Admit No Contraband Seized

Customs agents did not seize any contraband by rail over a four-year period, records show. The disclosure follows cabinet’s admission it has no estimate on the number of guns smuggled into Canada: "The CBSA did not seize any illegal items from train cars for the years 2018 to 2021."

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$453K Per Quarantined Guest

A Calgary hotel last year was paid the equivalent of $452,714 per guest to feed and shelter quarantined travelers, records show. MPs expressed astonishment at millions paid to the Westin Calgary Airport hotel by the Public Health Agency of Canada: "Has anybody been fired for this?"

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‘Watch Language’ On Ethics

A Conservative MP yesterday was told to “watch the language” after accusing cabinet members of corrupt practices. MP Michael Barrett (Leeds-Grenville, Ont.) repeated his charge outside the Commons, then served notice of committee cross-examination for one minister caught rewarding a friend with sole-sourced contracts: "What is it going to take for one of these corrupt ministers to resign?"

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Fears Dep’t Of Enlightenment

A cabinet bill to regulate YouTube is an Orwellian attempt to have Canadian creators comply with government-approved messaging, a Liberal-appointed Senator said yesterday. “In Germany it was called the Ministry of National Enlightenment,” said Senator David Richards, a novelist and screenwriter: 'I don’t know who would be able to tell me what Canadian content is but it won’t be the Minister of Heritage.'

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Paid $530K For Cancellations

Taxpayers lost a half million on contractors’ cancellation fees paid by federal department and agencies, records show. The figure did not include estimates from the Department of Public Works that declined to release all numbers: "This information is not systematically available."

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Labour Still Waiting For Bill

New Democrat MPs and the Canadian Union of Public Employees yesterday pressed cabinet to introduce a promised federal ban on replacement workers. The Liberal Party two years ago pledged to introduce the bill: "I have long been frustrated."

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‘I Do Not Have A Number…’

Eight years after Parliament passed the Veterans Hiring Act the Department of Veterans Affairs yesterday said it had no figures on how many veterans were actually hired. “We absolutely believe in hiring veterans,” Steven Harris, assistant deputy minister, testified at the Commons veterans affairs committee: "We do make efforts."

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Says Emergency Is No Excuse

Emergency powers invoked against the Freedom Convoy were no excuse for privacy breaches, the federal privacy commissioner said yesterday. “Privacy protection is not just a set of technical rules,” Commissioner Philippe Dufresne wrote a parliamentary committee: "Even in an emergency, public institutions must continue to operate under lawful authority."

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Find Costly “Shadow” Gov’t

Billions spent on consultants have created a “shadow public service” unaccountable to taxpayers, a union executive yesterday told the Commons government operations committee. Federal departments and agencies spend $16.7 billion a year on consultants, by Treasury Board estimate: "This shadow public service plays by an entirely different set of rules."

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Stands By ‘Inclusion’ Advisor

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau yesterday rejected demands that he withdraw the appointment of his “inclusion” advisor for inflammatory comments. One cabinet minister described remarks by Amira Elghawaby as “really inappropriate.”

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Feds Reject Genocide Protest

Cabinet has successfully opposed a Federal Court petition that it formally sanction Communist China as genocidal. A judge rejected the petition by lawyers acting on behalf of minority Uyghur Muslims held in Chinese slave camps: 'Canada has decided not to act.'

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Crown Bankers In The Money

A federal bank awarded senior staff $104 million in pandemic bonuses and pay raises even as it reported a net loss and customers struggled with “extreme hardship,” records show. Access To Information figures obtained by the Canadian Taxpayers Federation tracked Covid perks paid by the Business Development Bank: 'They should not have doled out big bonuses.'

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Said Harper Worse Than 9/11

A decade of Stephen Harper as Prime Minister was more hurtful than 9/11, a federal “inclusion” advisor wrote in a 2015 newspaper column. Amira Elghawaby in other commentaries complained middle-class Canadians never experienced inequity and advocated for Muslim prayer in public schools since “parents of these children pay taxes.”

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Gun Bill In “Delicate” Straits

Cabinet attempts to save its latest gun bill is a “delicate conversation,” says Government House Leader Mark Holland. The bill introduced eight months ago faces stiff opposition in the Commons public safety committee: "This is a very difficult, emotional, difficult issue."

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Words Hurt, Says Fed Agency

Arguing, gossiping and cussing are forms of workplace violence along with assault, murder and arson, says a Parks Canada report. The internal audit on workplace health counted 20 “violent incidents” over a two-year period but did not elaborate: "Most people think of violence as a physical assault. However workplace violence is a much broader problem."

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