Forty-three investigations of misconduct from bullying to forgery are confirmed by the Privy Council, Treasury Board and Department of Finance. “We need to hold ourselves to the highest standard,” said Privy Council Clerk Michael Sabia.
Ties Immigration & Medicare
The Commons health committee has voted for the first time to investigate immigration’s impact on medicare. Hearings proposed by Conservative MP Dan Mazier (Riding Mountain, Man.) coincided with a Department of Immigration marketing campaign that asked foreigners, "Did you know Canada has public health care?"
Muslims Protest Feds’ Bill C-9
The Canadian Muslim Lawyers Association is protesting federal restrictions on protests outside synagogues, religious schools and community halls. The measure could lead “to politicized arrests,” counsel wrote the Commons justice committee: "We have serious concerns."
Rules Can’t Keep Up To EVs
Road safety regulations have failed to keep pace with hazards posed by weighty electric vehicles, says the Department of Transport. Large batteries add tonnes to the weight of a motor vehicle representing a “key factor” in collisions, said a report: "It can get to a point where they’re not even subject to the requirements anymore."
Spot Trend In Pocket Change
Canadians are carrying about a third less pocket change than before the pandemic, says the Royal Canadian Mint. The agency counted 27,000,000 fewer new coins in circulation: "The Mint continues to deal with ongoing impacts of the shift towards electronic payments."
No Cuts Here: It’s 85% More
The $343,000-a year president of the Canadian Nuclear Safety Commission has awarded himself an 85 percent increase in his travel and hospitality budget, records show. Pierre Tremblay in an internal memo acknowledged an “elevated risk” of exposure after cabinet promised to cut unnecessary spending: "The Commission understands the current fiscal context where departments have been asked to reduce their spending."
Not My Job, Minister Testifies
Public Safety Minister Gary Anandasangaree confirms cabinet has yet to fulfill an April election promise to hire more police and border guards. “I’m not responsible for the hiring,” he told the Commons public safety committee.
Denies Third Try At Censors
A cabinet bill to expand hate crime prosecutions is not a ploy to regulate the internet, says Attorney General Sean Fraser. His remarks follow two failed attempts in four years to censor lawful internet speech: "The only circumstance where you could imagine some online comment attracting scrutiny under this law would attach to behaviour that is criminal today but is punished less severely."
Feds Detail New Radio Rules
Federal regulators propose changes to radio licensing as the industry enters its second century, including the issue of long-term permits and approval of new 50-watt commercial stations. “Radio is in a period of transition,” wrote the CRTC.
Test Warning Labels For 2026
The Department of Health has completed focus group testing of long-studied food labels intended to cut Canadians’ consumption of sugar, salt and fat. The food industry has complained new labeling regulations to take effect January 1 will cost millions: "More than half of pre-packaged foods in grocery stores are high in nutrients of concern."
For 14 Years Of Thanksgiving
We are grateful this holiday to friends and subscribers as Blacklock's embarks on a 14th great year of independent, all-original Canadian journalism. On behalf of contributors, please accept our thanks. We're back tomorrow -- The Editor.
“A Poem For C.D. Howe — “
Poet Jeff Blackman writes: “It’s been so long since the opposition hounded you, ‘What’s a million? What’s a million?’ Clarence. The amateur partisans with their seasonal pragmatism actually believe your big picture, cost-benefit Karma…”
Review: One Cold Morning In Kosovo
In spring 1999 a paramilitary group called the Scorpions descended on Podujevo, Kosovo, a mid-sized city the size of Medicine Hat. Albanians were rounded up. It was a cold morning, and one small boy named Shpetim, age 9, jammed his hands in his pockets to keep warm. The gesture seemed to irritate the gunmen.
They ordered Shpetim to empty his pockets, and out tumbled the boy’s collection of marbles – plunk, plunk, plunk. The boy’s mother, unsure of what to do, bent down and tried to gather them up as they scattered, writes Eliott Behar. Later they shot Shpetim in the head.
Behar is a former Ontario Crown prosecutor who recounts his two years’ work as a war crimes attorney at The Hague. Behar was raised in Toronto, the son of an architect. His family numbered Holocaust survivors. He is a skillful writer with a police reporter’s eye for detail.
Need Ambition, Says Minister
Canadians must be ambitious if cabinet is to meet its climate targets, Environment Minister Julie Dabrusin said yesterday. Her remarks followed testimony by the Commissioner of the Environment that Canada has the worst climate record of any G7 country: 'We are a poor performer.'
‘It Wasn’t About The Money’
There was “no money to be made” in collecting tuition from tens of thousands of foreign students, the president of Conestoga College of Kitchener, Ont., yesterday told the Commons immigration committee. MPs scoffed at John Tibbits' testimony, noting Conestoga was the nation’s heaviest user of the foreign study permit system: "Do you deserve your $640,000 salary?"



