Less than half of billions paid out under a corporate subsidy program will ever be recovered, says the Department of Industry. The $7 billion Strategic Innovation Fund was launched six years ago by then-Industry Minister Navdeep Bains on a false claim it would create 56,000 jobs: "Terms are fairly flexible on the whole."
50% Bonus For Rural Doctors
The Department of Employment will offer a 50 percent bonus on loan forgiveness for medical students who agree to work in the country. The $3.2 million-a year cost is necessary to increase the number of rural doctors and nurses, it said: 'Shortages are acute.'
Feds Revoke “Political” Audit
A Muslim charity stripped of its tax status for allegedly hosting radical speakers has regained its registration with the Canada Revenue Agency. Auditors said they “reconsidered” the charitable status of the Ottawa Islamic Centre and Assalam Mosque: "We ended the political activities audit program."
Sunday Poem: “Role Model”
Poet Shai Ben-Shalom writes: “I suggest nominating this manager for the Outstanding Leadership Award…”
Review: The Trek
There were two Franklin Expeditions. One is acclaimed by Parks Canada which spent millions scanning the floor of the Arctic Ocean in search of 19th century English shipwrecks. The other is documented through the passion and extraordinary research of a lone anthropologist, Alison Brown of the University of Aberdeen. The resulting First Nations, Museums, Narrations is intriguing and profound.
In June 1929 a band of researchers left Winnipeg to document what they believed were the vanishing First Nations of the Prairies. Canada’s Indigenous population had been decimated by disease and misfortune and numbered some 107,000 people. “Now or never is the time in which to collect from the natives what is still available for study,” noted a director of the Geological Survey of Canada. Anthropologists believed the end was near. “Indigenous people were thought to be assimilating or dying out,” writes Brown.
Feds Amend Citizenship Act
The Senate yesterday amended the Citizenship Act to permit citizenship judges to perform their duties by “electronic means.” The Department of Immigration refused comment following its proposal to allow immigrants to swear allegiance to Canada by clicking a box on a federal website: "The negative concerns I have heard about this idea are legion."
No Comment On Spies Claim
An Ontario senator yesterday did not comment on a report he wanted to counter media critics who “insist there are Chinese spies” in Canada. Alleged remarks by Senator Victor Oh followed the May 8 expulsion of a Chinese spy: "The situation has escalated."
Bank Of Commerce Pays $3M
The Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce yesterday was fined $3 million for billing irregularities affecting more than 130,000 credit card customers. “The total number of customers affected and total dollar amounts involved were relatively high,” wrote regulators: "It is damaging to confidence."
Thousands For Circus Tickets
Canadian diplomats abroad have spent more than $139,000 on circus tickets, concerts and galas, newly-released records show. Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland in her 2023 Budget proposed a 15 percent cut in unnecessary spending to show cabinet was “fiscally responsible."
Facebook Bill Is Law, 56 To 22
The Senate yesterday by a vote of 56 to 22 passed into law a bill mandating that Facebook and Google surrender a portion of news-related advertising revenues to government-approved media corporations like the CBC. Facebook immediately announced it would halt all links to Canadian news content: "If Facebook pulls out of news in Canada as they have indicated it will have a devastating impact."
Public Hid Vax Status: Memo
Canadians hid their vaccination status when questioned by federal pollsters, says an in-house Privy Council Office memo. Researchers cited the “social desirability” of claiming to fully comply with public health orders at a time when unvaccinated people were denied access to public services and threatened with job losses: "Respondents tend to answer questions in a manner that will be viewed favourably by others."
Gov’t Silent On Chinese Bank
The Department of Finance will not say if it is dumping taxpayer-owned shares in a Beijing bank dubbed a Communist Party front. Department managers testifying at the Commons Special Committee on Canada-China Relations were silent on the nature of a cabinet “review” of the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank: "I am not able to answer questions."
Bill Would Jail Farm Activists
The Commons yesterday gave Second Reading to a private Conservative bill threatening jail for animal rights protesters who trespass on farm property. A similar bill lapsed in the last Parliament: "There has to be a line in the sand."
Called TV Segment A “Scam”
TV stations must clearly tell viewers the difference between news and advertising content, a national ombudsman ruled yesterday. The decision came in the case of a Montréal morning show that praised a sponsor’s product without clearly explaining the pitch was advertising: "It will be fine for you!"
$50M Fine In $5 Billion Probe
A company implicated in an alleged national bread price-fixing scheme yesterday was fined $50 million after pleading guilty to breach of the Competition Act. The alleged conspiracy involving Canada Bread Co. and others was worth up to $5 billion, according to Court records: "We are doing everything in our power to pursue those who engage in price-fixing."



