Citizenship Canada polled immigrant communities on the “niqab issue” in the weeks before the federal election, documents show. Researchers were hired to “prompt” ethnic groups on whether they agreed with a 2011 department order that face coverings be removed at citizenship ceremonies: “This was not a top of mind issue”.
Study Follows Tourism Cuts
Two years after axing its U.S. direct marketing, the Canadian Tourism Commission is attempting to gauge the impact of advertising. The research follows a decline in revenues: “You have to double check all the assumptions”.
Court Says CFIA Can Be Sued For Negligence In Quarantine
An Alberta court has ruled the Canadian Food Inspection Agency can be sued for damages after quarantining a farm, even if the farmer received partial compensation. The liability case involves potato growers who accused inspectors of negligence: “The liability of the Agency is a live issue”.
Immigrants Rated Healthier
Immigrants pay fewer hospital visits than other Canadians, says new federal research. The data follow a 2012 cabinet order restricting medicare coverage for refugees. A federal judge in 2014 struck down the order as “cruel and unusual” and a violation of “standards of decency”.
CBC A Job Killer: Gov’t Study
CBC’s online news service is a media job-killer that undercuts private competitors with subsidized giveaway content, says a Department of Canadian Heritage report. The report is the first of its kind to cite the CBC.ca internet news site as a “challenge” to the viability of local newspapers: ‘The newspaper model is broken ‘beyond repair’, even ‘decimated’.
Labour Seeks Quick Repeals
Unions are pressing for a quick summons of the 42nd Parliament to repeal newly-passed Conservative labour legislation already contested in the courts. One bill C-377 would see disclosure of confidential union data beginning in 2016: “We’ll see”.
Alcohol Sensors Ruled Okay
A British Columbia court’s dismissal of questions over the reliability of alcohol sensors leaves innocent drivers with little protection against license suspensions, says a Vancouver lawyer. The ruling came as the RCMP consider roadside tests for marijuana-impaired drivers: “The government does get to make the call”.
CRTC Cited For ‘Weak’ Order
Telecom regulators have dismissed requests from consumers’ advocates for a clear ruling on data mining by telecom companies. The CRTC in a “non-ruling” yesterday said the practice was a privacy issue: “It took six months for the CRTC to decide it wasn’t going to do anything”.
Nt’l Election By The Numbers
The Liberal Party yesterday won its first majority government in fifteen years. Returns in the expanded 338-seat Commons were 184 Liberals; 99 Conservatives; 44 New Democrats; 10 Bloc Québecois MPs; and one Green Party MP.
The government under Stephen Harper lost 67 seats from the 2011 campaign, marking the first time since 1935 that a Conservative leader won a single-term majority and was then driven from office by a Liberal majority. More than a dozen senior Conservative cabinet members, parliamentary secretaries and committee chairs were defeated. In returns by province:
NEWFOUNDLAND & LABRADOR — Liberals swept all seven ridings with the Conservative vote collapsing to fewer than 27,000. Among notable losses: Peter Penashue, former Conservative Minister of Intergovernmental Affairs, defeated again in Labrador by Liberal MP Yvonne Jones. Penashue resigned in 2013 over irregularities in campaign financing, and lost a subsequent byelection to Jones, a former provincial Liberal leader. Jones yesterday won Labrador by 7,000 votes.
MP Jack Harris, New Democrat defence critic, was narrowly defeated in St. John’s East, a riding he’d first won in a 1987 byelection. The former provincial NDP leader lost the riding to Liberal lawyer Nick Whalen of McInnes Cooper LLP, by 700 votes.
New Democrat MP Ryan Cleary, a former newspaperman, lost his bid for a second term in St. John’s South-Mount Pearl. The riding was won by Liberal candidate Seamus O’Regan, a former host of CTV’s Canada AM.
Two-term MP Scott Andrews, the party’s former ethics critic, was defeated in Avalon. Andrews was ejected from the Liberal caucus in 2014 on allegations of sexual misconduct; he denied wrongdoing and was never charged with any offence. Andrews campaigned as an independent and lost to Liberal candidate Ken McDonald, former mayor of Conception Bay South, by more than 16,000 votes.
PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND — Liberals won all four Island ridings as the Conservative vote fell to less than 17,000, nearly half its support in 2011. Two-term Conservative MP Gail Shea, Minister of Fisheries, was defeated in Egmont by Liberal candidate Bobby Morrissey, a longtime provincial legislator and former Island transport minister.
NOVA SCOTIA — Liberals won 11 of 11 ridings. Notable losses included two-term Conservative MP Scott Armstrong, parliamentary secretary for labour, defeated in Cumberland-Colchester by Liberal Bill Casey, a former six-term MP for the riding. Casey was first elected as a Conservative, then expelled from caucus in 2007 after opposing a federal budget.
In Halifax, New Democrat environment critic Megan Leslie lost by 8,000 votes to Liberal Andy Filmore, an urban planner. In Dartmouth-Cole Harbour, New Democrat fisheries critic Robert Chisholm lost to Liberal Darren Fisher, a municipal councillor.
In Sackville, New Democrat veterans’ affairs critic Peter Stoffer was defeated after 18 years in the Commons. The riding was won by Liberal Darrell Samson, superintendent of Nova Scotia’s only French-language school board.
NEW BRUNSWICK — Liberals won all 10 ridings in the province. Notable losses were Bernard Valcourt, Minister of Aboriginal Affairs, defeated in Madawaska-Restigouche. Valcourt held the riding for three terms. He finished third, more than 13,000 votes behind Liberal lawyer René Arsenault.
Keith Ashfield, former Conservative fisheries minister, was defeated in Fredericton by Matt DeCourcey, a former Liberal aide. Ashfield sought re-election after undergoing treatment for cancer in 2013 and 2014. He lost by 9,600 votes.
Rob Moore, Minister of State for the Atlantic Canada Opportunities Agency, was defeated in Fundy Royal after four terms. Moore lost to Liberal candidate Alaina Lockhart, a Sussex, N.B. wedding planner.
Robert Goguen, parliamentary secretary for justice, was defeated by more than 10,000 votes in Moncton-Riverview-Dieppe by Liberal Ginette Petitpas Taylor, former chair of the New Brunswick Advisory Council on the Status of Women.
QUEBEC — Of 78 seats in the province Liberals won 44; Conservatives 12; and Bloc Québécois ten. New Democrats that swept 59 seats in Québec four years ago saw their provincial caucus dwindle to a dozen ridings.
Hoang Mai, New Democrat transport critic, was defeated in Brossard-Saint Lambert. Mai lost by 4,000 votes to Alexandra Mendes, former Liberal MP for the riding.
In Gatineau, New Democrat justice critic Françoise Boivin lost by 9,000 votes to Steve MacKinnon, a former Liberal aide and public relations executive at Hill & Knowlton. Boivin was twice elected in the riding, and had been a leading critic of Conservative security and crime bills.
Hull-Aylmer MP Nycole Turmel, a former acting leader of the party in 2011, was defeated by more than 8,000 votes. Turmel lost to Greg Fergus, a former national director of the Liberal Party.
In Laurier-Sainte-Marie Bloc leader Gilles Duceppe lost a bid to return to the House after winning just 29 percent of the vote. Duceppe was beaten by incumbent MP Hélène Laverdière, New Democrat Deputy House Leader.
Pontiac MP Mathieu Ravignat, New Democrat Treasury Board critic, was defeated after one term. Ravignat lost by 12,000 votes to Will Amos, a director of the University of Ottawa’s Ecojustice Environmental Law Clinic.
ONTARIO — Of 121 ridings results were Liberals 80; Conservatives 33; New Democrats 8. Fifteen prominent Conservatives were defeated in the near-Liberal sweep, including senior members of cabinet.
Finance Minister Joe Oliver lost his Eglinton-Lawrence riding to Liberal candidate Marco Mendocino, a Crown prosecutor. Mendocino claimed the upset by 3,000 votes. Oliver at age 74 was the oldest finance minister to serve in any federal cabinet since 1925.
Immigration Minister Chris Alexander was defeated by 10,000 votes in Ajax, Ont. Winner Mark Holland had been the three-term Liberal MP for the riding beaten by Alexander in 2011.
Alexander’s parliamentary secretary for immigration, MP Costas Menegakis, was also defeated in his own riding of Aurora-Oak Ridges-Richmond Hill. The seat was won by Liberal Leona Alleslev, a former logistics officer for the RCAF.
MP Paul Calandra, parliamentary secretary to the prime minister, lost Markham-Stoufville by 3,500 votes to Dr. Jane Philpott, associate professor at the University of Toronto’s Department of Family & Community Medicine. Calandra was named the prime minister’s parliamentary secretary after his predecessor, Peterborough MP Dean Del Mastro, was found guilty and jailed for election financing irregularities.
MP Julian Fantino, associate defence minister, lost in Vaugh-Woodbridge by 2,000 votes to Liberal Franceso Sorbara, a Bay Street bond analyst.
MP Ed Holder, Minister of State for Science, lost London West after two terms. Holder lost by 7,000 votes to Liberal Kate Young, a longtime news anchor on London’s CFPL-TV.
MP Gary Goodyear, Minister of State for the Federal Economic Development Agency of Southern Ontario, lost the Cambridge riding he had held for four terms. Goodyear was defeated by Liberal Bryan May, a community organizer.
MP Bal Gosal, Minister of State for Sport, lost by 5,000 votes in Brampton Centre to Liberal candidate Ramesh Sangha, an immigration lawyer and former chair of the Canada Pension Plan Review Tribunal.
MP Parm Gill, parliamentary secretary for trade, was defeated in Brampton North after one term. The riding yesterday elected Liberal lawyer Ruby Sahota by a 7,000 vote majority.
MP Jeff Watson, parliamentary secretary for transport, lost by 3,000 votes in his Essex riding in southern Ontario. Watson was beaten by New Democrat candidate Tracey Ramsey, a Unifor organizer and Ford Motor Co. employee.
MP Bob Dechert, parliamentary secretary for justice, was defeated by 5,000 votes in Mississauga-Erin Mills. The riding was won by Liberal candidate Iqra Khalid, counsel for the City of Mississauga. As parliamentary secretary for foreign affairs in 2011, Dechert apologized after sending love notes to an employee of the Chinese state-run Xinhua press agency.
MP Ted Opitz, a one-termer whose election four years ago was contested at the Supreme Court, was defeated by 8,000 votes in Etobicoke Centre. The riding elected Liberal Borys Wrzesnewskyj, an incumbent MP who narrowly lost to Opitz in 2011 amid complaints of voting irregularities. Wrzesnewskyj lost a 2012 Supreme Court appeal that confirmed “errors” occurred at several polling stations.
MP Daryl Kramp, chair of the Commons public safety committee, was narrowly defeated in Hastings-Lennox & Addington. Kramp, a former Ontario Provincial Police officer, held the riding for four terms. He lost by 400 votes to Mike Bossio, a telecom consultant.
MP Roxanne James, parliamentary secretary for public safety, lost Scarborough Centre by 6,000 votes to Salma Zahid, a Liberal advisor with the Province of Ontario. James held the riding for a single term.
MP Rick Dykstra, parliamentary secretary for heritage, lost St. Catharines by 3,000 votes to Liberal Chris Bittle, a litigator. Dykstra previously held the riding for three terms. Among notable New Democrats losses in the province:
- • MP Paul Dewar, foreign affairs critic and formerly a 2012 candidate for the party leadership, was defeated in Ottawa Centre by 3,000 votes. The riding was won by Catherine McKenna, a Liberal lawyer and former counsel to U.N. peacekeeping missions.
- • Peggy Nash, New Democrat industry critic and another former candidate for the 2012 leadership, lost her bid for a third term in Parkdale-High Park. Nash lost by 2,000 votes to Arif Virani, a Liberal aide and constitutional lawyer.
- • Andrew Cash, New Democrat consumer affairs critic, was upset by a thousand votes in Davenport by former Liberal aide Julie Dzerowicz;
- • MP Matthew Kellway, infrastructure critic, was defeated by 7,000 votes in Beaches-East York by Liberal litigator Nathaniel Erskine-Smith;
- • MP Craig Scott, New Democrat parliamentary reform critic, lost Toronto-Danforth after one term. Scott lost by 1,000 votes to Julie Dabrusin, Liberal candidate and former litigator with Rogers Partners LLP.
MANITOBA — Of fourteen seats in the province, Conservatives won five; Liberals 7; and New Democrats two. Notable losses included: Stephen Fletcher, formerly Minister of State for Transport, defeated in Charleswood by 6,000 votes to Liberal candidate Dr. Doug Eyolfson, an emergency room physician. Fletcher in 2011 was the first quadriplegic elected to the House of Commons following injuries suffered in an auto accident.
MP Pat Martin, former New Democrat public works critic, lost Winnipeg Centre after representing the riding for 18 years. Liberal candidate Robert-Falcon Ouellette, a former Sergeant at Arms with the artillery, won the riding by 8,000 votes.
SASKATCHEWAN — Returns in 14 ridings saw Conservatives elect 10; Liberals one; and New Democrats 3, after being shut out of Saskatchewan in the 2011 campaign. Incumbent Conservative Rob Clarke, a former RCMP sergeant, lost Desnethé-Missinippi-Churchill River to the NDP by a thousand votes. Clarke held the riding for three terms. He was defeated by Georgina Jolibois, former Mayor of La Loche, Sask.
ALBERTA — With a record number of seats, 34, Albertans elected 29 Conservatives; four Liberals; and 1 New Democrat. Among notable defeats:
- • Tim Uppal, Minister of State for Multiculturalism, narrowly defeated by 80 votes in Edmonton Mill Woods after two terms; the riding was won by Liberal candidate Amarjeet Sohi, an Edmonton city councillor;
- • MP Joan Crockatt, former managing editor of the Calgary Herald, lost re-election in Calgary Centre by 700 votes. The riding was won by Liberal Kent Hehr, former counsel with Fraser Milner Casgrain and two-term member of the legislature;
- • MP Devinder Shory lost by 2,000 votes in Calgary Skyview to Liberal Darshan Singh Kang, a former realtor and member of the Alberta assembly;
Alberta returns also saw the defeat of MP Brent Rathgeber, running as an independent in St. Albert-Edmonton. The incumbent lost by 15,000 votes to Conservative candidate Michael Cooper, an Edmonton litigator; Rathgeber quit the Conservative caucus in 2014 after cabinet blocked his private bill to disclose salaries paid to top civil servants.
BRITISH COLUMBIA — Of 42 seats in the province, returns saw 17 Liberals; 13 New Democrats; 11 Conservatives; and a single Green MP, leader Elizabeth May re-elected in Saanich-Gulf Islands. The only other Green MP, Bruce Hyer, was defeated in Thunder Bay-Superior North, Ont. by Liberal Patty Hajdu, by 14,000 votes. Hyer finished fourth in his constituency.
Among notable B.C. losses: Revenue Minister Kerry-Lynne Findlay, ousted by 9,000 votes in Delta by Liberal candidate Carla Qualtrough, vice-chair of the provincial Workers’ Compensation Appeal Tribunal. Findlay held the riding for a single term.
MP John Duncan, in the Commons since 1993 and Chief Government Whip, was defeated by 7,000 votes in Courtenay-Alberni. The riding was won by New Democrat Gord Johns, a Tofino councillor.
Andrew Saxton, parliamentary secretary for finance, was defeated by 18,000 votes in North Vancouver by Liberal Jonathan Wilkinson, a management consultant. Saxton had held the riding for two terms.
TERRITORIES — Yukon Conservative incumbent Ryan Leef, narrowly elected in 2011, lost by 6,000 votes to returning Liberal MP Larry Bagnell. In Northwest Territories, incumbent New Democrat Dennis Bevington lost to Liberal Michael McLeod, a former territorial legislator, by 3,000 votes. In Nunavut, Environment Minister Leona Aglukkaq was defeated by 3,000 votes by Hunter Tootoo, Liberal, former Speaker of the territorial assembly.
By Staff 
Error Blamed In Gov’t Breach; Secret Records Mailed Away
The immigration department has acknowledged a major privacy breach after personal information on hundreds of employees was accidentally released. Officials blamed “administrative error” for the violation of the Privacy Act: “The breach was discovered”.
Audits Target Tax-Free Acct’s
Federal auditors have been assigned to monitor “schemes” involving Tax-Free Savings Accounts, according to Canada Revenue Agency memos. Wealthier taxpayers have deposited billions under the program: “Taxpayers and their advisors are becoming increasingly aggressive”.
Work Holidays, No Overtime
The Governor General’s Office requires “tactful” telephone operators willing to manage “unusual” calls. Rideau Hall issued a job notice for switchboard staff with keen judgment willing to work overtime without extra pay: “No premium will be paid for weekends and statutory holidays”.
Court ‘Surprise’ On B.C. Law
A Supreme Court ruling gives provinces the go-ahead in enforcing automatic roadside suspensions for suspected drunk drivers. Justices upheld a British Columbia law that saw drivers lose their license without being convicted: “The state can punish you in ways other than sending you to prison”.
A Poem: “School Of Thought”
In the Conservatives’ School of Economics,
Canada is not in a recession;
it’s only going through a contraction
of the energy sector.
In their Faculty of Environmental Science,
climate change and Kyoto
aren’t on the curriculum.
Our planet is fine,
despite contractions of the polar ice caps
and the disappearance of the world’s glaciers.
And in their School of Medicine – I suppose –
women don’t go into labour.
They merely experience 60-second long
contractions,
sometime around the due date.
(Editor’s note: poet Shai Ben-Shalom, an Israeli-born biologist, examines current events in the Blacklock’s tradition each and every Sunday)

Review — How To Hide The Expenses
User fees make sense. People who want heated parking and water ski lessons could not fairly expect subsidies from non-skiing pedestrians. But what if true costs of goods or services are so deeply hidden no ordinary accounting is possible? This is where Cleaner, Greener, Healthier steps in. Professor David Boyd of Simon Fraser University calculates actual costs of environmental degradation and totes up the bill. The result is arresting.
Take pesticides. On the polluter-pay principle, Sweden taxes imported farm chemicals at $4.75 per kilogram; in Norway the rate is about $4.30. Finland, Denmark, France, Italy – all charge a pesticide tax reflecting the cost of environmental rehabilitation from the long-term effects of chemical use. The tax in Canada is zero. “Even worse, any pesticide used in agriculture regardless of its toxicity is exempt from the federal GST,” writes Boyd. “Rather than discourage the use of pesticides or reflect their substantial negative effects on human health and ecosystems, this subsidy encourages farmers to use pesticides instead of alternative methods of pest control.”
Even the cost of regulating pesticides is heavily subsidized. Health Canada has not increased manufacturers’ licensing fees since 1997. When the department proposed a modest increase in 2015, the Pest Management Regulatory Agency noted fees would still only cover 30 percent of government costs of testing chemicals for toxicity. “If we made our fees too high, it would potentially be a disincentive to industry to enter the Canadian market,” one official told the Senate agriculture committee.
So, manufacturers and farmers draw a fat subsidy for immediate benefit, and everyone else pays the bill. That’s nice work if you can get it.
“Why does Canada lag behind in protecting the health of its citizens from environmental hazards?” Cleaner, Greener asks. “What are the economic, political, legal and cultural factors that explain this systemic failure?”
Professor Boyd blames shrewd lobbying, short-term legislative agendas – and human nature. To drive from Halifax to Vancouver is to see so many lakes and so many trees, simple arithmetic suggests we could poison every lake and cut every tree and still have enough lakes and trees to last a thousand years.
“The chasm between values and actions is that Canadians’ pride in this country’s striking natural beauty, bounty and immensity creates a blind spot about environmental impacts,” Boyd writes; “Canadians consistently express strong environmental values in public opinion polls, but there is a large gulf between their words and their actions. We are among the world’s most prolific consumers of oil, natural gas, electricity and water. Canadians are world leaders in the unenviable categories of household garbage production and per capita emissions of greenhouse gases, sulphur dioxide, nitrogen oxides, carbon monoxide, and volatile organic compounds.”
User fees would mean an asthma tax on Ford Motor Co.; a mercury tax on the Mining Association of Canada; and a groundwater tax on Imperial Oil. Instead regulators concluded environmental impacts are so pervasive, and the cost is so onerous, it’s easier to bury the bills in the accounting of everyday life.
Cleaner, Greener is so candid it’s alarming, so comprehensive it leads the reader to a damning rhetorical question: Why is it Swedes and Norwegians could figure this out, but the Government of Canada is paralyzed by fear of industry?
By Holly Doan
Cleaner, Greener, Healthier: A Prescription For Stronger Canadian Environmental Laws & Policies, by David R. Boyd; University of British Columbia Press; 412 pages; ISBN 9780-7748-30478; $34.95




