Mask Mandate Ends In Court

Complaints that maskless workplaces pose a danger to employees’ health are frivolous, a federal judge has ruled. The decision marked the final chapter in pandemic mandates that forced millions to wear masks in public: "It is unreasonable."

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Files Hidden To Protect Nazis

Federal archivists in an Access To Information memo say they are concealing more than a million pages of records on Nazi collaborators in Canada to protect “individuals determined to be innocent” of actual war crimes. Cabinet had promised German researchers in 2009 that all Holocaust-related files would be released: "People want answers."

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Gov’t Contracting Fails Again

Public Works Minister Jean-Yves Duclos’ department yesterday was faulted for unprofessional treatment of dozens of contractors. Criticism by the Procurement Ombudsman followed Duclos’ assurance to MPs that his department was “doing really, really good.”

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Call A War A War, Write MPs

Canada should honour volunteers who served in the 1990 Persian Gulf conflict as legitimate wartime veterans, the Commons veterans affairs committee says in its final report to the 44th Parliament. The “legal semantics” of whether veterans were at war or not meant reduced disability benefits for 4,458 Canadians who served in Operation Desert Shield and Desert Storm: "Wrong answer."

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Few ‘Tangible Improvements’

Nine years of reconciliation have not led to “any tangible improvements in the qualify of life for Indigenous people,” says a Privy Council report. In-house focus group research found First Nations, Inuit and Métis questioned the point of cabinet’s friendship when many communities had undrinkable tap water: "Most did not feel the prioritization of this issue had led to any tangible improvements."

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Automakers Predict Trouble

Automakers yesterday forecast trouble ahead with a signature climate change program after cabinet confirmed the abrupt phaseout of $5,000 federal rebates for electric car buyers. Cabinet had mandated that all Canadian may only buy an electric by 2035: "Sales targets are increasingly unrealistic."

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Gov’t Polled On ‘Arab Rights’

Cabinet aides in pre-election polling asked Arab Canadians how the government could “promote the rights and safety of members of the Arab diaspora,” says a Privy Council report. No corresponding focus groups were held with Jewish Canadians: "Most felt the Government of Canada was on the wrong track."

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Libs Promise No Interference

The Liberal Party must run a leadership contest free of foreign interference, say MPs. A change in Party voting rules follows evidence a busload of Chinese foreign students helped nominate MP Han Dong (Don Valley North, Ont.) in 2019: "Listen, there’s foreign interference concerns."

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Feds Freezing Electric Rebates

Electric car dealers say they are stunned by cabinet’s abrupt wind-up of a $5,000 rebate program for new buyers. The Department of Transport announced Friday it will suspend rebates by the end of March or “until program funds are exhausted.”

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Québec Defaults Cost $25M

Taxpayers lost millions through defaults on federal loans to Québec businesses, records show. The federal agency that approved the loans, Canada Economic Development for Québec Regions, boasted in a briefing note it was “prepared to support riskier projects.”

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Music Biz Collapsing: Report

A federal subsidy program for Canadian musicians went 80 percent over budget due to pandemic lockdowns and collapsing album sales, says a Department of Canadian Heritage report. Musicians have complained they are reduced to collecting pennies in royalties from streaming services: "The current economic context does not allow the majority of artists to make a living."

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Review: The Days Of Ho Chi Minh

Michael Maclear was the only Western TV correspondent in North Vietnam the day Ho Chi Minh died in 1969. Half a million mourners clad in white queued for hours to see Ho laying in state, his head resting on a soft pillow. It was “a great river of people,” Maclear recalls. The temperature hit 107° and kept climbing: “Every few seconds in the intense heat, even among the ranks of soldiers, someone would faint.”

Reading Guerrilla Nation is like opening a drawer to find a lapsed passport or faded yearbook. In an instant you are in a time and place once very important and now utterly forgotten, “the strangest of journeys in the most divisive of times, when ‘Nam confounded us all,’” writes Maclear.

Travel was expensive. Asia seemed distant. And a CBC-TV foreign correspondent like Maclear was assured fame and a mass audience. One of Maclear’s newsroom colleagues, Knowlton Nash, went into management and self-appointment as network anchor. Another, Roméo LeBlanc, became Governor General. Maclear remained a working reporter, still writing in his 84th year. He died in 2019.

Paid $369K To Silence Critics

A “fact-checking” program launched in 2019 by then-Democratic Institutions Minister Karina Gould paid researchers nearly $370,000 to discourage media and the public from questioning authority, Access To Information records show. Researchers stressed the importance of invoking Canadian values to avoid being seen as Liberal partisans: "Dissenting voices, in some cases even just one, can weaken the power of a normative belief."

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Jail Telecom Vandals: Rogers

Parliament should prosecute scrap metal thieves as saboteurs, says Rogers Communications. The telecom firm in a petition to senators complained theft of copper wiring was costing Rogers millions: 'It is threatening public safety nationwide.'

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