Union’s OK, But No Criticism

Legislation promised to repeal a 1920 ban on unions in the RCMP will maintain a ban on members’ political activities or public criticism of management, authorities confirm. The Mounties this year began compiling an electronic database of “problem” employees: ‘It restricts certain matters from being included in a collective agreement’.

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Court Hears ‘Absurd’ Scheme

Taxpayers misled by unscrupulous advisers are still liable for 50 percent gross negligence penalties for filing a false return, Tax Court has ruled. Identical judgments came in two separate cases involving claims for fictional business losses: “No one except the most unsophisticated, ignorant, naive and gullible could believe that”.

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Cop Union Will Have Limits

Cabinet will not meet a Supreme Court-ordered deadline to repeal a ban on unions in the RCMP. And even a unionized force will see enforcement of a strict Code Of Conduct that threatens officers with firing or demotion for criticizing management or engaging in political activities: “The devil is in the details”.

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Wider Tariff War Threatened

Cabinet is threatening to expand its blacklist of U.S. imports targeted with punishing tariffs in a cross-border dispute over meat shipments. Ministers acknowlege no trade retaliation action is likely, if at all, till 2016: “Free trade only works when everyone follows the rules”.

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‘Weird’ Trademark Repeal Is Sought: “It Has Got To Stop”

Parliament must restrict perpetual trademarking of common phrases under an obscure Canadian law, says a Nova Scotian whose complaint prompted a 2014 private bill on the issue. The Trademarks Act allows public institutions to claim monopoly rights to everyday words: “I don’t think that is fair, not in Canada”.

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Hearings Sought On GM Fish

Cabinet must permit public input on licensing genetically-modified foods, says an advocacy group. The appeal comes as regulators consider approving the public sale of edible engineered salmon, a Canadian first: “There is almost a total lack of transparency”.

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Claim Pipeline Data Is Flawed

TransCanada Corp. has relied on flawed data in touting the safety of its landmark Energy East project to pile Alberta oil to Saint John refineries, claims the Council of Canadians. The group said the original assessment omitted or understated health risks: ‘An explanation is needed’.

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Threaten A Winter Trade War

Cabinet hopes to avert a U.S. trade war but will press retaliatory tariffs if necessary in a cross-border dispute over meat labeling, says Trade Minister Chrystia Freeland. Processors have cautioned tariffs would see Canadian pay more for food: “We’re in their corner”.

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Feds Claim Private Copyright

Federal agencies can copy protected works after as few as 10 years, says a government attorney. The argument came in a landmark copyright dispute that saw millions of dollars’ worth of data sold by a federal board for as little as $150: “You can still own the house, but if the rules are that after five years some refugees can move in, then those are the rules”.

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Court OKs Deadline On Suits

Investors remain bound by tight deadlines in working up class action lawsuits against corporations accused of sharp dealing, the Supreme Court has ruled. In a divided decision, justices agreed some limits should apply on litigation: “The limitation period will help the defendants – the corporations, basically”.

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A Sunday Poem — “Census”

 

The Liberals bring back the

long-form census.

 

A bizarre move.

 

Data collected may be helpful in

poverty reduction,

transportation improvement,

employment forecasting,

immigration planning,

city investment in schools, hospitals,

and overall, allow for

evidence-based policy making.

 

Other than that,

do we really need it?

 

(Editor’s note: poet Shai Ben-Shalom, an Israeli-born biologist, examines current events in the Blacklock’s tradition each and every Sunday)

Gov’t Agency Owns ‘Season’s Greetings’ In Time For X-Mas

The phrase “season’s greetings” has been trademarked by a government agency in a bid that prompted experts to question misuse of the Trademarks Act. The application came under an obscure provision of federal law permitting public institutions to stake claim to trademarks without public notice: “Everybody uses that term, and no government agency should be expropriating it for their own use”.

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Claims Fast Border Crossings

Wait times for trucks paying cash fees at Canada-U.S. border crossings average just 5 minutes, claims a federal report. A trucking executive disputed the claim as misleading: “They were looking for very simple, black and white, cut-and-dried data”.

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