Mandate Paperless Crossings

Truckers face maximum $25,000 fines for failing to submit electronic cargo records under a long-promised Canada Border Services Agency program. The Agency said its eManifest system, introduced on a trial basis in 2012, will be mandatory: “This is long overdue”.

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Cheers On $3.5M Retail Fine

Business and consumers’ advocates are praising a $3.5 million fine on U.S. craft retailer Michaels for misrepresentations on pricing. The federal Competition Tribunal cited Michaels’ Canadian subsidiary for claiming “sale” prices that appeared to be regular charges: “Thousands of independent businesses play by the rules”.

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Whistleblower Case Protested

A court ruling that narrowly interprets protection for federal whistleblowers sends a “disturbing” message to government employees who fear reprisal in reporting wrongdoing, says an MP. A federal judge dismissed complaints from a Natural Resources Canada scientist after noting he failed to report reprisals within 60 days as required by law: “The message is, keep your mouth shut”.

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Senate Plea For DNA Privacy

The Senate is being urged to reject the work of one of its own committees and outlaw use of DNA testing by insurance companies. The Senate human rights committee’s Conservative majority rejected the bill last February 19: “We need to do something”.

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Tory MP Seeks Police Cams

A Conservative MP citing two recent police shootings is urging that the Commons adopt a motion promoting use of body-warn cameras by law enforcement nationwide. Video surveillance would curb “instances of police and public violence”, the MP said: “Why do police not want this?”

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Costly & Intrusive Is Verdict On Terror Financing Dragnet

Canada is spending a fortune on its search for terror financing with little justification for budgeting, and no accounting for privacy concerns, a Senate committee has been told. The current dragnet for black market cash is reduced to tracking house payments and wire transfers to family, said a University of Toronto law professor: “We do not have evidence of the benefits”.

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$255M Payout A Pace-Setter

A landmark quarter-billion dollar settlement in a Nunavut dispute should spur cabinet to fairer resolution of land claims nationwide, says a lead attorney in the case. The Government of Canada will pay $255.5 million to Nunavut Tunngavik Inc. on complaints it breached terms of an Inuit claim that led to creation of the territory in 1999: “Hopefully this won’t be necessary in the future”.

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Bank Waiver To Privacy Law Questioned: ‘What’s Shared?’

A bank proposal to sanction currently-illegal sharing of depositors’ information raises numerous questions, says the chair of the Commons finance committee. Bankers seek amendments to privacy law that would allow them to exchange details on customers: “How do I know they’re not sharing information I don’t want them to share?”

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Feds Pay $22M In Credit Fees

Federal agencies are paying almost $22 million a year in transaction fees for processing credit card payments, documents show. MPs and senators have rejected first-ever regulation of fees, mainly charged by Visa and MasterCard Canada: “We pay”.

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Senators Eye Seal Photo Ban

Lawmakers must adopt “strict measures” to support the seal hunt, says a Liberal senator. A proposal to outlaw photographs of the Atlantic hunt will be discussed today at a closed-door meeting of the Senate fisheries committee: ‘We have to check what people are doing’.

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Ex-Mechanic Wins In Court

The Canadian Human Rights Commission is being cited for unfair treatment of an ex-railway mechanic who complained he lost his job due to poor health. The Commission was mistaken in dismissing the mechanic’s complaint, a federal Appeal Court judge has ruled: ‘It was unreasonable’.

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Cabinet Amends Drug Rules

New changes to Canada’s drug patent regulations will revive 2006-era rules after Federal Court judgments narrowed patent law. Industry Canada said it feared numerous drug patents would lapse without a change in regulations: “It’s back to the future”.

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Demand Privacy Law Rewrite

Bankers want changes to federal privacy law to allow them to swap information on customers. The demand follows disclosures in an Ontario court that banks already permit a spy agency to scrutinize accounts without a warrant: “How do you ensure you are protecting privacy?”

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Feds Broke Law In Awarding $40.5M Contract, Says Judge

A federal agency broke the law in awarding a multi-million dollar contract, an Appeal Court judge has ruled. The Canadian Air Transport Security Authority was cited for unfair and illegal conduct in its 2010 purchase of airport X-ray screeners. Federal auditors are conducting a special examination of the agency: ‘The decision was unreasonable and unlawful’.

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