No Mask, No Pay Says Judge

A Loblaw Companies Ltd. manager suspended without pay for declining to wear a Covid mask is not entitled to damages for constructive dismissal, a judge has ruled. No mask, no pay, said the Court: "He refused to do so."

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Question Convoy Bank Freeze

The federal Privacy Commissioner is being asked to determine if the Freedom Convoy bank freeze complied with an Act of Parliament. Committee testimony from bankers suggested the blacklisting of convoy sympathizers may have breached the Privacy Act, said an MP: "What was the information shared?"

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A Poem: “News Online”

Poet Shai Ben-Shalom, an Israeli-born biologist, writes for Blacklock’s each and every Sunday: “You caught me surfing the web. I only wanted to read the top stories…”

Review – The Grey Man In A Grey Suit

In Ottawa in 1941 Oscar Skelton, Canada’s first deputy foreign minister, was driving on O’Connor Avenue on his lunch break when he suffered a fatal heart attack and ploughed his Packard into a streetcar. Back at the office, Skelton had secretly filed away a memo seething with frustration. His biography by acclaimed historian Norman Hillmer is worthy of a Chekhov novel: the unassuming functionary whose daily plodding concealed a boil of thwarted aspirations.

A Portrait Of Canadian Ambition is outstanding: “His grey exterior and natural reticence covered a vast range of ambitions – for an extraordinary life, for power and influence, for social standing and prosperity, and for an important place in the remaking of Canada as an independent and progressive country,” writes Hillmer, professor of history at Carleton University.

Pledge Long Term Media Aid

Cabinet is committed to long term aid for money-losing news media, the Department of Canadian Heritage said yesterday. The department said it was unaware of impending newspaper closures amid an ongoing $595 million bailout set to expire in two years: "News businesses have seen their revenues significantly decline."

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Passport Reform Just Possible

Cabinet yesterday said it is “exploring” online passport renewals so Canadians can avoid hours-long waits at federal offices. It was merely a possibility, said Social Development Minister Karina Gould: "I remain seized with resolving this unacceptable situation."

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Never Asked For The Subsidy

The Freedom Convoy inquiry yesterday moved a step closer to public hearings with recommended taxpayer funding for participants' legal fees and expenses. Lawyers for convoy organizers did not ask for a subsidy: "Applicants who requested funding provided varying degrees of detail in terms of the amounts they requested."

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CBC “Pressured” By Convoy

Freedom Convoy coverage put “significant pressure” on CBC employees, according to corporate records. Cabinet earlier said it relied on CBC News for justification in using emergency powers against truckers, while one cabinet minister said he spoke personally with unnamed reporters covering the protest: "For journalists, trust me, I reached out to some of them."

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Zoom Meeting Not The Same

Zoom meetings at clubs and associations are invalid unless spelled out in members’ bylaws, a British Columbia court has ruled. The Victoria Canoe and Kayak Club had its entire annual general meeting declared void since old bylaws required a “show of hands.”

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Says We Depend On Migrants

Canada’s success depends in part on migrant labour though it accounts for a small fraction of the national workforce, Immigration Minister Sean Fraser’s department said yesterday. Fraser earlier said record high immigration quotas were essential to “pay for all the things we enjoy.”

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Staple Foods Up 20% Or More

Rising grocery prices have shoppers paying 20 percent more for spaghetti, flour, cabbage and other staples, new Statistics Canada tables showed yesterday. The cost of even the cheapest meats increased by a third or more year over year while basic white bread averaged $4 a loaf: "Canadians are feeling left behind and ripped off."

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Afghans Must Repay Canada

Cabinet yesterday doubled a loan program that requires Afghan refugees to repay funds advanced to cover their cost of resettlement in Canada. Ukrainian refugees were given free grants: "Canada is treating Afghan refugees and Ukrainian refugees differently."

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Most Jobs, 54%, Never Posted

Fewer than half the job vacancies in one federal department are now advertised to the general public, says a newly-released audit. The Department of Canadian Heritage confirmed only 46 percent of postings are made public, a practice criticized by the Public Service Commission as prone to nepotism: "That is certainly something we are on the lookout for."

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Guarantee 9% Lines Of Credit

Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland’s department yesterday approved taxpayer-guaranteed lines of credit for small business borrowers at nine percent interest. “Lines of credit are inherently riskier,” wrote staff: 'It was assumed the rate at which borrowers default was 15 percent.'

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Would Censor Political Posts

“Misleading political communications” should be federally regulated, say censorship advisors appointed by Heritage Minister Pablo Rodriguez. Unregulated political discussion and disinformation was a kind of pollution that “erodes the foundations of democracy,” said the group: "By polluting the information environment with false, deceptive or misleading information, disinformation undermines citizens’ rights to form their own informed opinions."

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