Hiring Foreigners “Popular”

Immigration Minister Marc Miller yesterday extended regulations allowing a half-million foreign students to work full time hours in Canada, telling reporters: "It was popular." Figures show the unemployment rate for Canadians grew after the rules were changed: "I don’t think students are taking jobs away from other people."

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Gov’t Drops Lifesaver Claims

The Public Health Agency of Canada yesterday acknowledged it had no evidence its ArriveCan app saved lives. The Agency had claimed the $54 million program saved so many lives it justified the cost: "Can you let us know how many?"

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Want Ports Declared Essential

Parliament should rewrite the Canada Labour Code to classify port workers as essential, freight shippers yesterday told the Commons trade committee. The designation would prohibit longshore strikes and see all disputes resolved through binding arbitration: "The victims of strikes are not the workers."

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Bracing For $16,297 Groceries

A typical family of four will spend $16,297 on groceries next year, says a national Food Price Report by analysts at four universities. One co-author has recommended Parliament enact a food stamp program for Canadians who can’t afford fresh fruit and vegetables: "Such a program could be meticulously targeted to provide essential grocery store assistance to those in dire need."

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Appointee OK’d $394K Grant

A Liberal-appointed director of a federal foundation acknowledges he voted to award $393,805 in grants to a Québec company in which he had a direct interest. “We all declared conflicts of interest – well, not everyone,” Guy Ouimet testified at the Commons industry committee: "I have acted in good faith."

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Spent $199.2M On Paperwork

Cabinet has spent almost $200 million on carbon tax paperwork since Parliament introduced the fuel charge in 2019, new records show. Hundreds of federal employees administer the tax described by Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault as the cheapest, “most efficient” way to cut greenhouse gas emissions: "Carbon pricing is central to our climate plan."

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Prisoner Upkeep Now $222K

The cost of keeping federal prisoners in a maximum security penitentiary now averages almost a quarter million a year, new documents show. The Correctional Service blamed fixed costs in what is one of the world's most expensive prison systems: 'The staff-to-inmate ratio is one to one.'

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Must Guard Freedoms: MPs

Cabinet must establish a federal task force to protect religious freedoms, the Commons justice committee yesterday wrote in a report to Parliament. Canadians should be free to attend a Hebrew school or menorah lighting without harassment, said one MP: 'Without freedom of religion, there actually is no freedom.'

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Can’t Say That In Parliament

Calling the Prime Minister a liar yesterday saw Conservative MP Damien Kurek (Battle River-Crowfoot, Alta.) ejected from the Commons for unparliamentary language. “He lied,” Kurek said after leaving the chamber: "The Prime Minister lied. His minions continue to lie."

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There Is No Plan, Says CMHC

Cabinet has no plan to solve the housing crisis, the CEO of Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation said yesterday. “There is not a plan,” Bowers testified at the Senate national finance committee: "I just need an answer; is there a plan yet?"

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Feds Faked Inspection Claims

Employment Minister Randy Boissonnault’s department misrepresented inspection claims under the Temporary Foreign Worker Program, records show. Of 2,139 “inspections” on migrant labour it reported last year fewer than a tenth were actual random, in-person checks in the workplace: "We are building awareness."

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Agree To Investigate Speaker

The Commons today is expected to order a committee investigation of Speaker Greg Fergus. A total 149 Conservative and Bloc Québécois MPs have already demanded that Fergus resign for overt partisanship: "The head referee is in the tank."

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Banish Port Strikes, MPs Told

Automakers and the Government of Alberta yesterday petitioned MPs for a federal ban on port strikes by the International Longshore and Warehouse Union. Such a move would be unconstitutional, the Union president warned the Commons trade committee: "That is something that can never happen."

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Warning On Mortgage Shock

The Senate banking committee yesterday questioned bankers’ sale of mortgages dubbed a "payment shock" for borrowers. An estimated $246 billion worth of mortgages were sold at variable rates with fixed payments: "They are at risk of suffering a significant payment shock."

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Hometown Vax Plant ‘Risky’

The Department of Public Works yesterday for the first time acknowledged it “took a risk” in subsidizing a vaccine factory in Minister Jean-Yves Duclos' riding. Taxpayers lost $150 million: "There was a lot of risk at the time."

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