MPs Demand China Records

The House affairs committee yesterday voted unanimously to compel documents regarding alleged Chinese Communist interference in federal campaigns. The committee earlier heard foreign agents sought to unseat Conservative MPs: "Canadians deserve answers."

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Feds Surveyed On Postal Cuts

The Department of Public Works has polled Canadian businesses on service cuts, records show. Business operators are the heaviest users of the post office: "To what extent would you support or oppose an end to door to door home delivery and replacing it with community mailboxes?"

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Convoy Was “Mental” Threat

The Freedom Convoy threatened "mental health" but was not literally violent, Ontario’s deputy solicitor general told the Public Order Emergency Commission. The testimony followed evidence from the Ottawa Police Service that the protest “felt” violent: "No murders, shootings, robberies, stabbings, aggravated assaults, nothing of that sort."

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Bought Tow Trucks On Kijiji

The Government of Alberta in 48 hours bought $826,000 worth of towing equipment at Kijiji and the Truck Trader to clear a border blockade, records show. Public Safety Minister Marco Mendicino had claimed “no tow trucks were available” at the time, forcing the federal cabinet to invoke the Emergencies Act: "These were found by conducting online searches of websites like Kijiji and Truck Trader."

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Debt Charges Balloon To $53B

Federal debt charges will top $53 billion by 2024, says the Parliamentary Budget Office. Costs of interest payments on the federal debt will nearly double federal spending on children’s benefits: "That is something that will have a major impact on public finances."

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Hockey Passport’s Unpopular

Minor hockey players and parents oppose a federal “concussion passport” as an invasion of privacy, says internal research by the Department of Canadian Heritage. “The possibility that individuals’ highly confidential medical information could be shared potentially outside the health care system was a fundamental concern,” wrote researchers: "Divulging information about their health should be their decision and theirs alone."

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‘Should Tips Be GST Taxed?’

Tips are GST taxable but only if mandatory, says Tax Court. The rare ruling on sales tax treatment of gratuities came in the case of a caterer that charged all customers 15 percent regardless of whether they enjoyed themselves: "To discourage behaviour one taxes that behaviour."

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Review: Heroes

On Sunday, June 22, 1953 a liquor store clerk named Bill Beatty died from an accidental fall at his Toronto duplex. Beatty was a plain man who died an ordinary death, yet a Globe & Mail editor pushed his obituary up to page four: “As a result of injuries suffered a week ago in a fall from an upper duplex porch at his home, William James Beatty, 54, of 56 Macdonnell Ave., died yesterday afternoon in St. Joseph’s Hospital. Mr. Beatty, it is believed, suffered a dizzy spell from the heat and lost his balance. He never regained consciousness. A veteran of the First World War, he served overseas with the 75th Regiment.”

He was with the 75th. In a city that celebrated Old School Ties and the exclusivity of private clubs, the combat veterans of the Toronto Scottish Regiment were a privileged class of workers’ aristocracy honoured long after the war’s end.

Pause For Remembrance Day

Blacklock's Reporter today pauses for Remembrance Day observances with gratitude to all who honoured our country. Thank you for your service -- The Editor.

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Skimpy OT But Food Was A-1

A truckers’ blockade in Windsor, Ont. was so relaxed local police complained they couldn’t earn enough overtime, records show. However “the food provided was top notch,” said a police department report submitted to the Freedom Convoy inquiry. Cabinet had pointed to the Windsor blockade as a contributing factor in its use of the Emergencies Act: "The food provided was top notch and officers were extremely grateful."

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Canada Day Costs Rise 86%

Costs of Canada Day festivities on Parliament Hill have nearly doubled since the Department of Canadian Heritage assumed responsibility for all expenses, records show. Accounts indicate cost of the one-day observance is up to $6 million: "The information is based on actual costs."

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Longest Pension Claim Is Lost

The Federal Court of Appeal has rejected a final petition in Canada’s longest-running petition for veterans’ disability benefits. The case dated from 1954 and was carried into court one final time by a former airmen’s aged widow: 'We have to apply the law, no matter how heart-rending, whether we like it or not.'

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Handgun Sales Ban In Effect

All new handgun sales and transfers in Canada were yesterday outlawed by cabinet effective at 9:05 am Eastern. Applications to transfer firearms received by regulators prior to the deadline would still be processed, said the Department of Public Safety: "Firearms violence is a complex issue."

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Curfew Buster Must Pay $1K

A Québec judge has upheld a four-figure fine on a harried office manager charged for breaking a Covid curfew by driving alone in his car at night. Québec had among the strictest pandemic lockdowns of any province: "I don’t know why I didn’t tell the accountant it could have waited."

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Say Cops Feared Street Brawl

A Unifor executive threatened to lead 1,000 autoworkers in a street brawl with Freedom Convoy protesters, the Public Order Emergency Commission heard yesterday. Dave Cassidy, president of Local 444 in Windsor, Ont., denied remarks attributed to him in second-hand police notes: "At no time did I threaten physical violence."

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