to a higher standard. This is a government agency.”
Nanos Group charges $4 a month for access to detailed polling data on its company website – “I think we’re being more than reasonable,” said Nanos – and told the CBC to “remove my research from your aggregator” after Grenier questioned the paywall.
Grenier in a July 9 tweet when asked by a follower, “How much stock do you personally put in Nanos weekly rolling average polls?” replied: “Less now that the regional numbers aren’t available.” Grenier subsequently deleted the message from his Twitter feed.
“Notoriously Inaccurate”
“I would really prefer they weren’t using our data for purposes we don’t agree with,” said Frank Graves, president of EKOS Research Associates. “They are making a living off this. The CBC is making revenues from our work.”
“They were aware we didn’t want them using it,” said Graves. “There should at least be consent to use it. We never even got to the stage of permission, let alone payment or discussion on use of the data. No one even asked.”
“There is an art and a science to doing this,” said Graves. “It’s not something that magically comes out of a computer. It costs a lot of money. It takes experience, effort and skill in assembling sound polling data. That’s our intellectual property, and it should be treated like any other copyright material that cannot be reproduced without written permission.”
The CBC compiles a Poll Tracker feature including Commons seat projections. Graves called it a “kind of statistical Cuisinart” using data from named research companies. “It is not helpful to have this kind of Las Vegas-style handicapping of election outcomes, and I don’t agree with our data being used for that purpose,” said Graves.
Darrell Bricker, CEO of Ipsos Public Affairs, described seat modeling using data copied from pollsters’ websites as “notoriously inaccurate”: “We didn’t design our polling for the purpose of compiling seat models. The models are not accurate at all, and the CBC associates our brand with that,” he said.
“I’ve repeatedly objected,” said Bricker. “I’ve contacted the CBC and told them to stop, and they say, well, it is public information, forget about it. We do not endorse use of this data for conducting seat models, and the CBC does it anyway.”
“I hold the CBC to the same standard they would hold any reseller of their information,” said Bricker. “If they believe the CBC’s own copyright means something, then our copyright means something. We asked them clearly and politely to stop doing it. They’re a Crown agency. They are a national broadcaster. They completely ignored it. They do it anyway, and keep doing it.”
CBC management did not comment.
By Staff 
Ex-Candidate Wins $248K Job
Cabinet yesterday named an ex-Liberal candidate to a $248,000-a year federal post. It was the 293rd appointment approved by cabinet since May in a pre-election hiring blitz: “Partisan affiliation is not a barrier to being appointed.”



