Wouldn’t Drop Vax Mandate

Emergency pandemic measures like vaccine mandates must not continue without lawful orders, says a privacy commissioner. The ruling came in the case of the Saskatoon Public Library that insisted employees continue to submit personal medical data long after mandates were lifted: "You are expecting me to comply with an invasion of my privacy."

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Won’t Pay For Passport Snafu

Social Development Minister Karina Gould yesterday rejected any compensation for travelers left out of pocket due to extraordinary delays at passport offices. Gould to date has not explained why passport managers ignored 2021 warnings to prepare for a flood of new applications for travel documents: "What recourse do they have?"

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See Public’s Priced To Poverty

Food inflation is so persistent it threatens to reverse gains in the national poverty rate, says the Department of Social Development. The average 11 percent annual increase in checkout prices “could impact poverty rates” for years to come, said a department memo: "Food will be reflected in Canada’s poverty rates."

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Fewer Than Half Trust Gov’t

Fewer than half of Canadians have a high degree of trust that federal institutions tell the truth, say Privy Council researchers. A majority put more faith in family, friends and social media than government agencies, said a report: "Why?"

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Racked Up Interest At 45%

A British Columbia judge has faulted a lender for waiting years to collect on a loan in default while interest accumulated at 45 percent. The latest judgment follows a cabinet pledge to rewrite Canada’s usury law: "It seems inconsistent to permit such interest to be payable where little was done."

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We’re Transparent, Says CRA

A Canada Revenue Agency office accused of corrupt practices is committed to full transparency, managers wrote in a report to Parliament. MPs have yet to investigate whistleblower complaints senior auditors manipulated sweetheart tax settlements for offshore corporations: "What did (they) get out of this Prestige? A feeling of power? Influence? Future favours? 10M in a Swiss account?"

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Pledge 219% More Deportees

The Canada Border Services Agency is targeting a 219 percent increase in deportations this year. Past rates were not good enough, said an Agency memo: "Removals are prioritized based on a risk."

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Bill Will Target Hunters: Feds

New federal gun controls “may reduce the number of firearms some hunters use,” admits a federal briefing note to Public Safety Minister Marco Mendicino. Hunters will have to find alternatives, it said: "People feel hoodwinked."

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OK Covid Amnesty For 8,500

More than 8,000 undocumented foreign health care workers and their families were permitted to remain in Canada under a temporary amnesty program, according to Department of Immigration figures. The “guardian angels” program was a pandemic necessity, officials said: "We need to bring more people into our workforce."

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$10.6M For Jailhouse Healers

The federal prison service is budgeting almost $11 million a year on spiritual healing for Indigenous inmates. Contractors are paid for “telling of stories,” “sacred ceremonies” and “sharing of traditional teachings,” said an internal audit: "One strives to be in harmony with all living things on Mother Earth."

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Private Censor Paid $126,840

The National Gallery of Canada paid a private consultant over $126,000 to censor documents under the Access To Information Act. Other federal departments and agencies have hired private censors at fees that ran into the millions: "We’re not able to keep pace."

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Another Firing For Nepotism

A senior Department of Public Works manager has been dismissed for nepotism and misuse of public facilities. Authorities would not name the manager but called the misconduct a “serious breach” of its ethics code: "Allegations of wrongdoing were founded."

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A Poem: “Bread In A Vice”

Poet Shai Ben-Shalom writes: “My childhood friend used to put bread in a vice, squeezing out the empty spaces, showing us the paper-thin slice that was left…”

Review: That Was A Wow Question

It is an Ottawa ritual now that every cabinet minister must open public remarks with the phrase, “I acknowledge I am speaking to you today from the unceded territory of the Algonquin people.”

There is no context. The Minister of Small Engine Repair could be testifying on budget appropriations, but only after paying homage to the Algonquin.

What do those words even mean? Does Parliament Hill really belong to the Algonquin? If so, shouldn’t they just pay them for it?

If a cabinet minister “acknowledges” this is stolen land, does that carry any legal weight? Or is it a manipulative and self-serving deflection of anticipated criticism, like saying: “Some of my best friends are Jewish”?

Professor Peter Russell, acclaimed political scientist with the University of Toronto for more than a half-century, examines a similar question in Sovereignty: The Biography Of A Claim. Russell devotes a whole book to the meaning of the word “sovereignty.” It works. It is wry, fast-moving and instructive.

Pledges Pharmacare Or Bust

Cabinet must live to the letter of an agreement promising passage of a pharmacare bill by year’s end or renege on a vote deal, New Democrat leader Jagmeet Singh said yesterday. His remarks follow a Department of Health memo that said “working” on a prescription drug bill, not passing it, was sufficient: "They would be breaking the deal."

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