Air passengers have lost another legal challenge of fuel surcharges. The British Columbia Court of Appeal dismissed a proposed class action lawsuit against Air Canada and four other carriers over fuel “taxes” charged through travel agents: “Airlines are legally entitled.”
Police Unready For Legal Pot
Police are pleading for time with amendments to a cabinet proposal to legalize recreational marijuana. Law enforcement yesterday told the Commons health committee police are unprepared for the impact of the legislation, and lack necessary funds and training: “It’s impossible.”
Union Fights Work Cameras
Union executives yesterday protested a bill to exempt railroaders from federal privacy law. Legislation would allow live streaming video and audio of locomotive crews: “It’s easy to give away someone else’s privacy.”
Rail Claims Bill’s A Job Killer
Railways claim a federal bill promising competitive freight rates will cost Canadian jobs. Executives yesterday appealed to MPs to reconsider amendments to shippers’ regulations: “This takes jobs away. “
Seek New Post Management
Cabinet is seeking candidates with experience in labour relations as new directors of Canada Post. The current 10-member board is comprised of Conservative appointees faulted in Parliament for cutting home delivery, raising stamp prices 35 percent, and advocating 2011 back-to-work legislation later found unconstitutional: “It’s like they’re running a candle factory after lightbulbs were invented.”
Lose $9B In Delinquent Tax
The Canada Revenue Agency says it’s losing nearly $9 billion a year in unpaid income tax, not including unreported billions squirreled in offshore accounts. Long-sought data on the “tax gap” still fails to capture all losses, said a Liberal senator: “That’s a guesstimate.”
Up To 40 Complaints A Week
The Canadian Transportation Agency says it is now averaging 20 to 40 complaints a week from airline passengers. The regulator fields more complaints in a month than it did in entire years due to introduction of a passenger rights’ bill: “It’s lunacy.”
OK’s Surveillance At Work
Railways may randomly listen to recordings of employees at work under a federal safety bill, says the chair of the Transportation Safety Board. Unions oppose the mandate to install video and voice recorders in locomotives nationwide: “Railways have often demonstrated a very rules-based punitive culture.”
Pot Regs Vary By Province
The Department of Health says Canadians may see a patchwork of provincial marijuana laws under repeal of a 1923 ban on recreational cannabis. There is nothing to stop legislatures from tightening legal limits on possession, said a senior department lawyer: “Provinces have the flexibility.”
Warning On Seaway Review
Transport Canada in what it calls a “sensitive” project is reviewing costs and benefits of an expanded St. Lawrence Seaway. Any expansion should alarm environmental groups, said a former Conservative senator: “Hopefully there will be public consultation on this.”
$10M For Vimy Observance
Veterans Affairs Canada spent more than $10 million on ceremonies marking the 100th anniversary of the Battle of Vimy Ridge. The budget included a quarter-million dollars to send 39 RCMP officers to France, according to Access To Information files: “I recall you mentioned $12 million.”
More Headaches For Pot Bill
Mortgage lenders and insurers will punish any building owner that permits marijuana plants on the property, says the Canadian Federation of Apartment Associations. The Commons health committee today opens hearings on a bill that would allow users to grow up to four marijuana plants at home: “There is a variety of negatives to this.”
Feds Target Drug Store Pills
Health Canada proposes to mandate prescriptions for low-dose codeine painkillers. The department counted thousands of addiction treatments due to misuse of tablets: “These are pain relievers available behind the counter.”
A Poem: “Enjoy The Show”
The National Arts Centre
opens its new gates.
An architectural rejuvenation
– 110.5 million dollars –
showcasing Douglas fir wood in
coffered ceilings,
hexagons in limestone floors,
and a glass atrium visible from a
mile.
Also featuring:
80 ladies rooms,
up from 21.
Women have been complaining for
decades,
but had to wait for the
new floor, new ceiling, and the
glorious, one-of-a-kind atrium
before anyone
listened.
(Editor’s note: poet Shai Ben-Shalom, an Israeli-born biologist, examines current events in the Blacklock’s tradition each and every Sunday)

Alarm Bells On Salary Award
A labour arbitration board has awarded junior firefighters in one Canadian city a retroactive pay increase to nearly $100,000 a year, one of the highest rates in the country. Municipal salaries for firefighters and police are unsustainable, said a business group: “Excessive and unreasonable costs have been imposed upon the taxpayers.”



