Zero Scofflaws After Censure

All eligible MPs have completed mandatory ethics filings after a lone Liberal scofflaw was named and shamed for late filing in 2020. “If someone deserves to be punished for handing something in late, I am guilty,” MP James Maloney (Etobicoke-Lakeshore, Ont.) said at the time.

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Gun Roundup Starts In P.E.I.

Cabinet this year proposes to launch its long-promised national buyback of prohibited firearms starting in Prince Edward Island, according to a federal memo. Islanders own few guns and represent a low “risk assessment” before RCMP expand the program nationwide, it said: "Prince Edward Island will be used as a pilot."

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Focused On Protest Coverage

The Department of Public Safety in internal emails complained it had “better things to do” than take reporters' questions about its use of the Emergencies Act. Records show the department instead wanted news media to focus on discrediting the Freedom Convoy: "Get in on this growing narrative of the truckers."

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Find 2,400 Homeless Veterans

At least 2,400 former soldiers, sailors and air crew are homeless in Canada with the actual number likely higher, says the Department of Veterans Affairs. An emergency fund to provide impoverished veterans with winter parkas, food and shelter went over budget last year: "It is minus 40 and all the shelters are full."

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Count Fewer Asians In Prison

Disproportionately few Filipino and Chinese-Canadians are in federal prison, says a study by the Correctional Service of Canada. No reason was given. Findings were drawn from a decade's worth of data on the penitentiary population: 'Research on ethnocultural offenders should be conducted regularly.'

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Review: The Zoo

In 2012 a Department of Transport engineer celebrated his promotion as supervisor by triumphantly needling a coworker over his expense claims. “Why twist the knife?” a labour adjudicator wrote later. The coworker responded by slapping the manager so hard it sent his eyeglasses flying. Interestingly, the supervisor was cited for what author Alexander Abdennur calls “camouflaged aggression” while the employee who responded with a slap was awarded $25,000 in damages.

Dr. Abdennur examines office politics in the same manner Jane Goodall studies primates. He likens bureaucracies to an “animal world” of “petty grievances” and vendettas, “vengeful rumination” and predatory score-settling where managers are like small birds that “freeze when they see the shadow of a circling hawk.”

Camouflaged Aggression In Organizations does not single out public sector employees per se. They are only human, and as a 10th century Arab poet put it: “When nature grows a straight branch, humans attach a spear head to it.”

Claim A Five-Minute Savings

Mandatory use of the $54 million ArriveCan app saved travelers “about five minutes” at border crossings, says a Public Health Agency report. The claim contradicts Customs union complaints that lineups were so long travelers urinated themselves while waiting to clear border crossings: "There is obviously something fishy going on."

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CBC Faked Fed Equity Claim

The CBC, self-described “industry leader” in equity hiring, has a less diverse workforce than the Department of Agriculture, according to Access To Information records. Managers disclosed most CBC employees are white, English-speaking men: "We believe in celebrating human differences."

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Street Address Is Gov’t Secret

Shared Services Canada, the federal IT department, will not tell MPs the address of its building due to national security concerns, it said. Publicly available records show its main office is above a Tim Hortons restaurant at 90 Metcalfe Street in Ottawa with data servers nearby: "Perhaps the Russians or the Communist Party of China could find your offices through Google."

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Fed Loans Were Risky: Report

Borrowers under a costly federal Covid business loan program were typically small and heavily indebted, says a Department of Industry report. Losses under the Canada Emergency Business Account are estimated in the billions: "We've had your back."

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Cheques Make A Comeback

Paper cheques have made a comeback as retailers try to avoid high transaction fees on credit cards, says the Bank of Canada. The Department of Finance has for years threatened to regulate card fees though no legislation has been introduced to date: "Who do we work for?"

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25 Votes For Web Regulation

Twenty-five New Democrat MPs will pressure cabinet for legislation this year to regulate legal internet content, Party leader Jagmeet Singh said yesterday. Regulations should include censoring “misinformation,” he said: "It has to be the government."

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Fed Offices Sitting 70% Empty

Vacancy rates in federal offices run as high as 70 percent or more under a pandemic work-from-home policy for employees, records show. Cabinet quietly dropped claims it could save billions by selling empty buildings: "We are reimagining our workplace."

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Tax Filers Not All The Same

Men are more likely to file their taxes using off the shelf software while women tax filers worry about making mistakes, data show. Canada Revenue Agency researchers quizzed taxpayers nationwide to spot differences between the sexes: "A number of concerns are present."

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