Public Wary Of Foreign Wars

Canadians are wary of foreign combat missions with a majority, 57 percent, saying the military should stick to domestic and continental defence. The finding is contained in Department of National Defence in-house research: “Canadians are split”.

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Vow No Ethics Bill Loopholes

Exemptions to a federal anti-corruption bill will not see Canadian mining companies evade disclosure of offshore payments, says a trade group. The Canadian Mining Association pledged full disclosure of payments under long-promised ethics legislation: “It captures everything we do”.

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Says Feds Weak On Privacy

Federal agencies remain lackadaisical on privacy protection with a doubling of reported breaches last year, according to the Office of the Privacy Commissioner. Newly-appointed privacy chief Daniel Therrien refused an interview on his findings: “Is there a disconnect?”

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55% More To Mail In Canada

Taxpayers are seeing few dividends from Canada Post with ‘unfair’ fee increases and service cuts, the Senate has been told. The protest follows complaints one business was charged a 55% premium to post goods within Canada compared to the U.S.: “It’s not good enough”.

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Doctors Seek Junk Food Taxes

Legislators should tax soda pop and restrict “irresponsible” marketing of processed foods that target children, a pediatricians’ group has told the Senate science committee. The Childhood Obesity Foundation said the country faces a “significant toll in terms of the dollars cost and lives lost” due to calorie-laden food.

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Labour Bill Revived In Senate

The Senate has quietly revived a bill that would force unions to divulge confidential information on a government website. Bill C-377 had languished since a 2013 revolt by Conservatives stripped provisions to compel disclosure of financial data under threat of $1,000-a day fines: “We thought it was dead”.

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“Anti-Union” Bill Moves Up

A Conservative bill that would make it easier to decertify unions in federally-regulated workplaces has passed Second Reading in the Senate. Opponents charged the bill is “anti-union” and based on erroneous claims of labour intimidation: “The thumb on the scale is always on one side”.

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Gov’t Pension Changes Soon

Cabinet will detail within weeks new measures affecting guaranteed pension benefits for Crown employees, the largest pension pool of its kind in the country. Kevin Sorenson, Minister of State for Finance, yesterday said proposed changes are imminent. “Very soon!” said Sorenson. “Very soon.”

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Cabinet Creates Space Board

Industry Canada is appointing a Space Advisory Board to oversee research and development. The initiative follows a 10 percent cut to the Canadian Space Agency budget and resignation of its $255,000-a year president General (Ret’d) Walter Natynczyk, yesterday appointed deputy minister of veterans affairs: “Of course it’s late”.

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MPs Stake Constitution Claim On Property Rights In Alberta

Alberta lawmakers including Conservative MPs propose to enshrine local property rights under an obscure provision of the Constitution Act. Legislators will ask Parliament to amend the constitution for Albertans using the same legal device that changed Newfoundland’s name and entrenched bilingualism in New Brunswick: “We want to get this on the books”.

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Spy Agency Sued On Secrecy

Canada’s most secretive spy agency faces questioning under oath in an unprecedented lawsuit by the British Columbia Civil Liberties Association. Attorneys in Vancouver filed a Federal Court lawsuit alleging the Communications Security Establishment is operating outside the law by spying on emails, text messages and phone calls: “They are a very, very secretive organization”.

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Russian Ship Was Close Call

A Russian container ship that threatened to run aground off the British Columbia coast was laden with four types of fuel and petroleum products, says a federal agency. Documents filed in Federal Court detail what a close call B.C. had with the cargo vessel Simushir in an October 17 incident: “We got lucky this time”.

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Feds OK To Buy Foreign Flag

The Department of Public Works is buying thousands of new Canadian flags without any stipulation they be made in Canada. Officials did not reply to repeated requests for an explanation of procurement policies that omit reference to buy Canadian: “It breaks my heart”.

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