Canadians most likely to save for their children’s education don’t need subsidies to do it, new data show. Parliament has paid out grants to savers for nearly two decades: 'Families more likely to save for postsecondary education had higher incomes and owned a home.'
Warning On Pharmacare Tax
The Department of Health warns taxpayers are “sensitive to cost considerations” of pharmacare, citing a Fraser Institute poll indicating Canadians won’t pay more taxes for universal public drug insurance. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau promised to pass a pharmacare bill by year’s end under a vote deal with New Democrat leader Jagmeet Singh: "Support fell by almost half to 40 percent if the program was to be financed by an increase in the GST."
Admit Passports Mismanaged
An internal federal memo admits mismanagement was to blame for extraordinary delays at the passport office. Half of employees were sent to work from home and 20 percent quit during the worst of the backlog last year, said the memo: "There needs to be a crack of the whip, big time."
Sudden Rush On News Bill
Heritage Minister Pascale St-Onge in a regulatory surprise says enforcement of the Online News Act will begin by year’s end, scrubbing months of public consultation. St-Onge in a legal notice Saturday acknowledged the timing was “aggressive” and “accelerated.”
Young Most Scared: Fed Data
Young Canadians, women and British Columbians and Ontarians are the biggest climate change worriers, says in-house research by the Department of Environment. The findings follow an earlier federal report that most young people feel frightened, sad and helpless about global warming: 'How worried are you?'
Like The Customers To ‘Stick’
Canadian banks use “customer stickiness” techniques to prevent clients from comparison shopping, says a Competition Bureau report. The practice makes it difficult for any new rival to challenge the nation’s Big Five banks, it said: "There are frequently direct costs associated with customer switching."
In Observance Of Labour Day
Blacklock's Reporter pauses today for the 129th observance of Labour Day in tribute to Canadian workers nationwide. We will be back tomorrow -- The Editor
Poem: “This Is Your Captain”
Poet Shai Ben-Shalom writes: “Welcome aboard Federal Government Airlines. Our flight will be two hours longer than usual as we’re still looking to repair the left engine, following last year’s inspection…”
Book Review: A Victorian Tragedy
Dr. Peter Edmund Jones is the most interesting Canadian you never heard of. His accomplishments were many, yet he died in poverty. He left a mark in science and public affairs, yet stumbled in drunkenness and despair.
The son of a Mississauga chief and English mother, Jones was the first Status Indian to graduate from a Canadian medical school, Queen’s University in 1866. His thesis was “The Indian Medicine Man.” Jones was the first to publish an Indigenous newspaper in Canada, The Indian, in 1886. He was a chess master, an archaeological advisor to the Smithsonian Institute, a political organizer for John A. Macdonald, a federal Indian agent.
“Jones appears to have been a romantic who felt his early success would carry him onwards,” writes biographer Allan Sherwin. Of course this could only end badly. To read Bridging Two Peoples is to sense the creep of petty humiliation and raw bigotry that crushed this Victorian romantic in the end.
Guilbeault Silent On Slavery
Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault's department yesterday praised China for environmental leadership without mentioning its use of slave labour to make solar panels. A member of Guilbeault's own caucus earlier noted China used slaves to export renewable energy products: "41.7 percent of polysilicon used to produce solar panels, for all the environmentalists in the House, comes from Xinjiang."
Judge Resumes Ethics Probes
Federal conflict investigations yesterday resumed with the appointment of Interim Ethics Commissioner Konrad von Finckenstein, 78, a retired federal judge. A vacancy had forced a four-month halt to ethics probes: 'Our hands were tied until there was a new Commissioner.'
Facebook Posts Not A Crime
A Freedom Convoy sympathizer yesterday won an Ontario Court of Justice dismissal of a mischief charge over his Facebook posts. Other protesters also faced police charges targeting social media messages: 'They peacefully exercised their Charter rights.'
Blaming Capitalists For Fires
Capitalism is to blame for the August wildfire season, the Communist Party of Canada said yesterday. A Party periodical People’s Voice said trees planted by capitalist forestry companies were more susceptible to fire than other trees: 'The trees are pinnacles of so-called capitalist efficiency.'
Polled Tighter Pesticide Rules
Federal regulators polled Canadians on support for tighter controls on pesticides, records show. “Most Canadians continue to hold negative associations with pesticides,” said an in-house report: "What is needed? Is it when a large group of people die?"
Gun Buyback Plan In Trouble
The Department of Public Safety acknowledges stiff resistance to its national buyback of prohibited firearms as costly and pointless. An in-house report confirmed fewer than half of owners would voluntarily surrender their firearms and 12 percent will never comply: "I am a responsible owner."



