Climate Change OK Say Feds

Climate change will likely benefit Canadian farmers with an extended growing season and more precipitation, says the Department of Agriculture. Authorities in a confidential document Crop Sector Foresight Exercise said climate change will likely result in better harvests and more varied crops. The paper was released through Access to Information: “How do we use the climate we have to the fullest?”

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Federal Court Pulls Copyright

A federal judge has voided a professional association’s copyright and trademark, saying they could not be used to punish competitors from practicing their trade. The ruling ended a two-year feud between rival denturists’ associations: ‘The court does not condone threats’.

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Asked To Delay 7-Dollar Visa

Cabinet is being asked to delay a $23 million tourist fee program scheduled to be introduced in 2015. Tourism executives appealed for postponement of the Electronic Travel Authorization program that would see air passengers denied boarding without a mandatory $7 background check: “It could have a chilling effect”.

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Traffic Fatality Rate Increases

Canada’s traffic fatality rate is up amid concerns legislators continue to resist regulatory changes that would save lives and avoid injuries. The number of injury accidents totaled 122,140 in 2012, according to newly-published Transport Canada data: “We’re stuck in a mindset that accidents just happen”.

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Says Canada Post Can’t Keep Mail Monopoly & Cut It, Too

Canada Post’s abolition of home mail delivery breaches terms of its government-given monopoly on mail delivery, critics charge in Federal Court documents. The Canadian Union of Postal Workers and a coalition of plaintiffs are asking a judge to quash plans to eliminate doorstep mail delivery to 5.1 million homes nationwide: ‘It has duties’.

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Wants Border Chief Inspector

Parliament would see a new Inspector General appointed to oversee all work of the Canada Border Services Agency under a proposal pending in the Senate. The bill’s sponsor said a cabinet-level appointee is needed to scrutinize the agency’s work: “These people have been operating without oversight”.

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The City That Does Not Work

Montréal is in decline as a working city with its per capita GDP showing the sharpest drop of any municipality its size, new federal data show. The city’s rate of economic output now ranks lower than Winnipeg, Saskatoon or Victoria: “It is a measure of productivity”.

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Thanks For Your Service, Tommy

Blacklock’s Reporter today pauses to honour the nation’s war dead.

We thank the war correspondents who told their stories.

And we toast Tom Hyland Blacklock, 1917 correspondent for the Montreal Gazette and 2nd lieutenant, 20th Battalion, Halton Rifles, 1893.

Thank you for your service, Tommy — The Editor.

Gov’t Plots Oil Spill Scenarios

Transport Canada is conducting a multi-million dollar study of oil spill scenarios similar to a near-disaster with a Russian container ship off the B.C. coast October 17. The risk study targets shipping lanes in four provinces: “A national assessment needs to be relatively high-level”.

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RCMP Sued On Breath Tests

The RCMP and Department of Justice are being sued over suspected faulty devices used to convict motorists of impaired driving. A Vancouver lawyer filed the Federal Court lawsuit asking that a judge recall the blood-alcohol readers: “We see people failing these tests who should not even have been stopped”.

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Wanted: 150-Yr. Nuke Dump

The Green Party is alerting Northern Ontarians to proposals to permanently store the nation’s radioactive waste in the region. MP Bruce Hyer, deputy federal leader, said few attempts have been made to consult with residents: ‘How do people feel hosting nuclear waste for all time?’

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Death Bill Clears Committee

A U.K.-style bill to simplify reporting of deaths to federal agencies is close to passage with all-party amendments. It follows an auditors’ report that complained of red tape facing families who attempt to settle tax and pension claims: “I had a personal experience”.

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