The Department of Finance took eight months to release uncensored climate change documents to federal auditors. Staff had refused to release records on tax credits and bonuses paid to oil and gas companies, and unredacted environmental assessments: “It was only this past Friday that Finance Canada gave us the other information that we asked for.”
Agency Penalties Hiked 79%
A federal agency faulted for levying random fines increased its collections 79 percent last year, according to records. The Financial Transactions & Reports Analysis Centre was cited in four court judgments for imposing arbitrary penalties on scofflaws: “I simply cannot tell how the director calculated the base figures.”
Cities Not Told Of Refit Code
Cities say a federal proposal to mandate energy refits of existing homes, apartments and commercial buildings is news to them. The Department of Natural Resources is drafting the code to be introduced in 2022: “It’s not the first time we are left scratching our heads.”
Will Sue Over Work Cameras
Teamsters say they will take Transport Canada to court if regulators proceed with plans to exempt train crews from federal privacy law. A cabinet bill would mandate video and voice surveillance of locomotive crews: “It’s ridiculous.”
Senate Questions Filibuster
Senators yesterday moved to end a filibuster over a contentious private bill to rewrite O Canada. The bill was introduced in the Senate June 6, 2016 but has yet to see a final vote over all-party opposition to gender-neutral lyrics: “Yea or nay, we must seize the day.”
Heritage Credit Costs $67M
A Conservative bill offering tax credits for owners’ restoration of heritage properties would cost up to $67 million a year, 20 percent more than originally estimated, says the Parliamentary Budget Office. Witnesses yesterday told the Commons environment committee the bill would do little to help charities or low-income owners: “What is the best way to support heritage in Canada?”
Feds Study Fish Farm Act
The Department of Fisheries is taking the first steps to writing a standalone Aquaculture Act. The proposal follows a 2016 recommendation from the Senate fisheries committee to streamline a “mishmash” of regulations on fish farms: ‘It would be the first dedicated Act of its kind.’
Critics Hammer ‘Secrets’ Bill
Media, advocacy groups and lawyers yesterday faulted a cabinet bill on disclosure of records as so inadequate it “should be called the Guide To Keeping Secrets Act”, said one official. Witnesses told the Commons access committee the bill should be rewritten or withdrawn: “You give new tools to these officials and they will use it to the max.”
Bank Loss Provision Up 54%
A federal insurer that protects bank customers’ deposits is raising its loss provision by 54 percent. The Canada Deposit Insurance Corporation said the sharp increase was prompted by “probability of default” and other factors. Canada hasn’t seen a bank failure since 1985: “You have to be a little bit forward-looking.”
$56K Human Rights Award
An Alberta tribunal has ordered a small business to pay $56,000 in damages for breaching the Human Rights Act in a conversation. The judgment, one of the largest of its kind, followed an unsuccessful job interview: “I should have had a witness there; it was my mistake.”
Nothing “Sneaky” In Oil Bill
Transport Minister Marc Garneau says there is nothing “sneaky” in executive powers sanctioned in a bill restricting Pacific oil tanker traffic. Bill C-48 An Act Respecting The Regulation Of Vessels allows cabinet to grant waivers to a tanker moratorium: “We’re not going to be talking about sneakily trying to develop tanker traffic.”
Questions Over RCMP Union
An RCMP union already the subject of a 15-year court battle is mired in another legal quandary. Québec organizers say they may challenge a federal Act that does not give consideration to French-speaking Mounties: ‘We just want to have a voice.’
$35K For Homeowners’ Code
The National Research Council says introduction of a retroactive energy code in 2022 could cost homeowners up to $35,000. Enforcement will be up to provinces, researchers told the Senate energy committee: “I don’t want to put fear in people’s minds.”
MP Uneasy With “Machine”
A Liberal MP is uneasy with a federal proposal to give cabinet new powers to bypass public scrutiny in drafting regulations. A parliamentary committee was told the proposal is so broad it leaves Canadians at the mercy of “the machine”: “The machine always wins, and the citizen always loses.”
Defeat GST-Free Carbon Bill
MPs have rejected a bill to exempt the national carbon tax from the GST. One legislator estimated the treasury will collect more than a billion a year from the tax on tax: “That is a significant amount of additional GST revenue.”



