$15.7M To Investigate Staffers

Federal departments and agencies spent almost $16 million investigating their own employees, records show. Expenses for private investigators followed introduction of a new law curbing workplace harassment: "What are the details?"

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Pits Holland Versus Hunters

Cabinet regrets its latest gun bill, says Government House Leader Mark Holland. Amendments to restrict hunting rifles were abruptly withdrawn Friday in the face of stiff opposition in the Commons public safety committee: "I get it, deeply, profoundly."

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Unsure Of Ratepayers’ Impact

Mandating use of electric cars will result in a 23 percent increase in overall demand for electricity, says a Department of Natural Resources report. Estimates of resulting impacts on power rates are “still being developed,” it said.

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Taxpayers Out $173 Million

Recovery of millions in subsidies sunk into a failed vaccine factory is not an immediate priority, says Industry Minister François-Philippe Champagne. Cabinet had approved $173 million for construction of a Medicago Inc. plant in the health minister’s Québec City riding: "We need to move on."

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Sunday Poem: “Million Jobs”

Poet Shai Ben-Shalom writes: “My toilet got clogged again. Plumber says he’ll replace the drainage, install a new bowl. I consult an engineer…”

Review: A Legacy Of Landed Gentry

Who invented our conservation movement: Hippies? First Nations. Settlers? The answer is none of the above. Conservation was created by 19th century corporations and wealthy urban sportsmen. The first national park in Banff was intended as a resort for the rich. Critics cursed it.

“There is no reason for the government to go into the business of entertaining,” Liberal MP John Kirk of Nova Scotia told the House in 1887. “This is a benefit to the wealthy while the poor people are compelled to foot the bill.”

If the motives of corporations like Banff’s Canadian Pacific Railway resort builders were selfish and narrow, the result was good and beyond debate. There is a park. Wildlife and waterways were preserved.

49 Employees Fired As Cheats

At least 49 staff at the Department of Employment were fired as Covid relief cheats, the Commons public accounts committee learned yesterday. MPs could not get information on the number of firings in other departments or the Canada Revenue Agency: "49 now former employees at the department were terminated for fraud?"

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Military Counts Vax Incidents

Covid shots accounted for an average 85 percent of medically reported “adverse effects” due to vaccination in the Canadian Armed Forces, new data show. Figures were disclosed at the request of Conservative MP Cheryl Gallant (Renfrew-Nipissing, Ont.) who asked, “How many vaccine-related injuries have occurred to Canadian Armed Forces members?”

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God Bless What’s Her Name

Federal managers in a series of social media errors misspelled the Queen's name when she died and compared tax filing to monkey business. The gaffes are among scores of Government of Canada tweets deleted by staff, records show: "The perks are ape-solutely a-peeling!"

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Bonus Time For Fed Bankers

A federal bank, Farm Credit Canada of Regina, paid bonuses to every senior manager through three years of pandemic, records show. The bank was one of nine federal agencies to pay 100 percent of executives a bonus year after year: "The government pays these people a lot of money."

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Convoy Supporter Loses Seat

The Bloc Québécois yesterday protested plans to eliminate the Québec riding held by an MP who supported the Freedom Convoy. “This will weaken our political voice,” said MP Kristina Michaud (Avignon-La Mitis-Matane-Matapédia, Que.), her party's public safety critic.

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Private Dinner At Freeland’s

Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland hosted a dinner party at her Toronto home with a former federal contractor, the Commons government operations committee learned yesterday. “She actually convened a dinner at her house,” testified Dominic Barton, now-retired managing director of McKinsey & Company, a global consulting firm: "I knew her from before. I did know her."

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Found Racism East And West

Québec has a “fixation on religious minorities” while Black Muslim women live in fear “out West,” cabinet’s inclusion advisor said in public remarks last spring. Amira Elghawaby, the $191,000-a year Special Representative on Combatting Islamophobia, said she herself was targeted by a truck driver while walking in her Ottawa neighbourhood: "I too was almost hit by a truck that was deliberately and very dangerously swerving toward me."

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Can’t Hide Emails: Fed Judge

Attorney General David Lametti has lost a key Federal Court ruling on his use of emergency powers against the Freedom Convoy. A judge ordered that internal emails contradicting cabinet claims of a national crisis must be admitted into evidence: 'It was not disclosed despite repeated requests.'

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Censure China For Atrocities

The Commons yesterday for the second time in two years unanimously passed a motion condemning China for crimes against humanity. MPs by a 322-0 vote said Uyghur Muslims “face pressure and intimidation by the Chinese state.”

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