A bill mandating disclosure of confidential labour data will cost Canada’s largest private sector union more than $3 million a year, says Unifor. Bill C-377 requires that all union locals submit annual reports on spending, including activities of contractors, union accountants and attorneys: “Unions are being singled out”.
Athletes Average $25K Yearly
The nation’s top amateur athletes earn just above the minimum wage and carry thousands in personal debt, says a federal Sport Canada study. The research was commissioned by the Department of Canadian Heritage that pays out grants to skilled amateurs: “Loans from family, and credit cards, are at the top of the list”.
Board OKs Navy Dozing Pay
A federal employee has won the right to overtime pay while sleeping on the job with management’s permission. The ruling by a federal labour board came in an unusual complaint from a Halifax dockyard worker: “Can a sleeping employee ever be considered to be at work?”
Loophole Found In Crime Bill
MPs warn a bill targeting very drunk drivers that’s already been approved in principle by the Commons contains an inadvertent loophole that defeats its purpose. Members of the House justice committee exposed the flaw in hearings on Bill C-590: “They know all the tricks in the book”.
Paperless Border Hits Hiccup
A plan to speed Canada-U.S. border crossings may be snarled by a dispute over reporting of some truck cargoes, says an industry group. The Canada Border Services Agency proposes to adopt paperless electronic logs of truck shipments beginning July 10: “You’re going to be there for up to 2 hours”.
A Sunday Poem: “Hijacked”
A new type of malicious software
spreads in the world’s computers.
The ransomware.
It encrypts photos, documents,
rendering them inaccessible.
One must pay to unlock them.
I imagine the warning message
on Senator Wallin’s computer:
“Access to your travel records
is denied.
Please pay to keep it this way.”
(Editor’s note: poet Shai Ben-Shalom, an Israeli-born biologist, examines current events in the Blacklock’s tradition each and every Sunday)

Payday Lenders Breach Usury Laws, Senate Committee Told
Every payday loan company in the country is currently in breach of usury laws, the Senate banking committee has been told. Interest charged payday borrowers would be a fraction of existing rates if Parliament enforced the Criminal Code, an economist says: “Rates violate the current federal criminal rate set at 60%”.
No-Deficit Bill Tabled, Again
Cabinet has introduced a balanced budget bill, apparently unaware a similar 23-year old law is still on the books. The Mulroney-era Spending Control Act also purported to curb overspending. Finance Minister Joe Oliver’s office did not comment: “It’s like the Loch Ness Monster: it reappears from time to time”.
Interns’ Labour Code Tabled
Cabinet is introducing limited Canada Labour Code protection for interns, with numerous exemptions. The bill comes three weeks after Parliament defeated a private bill offering broader safeguards for unpaid workers: “We have to be careful if we start to tinker with some of these things”.
MPs Question Food Subsidies
Federal regulators must answer for lax reporting of a multi-million dollar food subsidy program suspected of benefiting grocers, say MPs. The Commons public accounts committee said managers will be held to account for operations of the Nutrition North program: ‘You have to pay $45 for chicken’.
40-Year Gas Licenses ‘A Gift’
Legislation introduced in the Commons will extend natural gas export licenses by fifteen years in a measure one MP described as a “gift to industry”. The change yesterday was inserted in a 157-page omnibus budget bill: “25 years is okay but 40 years is better”.
Death Bill Passes Parliament
A bill calculated to save more than $47 million a year in paperwork on reporting taxpayers’ deaths to federal agencies has passed Parliament. More than 242,000 Canadians die every year, by official estimate: “It’s compassionate legislation”.
House Caps Oil Spill Liability
MPs have passed a pipeline liability bill critics charged will leave municipalities and landowners with costly cleanups in case of a catastrophic oil spill. The Conservative bill caps liability for companies at $1 billion except in cases of obvious negligence: “What does ‘negligence’ mean?”
Privacy Ruling Knocks Board
Canada’s largest liquor board has no business collecting the names and addresses of its customers, says a privacy ruling in Ontario Superior Court. A judge upheld a 2012 complaint from a wine club told it must divulge members’ identities to buy at the Liquor Control Board of Ontario: “This is overreach”.
Feds Win ‘Faint Hope’ Ruling
A judge has thrown out a constitutional challenge of the “faint hope” bill, a Conservative law that curbed early parole for prisoners convicted of first-degree murder. An Ottawa-area woman serving a life sentence for killing her husband argued the retroactive bill breached her Charter rights: “We’re not talking about controversial legislation”.



