A ski resort has lost its legal challenge of Parks Canada’s right to regulate national parks. The Federal Court case followed a dispute over parking: “To cast it as a ‘wake-up call’ suggests prior drowsiness”.
‘We Need Data’ On Fracking
Researchers urge study of leakage from natural gas wells as a public health risk. Scientists at the University of Waterloo identified seepage of methane below ground: “The problem is we aren’t measuring these things”.
Think ‘Farm’, Say ‘Handout’
Consumers don’t like dairy quotas; aren’t sure what “agri-food” means; and think farmers work hard but take too many handouts, according to federal research.
Those are the findings of focus groups commissioned by the Department of Agriculture.
Asked what words come to mind when thinking of farming, respondents replied “green”; “local”; “organic”; “risky”; “wasteful”; “long hours” and “need government handouts”.
Wait Up To Five Months For Documents, Records Reveal
Canadians can wait nearly half a year to see public documents held by federal agencies, records show. Documents detailing typical delays in Access to Information requests vary widely by government office, and average five months at agencies like Canada Post and the Department of Foreign Affairs: “They can stonewall and nobody’s going to stop them”.
Sees ‘Danger’ In Email Plan
A Crown agency Shared Services Canada insists it is on track to bring the national government into the internet age amid concerns over email security. The group created to streamline electronic systems will rely on private contractors but with federal oversight, an official said: ‘It’s not clear why that needed to be outsourced at all’.
Don’t Feed Bears: Injunction
The Supreme Court has sidestepped an appeal from an animal lover who waged a legal battle for the right to feed wild bears. Authorities in Seguin Township north of Toronto filed an injunction to halt a local man from putting out bear food in violation of a local bylaw: “Bears are highly intelligent”.
Auto Lobby Gets Tax Treat
Cabinet has quietly approved a million-dollar tariff break for the auto industry amid complaints of “boutique” tax treatment of industry. The Department of Finance repealed a 6.5 percent tariff on auto gaskets. Authorities would not name who lobbied for the tax break: ‘These just make life more complicated’.
Airports To Pay For Security
National airports face increased costs for security and screening. Transport Canada ordered managers at 89 airports to conduct their own anti-terror security training and “risk assessments” subject to federal audits: “It’s self-regulation to a certain degree”.
Court Case On Land Boom
The Supreme Court is staying out of a land squabble that sheds light on sky-high property values near booming Regina. A developer offered nearly $2,000 an acre for farmland earmarked for subdivisions with potential profits of more than $100 million: ‘It was very desirable’.
Lac-Mégantic Anniversary Brings More Safety Rules
Nearly a year to the day of the Lac-Mégantic disaster, Transport Canada is introducing new regulations on the shipping of dangerous goods by rail. New rules require more disclosure of toxic cargo, more recordkeeping, and more safety features on new tank cars.
Yukon Gets Home Rule — On Sewage Treatment
Yukon doesn’t have provincehood but is now responsible for its own sewage. Cabinet transferred regulation of wastewater to the territory, where one municipality earlier admitted to dumping raw sewage into the Yukon River: “There would be slight cost savings for the federal government”.
4 In 10 See Downturn
More than 4 in 10 Canadians worry the economy will sink in the next twelve months, according to in-house Department of Finance research.
Unemployment was rated the biggest single threat to the economy. The disclosure follows new Statistics Canada data showing unseasonal declines in key industries.
Researchers in a $135,000 department study cautioned Canadians are growing wary of the national outlook and anticipate no improvement in the months ahead: “How worried are you?”
Water Export Ban Is Law
Cabinet has enacted a law banning bulk water exports just as several American states grapple with extreme drought. The Transboundary Waters Protection Act rewrites sections of a 1909 treaty to restrict exports from cross-border basins: “Who knows what the future holds”.
Parks Canada Gets Attaboy
A Parks Canada repeal of service cuts on its historic canal system is drawing praise from boaters who lobbied against reductions. The agency released new data confirming a sharp drop in traffic that prompted protests to the Prime Minister’s Office: “The implications were not thought out”.
A Bye On Nova Scotia Coal
Nova Scotia, one of the biggest coal-burners in Canada, has won a waiver from federal greenhouse gas regulations. The province was granted a cabinet exemption till 2030 to self-regulate emissions from its coal plants: “The job just doesn’t get done”.



