Health Canada will not adopt a European-style ban of antibiotics in livestock and poultry production. Physicians and a Senate panel had sought tighter restrictions on non-medical use of drugs as a threat to consumers’ health: “That’s got to change.”
Find Weak Labour Inspection
Auditors are faulting Employment Canada for weak investigations under its migrant labour program. Investigators rarely conduct surprise inspections of worksites or interview migrants, an audit disclosed: “Most activities consisted of reviewing documents.”
Promises Better Rail Service
Cabinet has introduced legislation promising more competitive rail service for shippers. The bill follows a 2016 Supreme Court ruling upholding shippers’ rights to bypass Canada’s two largest railways in contracting for service: “These are surrogates for real competition.”
Say Air Rights Bill’s Overdue
A new air passenger rights’ bill should not levy steep penalties on carriers, says Transport Minister Marc Garneau. Critics yesterday described the promised legislation as mild: “It’s a pass.”
Feds Mandate Rail Recorders
Transport Canada will mandate the use of cockpit-style recorders in locomotives. The legislation follows the 2012 crash of a speeding VIA Rail train that killed three crewmen and injured scores of passengers: “This new tool will provide essential information.”
No Vet Hired For Hill Post
Parliament has again bypassed combat veterans in hiring a chief of security, despite a bill on preferential hiring of ex-military. Authorities declined comment. Past security chiefs included two Victoria Cross winners: “These are men and women who served our country.”
Climate Change Files Hidden
The finance department withheld climate change documents from the Auditor General after censoring numerous public reports on its carbon tax plan. Cabinet yesterday said it won’t happen again: “Canadians want to know this.”
Want ‘Teeth’ In Air Rights Bill
A first-ever air passenger rights bill to be introduced in the Commons shortly must mandate compensation for travelers, say critics. Canada is the only G7 country that obliges passengers to file unresolved compensation claims with a federal regulator: “We need teeth in the legislation.”
Parks Audit Rated Appalling
An internal Parks Canada audit has found widespread breach of federal contracting rules. Auditors complained contracts were not let in an “open, fair and transparent manner” as required by the Treasury Board: “There’s not an accountant in their right mind who would approve of this.”
Loan Guarantees Worry MPs
MPs are questioning taxpayers’ exposure to loan guarantees under a new $35 billion Canada Infrastructure Bank. Members of the Commons finance committee yesterday sought assurances the public will not pay in case of loan defaults: “Who will repay taxpayers? Is it a) no one; b) the tooth fairy.”
Tough Reforms For Oil Board
Cabinet has “tough decisions” to make after federal advisors urged a radical overhaul of Canada’s oil and gas regulator, says Natural Resources Minister Jim Carr. An expert panel cited complaints the National Energy Board is secretive, Alberta-centric and beholden to industry: “Many Canadians simply do not trust the Board.”
Feds Admit Ships Unreliable
The Coast Guard rates its fleet of icebreakers and heavy-duty vessels as unreliable, according to an Inquiry Of Ministry tabled in the Commons. An MP who requested the data described it as frightening: “We look like a Third World country.”
Memos Cite 1950s Radon Test
Access To Information memos suggest a federal agency funded human experiments with radioactive material. Cold War-era memos released by the National Research Council detailed grants paid to a University of Toronto lab for secret research: ‘Developments shall not be divulged.’
Gov’t To Strike 2 Senate Bills
Cabinet is attempting to strike two Senate bills as unconstitutional. Both passed the Senate after lengthy debate and public hearings. One bill appoints an independent complaints investigator at the Canada Border Services Agency, the other mandates call-before-you-dig systems for federally-regulated utilities: “The two Senate public bills should be ruled out of order.”
RCMP Union Bill Rewritten
Cabinet has reintroduced an RCMP union bill a year after the Senate amended terms to give police more bargaining powers. The Treasury Board proposed more rewrites, further delaying passage of the bill past two Supreme Court deadlines: “It created a significant period, still ongoing, of legal uncertainty.”



