Tells Banks To Mind Bonuses

A draft code of conduct yesterday cautioned bankers to mind the bonuses awarded to managers for aggressive sales tactics. The warning follows whistleblower testimony at the Commons finance committee that branch managers were rewarded for selling customers products they didn’t need or couldn’t afford: "Sales goals were an insidious thing."

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OK’d Millions For China App

Federal departments spent millions advertising on a China-made app now banned as a security risk, records show. Treasury Board President Mona Fortier said effective today TikTok is banned on all government-issue smartphones: "It presents an unacceptable level of risk to privacy and security."

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Named MP Welcomes Probe

Liberal MP Han Dong (Don Valley North, Ont.) yesterday said he welcomed an investigation of "insinuations" he kept secret contacts with Chinese Communist agents. Dong, the co-chair of the Canada-China Legislative Association, denied wrongdoing: 'I look forward to refuting these anonymous and unverified allegations.'

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Propose Federal Rent Control

Parliament should mandate rent controls, says a federal report. The Federal Housing Advocate also named corporations it accused of violating tenants’ rights: "Four walls and a roof do not alone constitute adequate housing."

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Forensic Review Of Blackout

The CRTC is commissioning a “forensic level technical review” of the blackout of Rogers Communications’ national network last July 8. The investigation comes as cabinet considers whether to grant final approval to Rogers’ takeover of rival Shaw Communications: "This network outage left more than 10 million customers of Rogers without connectivity."

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Court Rejects $1.5B Ford Suit

A $1.5 billion class action lawsuit that alleged misleading mileage claims by Ford Motor Company has been dismissed by the Ontario Court of Appeal. Judges ruled Ford was in full compliance with Department of Natural Resources rules: "The estimated fuel consumption for highway driving was 36 miles per gallon."

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Ceremonies End After 76 Yrs

The public swearing of the oath, a Citizenship Act requirement since 1947, will lapse effective July 1. The Department of Citizenship in a legal notice Saturday said qualified applicants will be able to swear allegiance to Canada by clicking a box on a government website: 'Whether online or in person it is intended to be meaningful.'

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More Than Any Paper Its Size

A small Ottawa weekly collected nearly a quarter million in federal funds last fiscal year, the largest sum of any newspaper its size, according to newly released records. Hill Times Publishing Incorporated, an advocate of media subsidies, earlier received an additional $584,318 under a sole-sourced Department of Public Works contract that expires next month: "What are the details of each expenditure?"

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Pot Finally Hits Tax Target

Marijuana tax revenues after four years have finally met federal estimates tabled when Parliament legalized cannabis in 2018. Statistics Canada figures did not account for any increased costs of policing, licensing, zoning and insurance: "There really isn’t much room for taxes other than the GST."

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See Death Of Company Plans

Bankruptcy lawyers claim a bill to protect company pensions in case of insolvency may spell the death of defined benefit plans in the private sector. “Employers may abandon these plans,” partners with the largest law firm in Western Canada said of Bill C-228.

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Feds Stall Payment Reforms

Enforcement of a bill guaranteeing prompt payment to contractors on public works remains stalled though Parliament passed the measure four years ago. Cabinet in a notice Saturday said it was still considering regulations: "They are some of the hardest-working people in our country and they are going bankrupt."

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Poem: “Artificial Intelligence”

Poet Shai Ben-Shalom writes: “It is Employee Appreciation Week and my mailbox is getting full. The Director of Operations is proud of our positive, inclusive, and constructive hard work, earning admiration and respect…”

Review: Apartheid

In 1926 the Manitoba Paper Co. founded a company town called Pine Falls northeast of Winnipeg. The community grew to 3,200 people by the 1950s. Raw sewage and mill effluent, 80,000 gallons a day, were dumped in the Winnipeg River, the only source of drinking water for the nearby Sagkeeng First Nation. Children were sick.

The Pine Falls Hospital had plenty of fresh, clean beds – it ran at 43 percent capacity in the 1950s – but townspeople objected to Indians receiving care in the same ward with Caucasians, so authorities built an Indian hospital instead.

Historian Maureen Lux picks up the story: “Between 1949 and 1958, in a population of less than 1300, 462 infants were admitted to the Fort Alexander Indian Hospital and 19 died. In July 1958 alone, 33 infants were admitted and one died.” The Indian Hospital operated at 128 percent occupancy.

Feds Admit Security Slip-Up

Criminals are bypassing a multi-million dollar security system intended to keep dangerous foreigners out of Canada, says a federal report. Smugglers “found workarounds” of the electronic visa system, admits the Department of Immigration: "Those with malicious intent including associations with fraud, human trafficking and smuggling movements have found workarounds."

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Bad Student Loans Jump 34%

Canada Student Loan write-offs are up 34 percent year over year, the Parliamentary Budget Office said yesterday. Losses to taxpayers rose even as Parliament voted to ease repayment terms by eliminating interest charges: "The value of unpaid student loans will continue to grow."

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