A bill to reform bankruptcy law to benefit pensioners yesterday passed the Senate banking committee, a key hurdle. Bankruptcy trustees made a last bid to amend the private bill: "Everybody loses money in a bankruptcy."
Counts Few Racists, “But — “
Few Canadians are outright racists but many hold stereotypically bigoted views of Chinese people, says Senator Yuen Pau Woo (B.C.). The Liberal appointee complained Chinese Canadians are expected to renounce the motherland or be “seen as suspicious.”
Complaints Backlog Hits 38K
The backlog of air complaints at the Canadian Transportation Agency is up to 38,000, a new record, the Senate transport committee was told last night. The Agency has calculated it takes a year to process 15,000 complaints: "There is a lot of frustration."
Rang Up $3M In Travel Costs
Julie Payette cost taxpayers nearly $3 million in VIP travel expenses as Governor General before pandemic lockdowns put a halt to her travels, new records show. Payette had publicly appealed to Canadians for self-sacrifice to reduce poverty and “help improve the lives of people.”
Fed Tree Plan A Slow Starter
Cabinet is off to a slow start on the 2019 promise by then-Environment Minister Catherine McKenna to plant two billion trees. Authorities complained seedlings take too long to grow: "We often get the question, where are those two billion trees?"
Biggest Lead Ban Since 1990
The Department of Environment yesterday introduced the most sweeping lead ban since Parliament outlawed the retail sale of leaded gasoline in 1990. Toxic lead wheel weights are now restricted. Regulators stopped short of banning hunters' lead ammunition and fishing jigs and sinkers: "We now believe there is no safe level of lead."
MPs Like Whistleblower Bill
The Commons yesterday by a 172-0 vote gave Second Reading to a bill to reform federal whistleblower protections for employees who uncover corrupt practices. Liberals abstained on the vote to toughen legislation dating back 16 years: "The law is nearly entirely dormant."
Crown Bank OKs Easy Terms
The Canada Infrastructure Bank has approved easy-term climate loans that will see taxpayers wait decades to get their money back, its CEO disclosed yesterday. “Our terms are quite flexible,” said Ehren Cory, $600,000-a year CEO and former McKinsey & Company consultant: "Those projects would not happen without us."
Agency Probed Radio Call-In
The Canada Revenue Agency yesterday said it investigated claims made by a caller to a Toronto radio station who boasted employees fraudulently claimed pandemic relief benefits. Misconduct was punishable by firing and a lifetime ban on federal employment, a spokesperson said: "The Agency is aware of the radio call-in show."
Find More Religions In Prison
Almost a third of chaplains in the federal prison system are non-Christians, data show. “Service levels to other than Christian faiths have increased by 66 percent” over the past decade, the Correctional Service wrote in a report to Parliament: "Offenders of all faiths receive regular and consistent support to practice their personal beliefs."
Drop Last Fed Mask Mandate
Cabinet has quietly dropped the last of its mask mandates. A requirement that taxpayers mask themselves at Service Canada offices has ended: "That’s been a very recent policy change."
9th Gov’t MP Cited On Ethics
A ninth member of the government caucus yesterday was cited for unethical conduct. Liberal MP Greg Fergus (Hull-Aylmer, Que.), parliamentary secretary to the Prime Minister, was caught lobbying for a TV license on behalf of a Québec businessman: "I fell short."
Hard Times: 38% Near-Broke
Nearly 4 in 10 Canadians are now borrowing money to pay for groceries, shelter and other daily expenses, say federal researchers. One report described it as the worst of times for many Canadians, "the biggest financial challenges of their lives."
See White Adults Radicalized
Parliament must combat the “radicalization of white people in this country,” a former Calgary mayor yesterday testified at the Senate human rights committee. Naheed Nenshi said unnamed politicians “have seen short term political gain in this.”
Never Checked, Feds Admit
The Department of Canadian Heritage yesterday admitted it did not do its homework in awarding a six-figure grant to an anti-Semite who fantasized on Twitter about shooting Jews. The department did not explain why it took months to cancel the contract with activist Laith Marouf, now a resident of Beirut: "Has there been disciplinary action for any staff over what happened here?"



