Elite environmentalists have hurt Canadian workers, says a Liberal-appointed senator. The Senate energy committee was told “religious self-righteousness” of activists is off-putting: “You have these multimillionaires with their private jets telling us we shouldn’t use oil.”
Calls Drug Limit Guesswork
A former Health Canada consultant says drug impairment limits set by cabinet in its legal cannabis program are completely random. The remarks follow RCMP testimony at the Senate legal and constitutional affairs committee that there is no scientific rationale for regulations that would see marijuana users charged with impaired driving: “It was plucked from thin air by a single activist.”
Cadets, Not Child Soldiers
Canada’s longest-running federal youth program must fight misperceptions to stem a membership decline, says in-house research at the Department of National Defence. Army, sea and air cadet programs now have lower enrollment than Girl Guides: ‘There are negative views of militaristic aspects like the uniform, being seen as child soldiers, etcetera.’
Rates Up 12% With Coal Plan
Cabinet’s climate plan will see electricity rates in coal-burning provinces rise by up to 12 percent. The Department of Environment warned of large upfront capital costs to meet emission targets: “Phasing out coal is good news for our climate.”
Poem: “The Kindergarten”
B.C. worries about the
Trans Mountain pipeline expansion.
New regulations are in the works.
Alberta retaliates,
bans B.C. wines,
suspends talks
on the purchase of electricity.
They may soon prevent B.C.
from getting gasoline and diesel.
If that doesn’t work,
they could build a wall and
force B.C. to pay for it.
(Editor’s note: poet Shai Ben-Shalom, an Israeli-born biologist, examines current events in the Blacklock’s tradition each and every Sunday)

Cops Unready For Legal Pot
The Canadian Association of Chiefs of Police warns officers are unprepared for legal cannabis. Cabinet has told legislators to repeal a 1923 ban on recreational cannabis by July 1: ‘We are five months away and have 65,000 police officers who require training.’
Drug Figures Unexplained
The Department of Justice cannot explain marijuana statistics it’s cited in support of a legalization bill. Senators yesterday questioned figures claiming Canadian youth are the heaviest cannabis users in the world: ‘The figure is highly exaggerated.’
FINTRAC Silent On Costs
A federal agency mandated to track money laundering says it does not know the extent of illegal cash transfers. The Financial Transactions & Reports Analysis Centre also told the Commons finance committee it has no idea of the cost to legitimate business of reporting millions of legal cash transactions every year: “That kind of attitude doesn’t really promote confidence.”
Whisteblower Reform Sought
MPs yesterday set a June 15 deadline for cabinet reforms to whistleblower protection for federal employees and contractors. Cabinet has yet to respond to a critical committee report that concluded the current law fails to shield whistleblowers from workplace reprisal: “People’s lives are still being destroyed.”
$8M Hill Rink A Rare Treat
Cabinet yesterday defended spending $8.2 million on a temporary Parliament Hill skating rink as a “once in a lifetime opportunity” for tourists. The remarks by Treasury Board President Scott Brison came a day after the rink was cited as the worst example of reckless federal spending in 2017: “You are not allowed to bring food or drink, or babies.”
A 50-50 Chance To Call CRA
The Canada Revenue Agency says taxpayers now have about a 50-50 chance of speaking to a live agent on their second or third attempt when contacting its toll-free call centres. “We’re getting to a point where about half the calls are getting through,” Revenue Commissioner Bob Hamilton told the Senate national finance committee. “I’m not trying to say it’s perfect.”
Can’t Explain Drug Limit
An RCMP drug recognition expert says there is no scientific rationale for a marijuana impairment limit in a federal bill. Health Canada has said it has no advice for cannabis users on how to comply with the legislation: “Is it only to teach people a lesson?”
Feds Rewrite Tobacco Bill
Cabinet is rewriting its own tobacco bill 17 months after it was introduced in the Senate. Members of the Commons health committee yesterday expressed dismay with a loophole allowing advertising of vaping products: “I in no way feel this should be allowed in the public sphere.”
Cities Secretive On Spending
Municipalities remain the least transparent level of government in the country, says the Canadian Taxpayers Federation. The group yesterday said it must resort to Access To Information requests to obtain basic records on municipal spending.
“One of the biggest challenges is that system is different for every city,” said Aaron Wudrick, the Federation’s federal director. “Once you learn the federal Access To Information system you can use it for every provincial system, but cities don’t work that way. There are often different rules. We would like to see the same rules applied everywhere, all the time.”
The Federation yesterday issued its annual Teddy Awards for government waste, including a citation for the City of Montréal for a $34 million subsidy to a 2017 electric car race. Only 25,000 tickets were sold for the so-called Formula-E event.
“There is just less attention paid to that level of government and there’s not as much interest from media,” said Wudrick. “We’re a non-profit organization; we don’t have the bandwidth to watch every single city council in the country the way we do provincial and federal governments.”
Other citations for municipal waste included the City of Calgary over six-figure grants for municipal art projects, including $221,000 for a “large metal ball located behind a fence at the Calgary fire department’s repair and maintenance facility”; and $246,000 to install decorate lighting at a wastewater station.
The Toronto Transit Commission was cited for a $1.9 million Light Spell program allowing riders to submit eight-character messages to be displayed in lighting at subway stations: “When the new stations opened in December, Light Spell remained offline as the Commission was concerned about ‘hate speech and the potential for the installation to be misused by some’.”
The Government of Canada is subject to mandatory disclosure of program spending, labour costs, out-of-court settlements, loss due to theft or negligence and the value of contracts over $10,000. No similar legislation forces disclosure of municipal spending.
“It’s important to remember that municipalities are creatures of the provinces, and so normally we hold the provinces to account because they’re the ones overseeing them,” said Wudrick. “When the federal government gives money directly to municipalities, there is the possibility that the lines of accountability aren’t clear.”
“We’re increasingly finding that we have to do a lot of digging, sometimes for years and years, to find this information,” said Wudrick; “We have to drag the information out of them. It’s actually better for them if they proactively release information.”
The Federation’s top award for public misspending went to the Department of Canadian Heritage, for spending $8.2 million to erect a temporary hockey rink with Zamboni shed on Parliament Hill. Costs averaged $10,000 a day, said Wudrick: “Any temporary rink costing millions of dollars is a project that should have been put on ice from the get-go.”
By Jason Unrau 
1971 Note Saves Citizenship
A handwritten note in a grandfather’s 1971 passport has saved Canadian citizenship for a young boy. In the first Federal Court ruling of its kind, a judge faulted the Department of Immigration for rejecting a citizenship application by the descendant of a traveling Canadian: “It is not a matter to be taken lightly.”



