CRTC Opposes Spam Rewrite

Federal regulators yesterday appealed to MPs to leave anti-spam legislation alone. The Commons industry committee cited overwhelming complaints the regulations are vague, and compliance is costly: “There is a difference between inadvertent errors and malicious activity.”

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Blamed For Food Antibiotics

Pharmaceutical companies and farmers are to blame for indiscriminate use of antibiotics in food production, the Commons health committee was told yesterday. Health Canada has ruled out any European-style ban on antibiotics in livestock and poultry production: “How did we get to the place where we are now? Overuse.”

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Animal Welfare Case Vetoed

The Supreme Court yesterday dismissed an appeal by a Québec trucking company against federal fines for undue suffering to livestock. The Canadian Food Inspection Agency is currently updating animal welfare regulations for the first time in 40 years: “It’s very akin to human beings traveling.”

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Few Will Work As Fed Spies

Few Canadians will work for a secretive federal spy agency, according to in-house research at the Communications Security Establishment. The agency is hiring, but found two-thirds of respondents aren’t interested: “I don’t want to work in Ottawa.”

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Feds Support Troubled Corp.

Fisheries Minister Dominic LeBlanc says cabinet will stand by a Crown corporation that failed three federal audits in 12 years. Members of the Commons public accounts committee earlier suggested closing the Freshwater Fish Marketing Corp. as an “absolute mess”.

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Feds Defend Old Home Refits

Environment Minister Catherine McKenna yesterday said owners of older homes should welcome a chance to renovate. Regulators are drafting a 2022 energy code that would compel homeowners to upgrade furnaces, roofs, windows and insulation when they sell their property: “You didn’t answer my question.”

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Spam Up 350-Fold Since ’97

Wholesale spam volumes have increased 350-fold in 20 years, a web security consultant yesterday told a Commons statutory review of anti-spam legislation. Internet spam filters, not regulations, were credited with blocking most unsolicited emails: “Ask yourself, did my spam volume go up that much? No, it didn’t.”

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MPs See Million Petitioners

More than a million Canadians have signed electronic petitions since Parliament introduced the system two years ago. Officials yesterday told the Commons committee on House affairs that petitions on issues from Sharia law to electoral reform drew tens of thousands of signatures: “We should be as expansive as possible.”

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