PM Gets Mail By The Millions

Canadians writing Prime Minister Justin Trudeau have a five percent chance of getting a reply, records show. The Privy Council Office explained the Prime Minister gets a lot of junk mail: "Almost every day as Prime Minister I learn new things."

This content is for Blacklock’s Reporter members only. Please login to view this content. (Register here.)

Vax Mandate Was OK: Ruling

School trustees were entitled to suspend or fire teachers even if vaccine mandates were not medically justified, a labour arbitrator has ruled. The decision came in the case of an Ontario school board that disciplined 52 elementary teachers who declined to show proof of vaccination: "There is no dispute that none of the provincial or public health authorities required or specifically recommended the board make vaccination mandatory."

This content is for Blacklock’s Reporter members only. Please login to view this content. (Register here.)

CBC Sees Two In A Hundred

Few Canadians, only two in a hundred, turn to CBC-TV for informative documentaries, says in-house federal research. The low viewership follows the launch of a CBC corporate plan to put “the audience at the heart of everything we do.”

This content is for Blacklock’s Reporter members only. Please login to view this content. (Register here.)

Biggest Gain On Election Map

Voters in Calgary and suburbs will send two more MPs to Parliament under a redistricting proposal detailed Saturday, the largest gain of any city in Canada. A Federal Boundaries Commission noted Calgary’s population grew ten percent over the past decade: "All the existing electoral districts have been changed."

This content is for Blacklock’s Reporter members only. Please login to view this content. (Register here.)

Foreign Students On The Job

Half of foreign college and university students in Canada are in the workforce, says federal research. The new figures follow a proposal from members of the Commons industry committee to lift a cap that limits foreign students to part time work: "International students have become an integral part of the labour force."

This content is for Blacklock’s Reporter members only. Please login to view this content. (Register here.)

Review: When The River Caught Fire

Canadians of a certain vintage can still recall when DDT was found in every kitchen cupboard and it was considered eccentric not to throw candy wrappings out the car window. The Ontario Department of Highways used to spend $1 million a year clearing roadside litter.

This did not change by osmosis. It took years of litigation and dramatic protest by a comparatively few people. “It was a burn-out job but you loved it,” one organizer tells author Ryan O’Connor. “It was what needed to be done so you did it.”

O’Connor’s First Green Wave chronicles the birth of environmental activism in Canada. It is a fresh account of Pollution Probe, a citizens’ committee that grew from the University of Toronto to include chapters from Halifax to Regina. Pollution Probe was never a mass movement; its membership peaked at some 1,500. The Kinsmen Club had 16,000. Yet its impact was far-reaching.

Federal App Tracking 715,000

The Department of Environment is tracking the location of more than 715,000 Canadians who downloaded what ex-Minister Catherine McKenna once called a “super cool” weather app, records show. Staff said they also collected users’ email addresses but insisted the data scoop complied with privacy law: "Oh yes!!"

This content is for Blacklock’s Reporter members only. Please login to view this content. (Register here.)

Senators Want The Fine Print

Members of the Senate communications committee are demanding cabinet spell out regulations under a YouTube bill that passed the Commons Tuesday by a 208 to 117 vote. Senators balked at demands they first pass the bill and see details later: "It will affect potentially every single Canadian who uses the internet."

This content is for Blacklock’s Reporter members only. Please login to view this content. (Register here.)

Passed Crime Bill In A Week

Parliament yesterday gave speedy passage to a cabinet bill to close the “extreme intoxication” defence. The cabinet bill was prompted by a Supreme Court decision six weeks ago: "It is our duty as parliamentarians to move quickly to solve problems."

This content is for Blacklock’s Reporter members only. Please login to view this content. (Register here.)

Housing Plan Is Short: CMHC

Cabinet’s proposal to boost new housing construction by 20,000 homes a year is a fraction of the number needed, according to CMHC figures released yesterday. The Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation said current building trends are short by 400,000 a year: "Housing is one of the most difficult issues."

This content is for Blacklock’s Reporter members only. Please login to view this content. (Register here.)

Dead Mouse Was A Warning

Former employees including a retired director general allege widespread sexual harassment in the federal prison service. One woman said coworkers left a dead mouse in her mailbox after she filed a complaint, according to Federal Court records: "She understood this to mean she was perceived as a ‘rat’ for reporting misconduct."

This content is for Blacklock’s Reporter members only. Please login to view this content. (Register here.)

Dr. Tam Wins 22% Pay Raise

Cabinet has awarded Dr. Theresa Tam a 22 percent pay raise. The increase to $324,000 a year was approved despite missteps including Tam’s 2020 announcement that Covid “is largely under control” and her recommendation that Canadians use Kleenex to ward off infection: "Public health officers across the whole country have become this generation’s rock stars."

This content is for Blacklock’s Reporter members only. Please login to view this content. (Register here.)

Feds On A “Search For Truth”

A cabinet bill on internet news will help Canadians “search for truth,” says Attorney General David Lametti. Bill C-18 the Online News Act would allow media conglomerates like the CBC to claim a slice of ad revenues from news content shared through Google and Facebook: "Freedom of expression protects speakers as well as listeners."

This content is for Blacklock’s Reporter members only. Please login to view this content. (Register here.)

Freeland Claim False: Report

Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland’s claim taxpayers will "likely" recover billions spent on the Trans Mountain Pipeline is false, the Parliamentary Budget Office said yesterday. The only question is how much taxpayers stand to lose, wrote analysts: "Trans Mountain no longer continues to be a profitable undertaking."

This content is for Blacklock’s Reporter members only. Please login to view this content. (Register here.)

Car, Gas Prices Hike Inflation

A change in Statistics Canada’s calculation of its benchmark Consumer Price Index to fully account for rising costs of used cars yesterday helped push the national inflation rate to its highest level in 39 years. The new calculation tracked “steeper price increases for used vehicles.”

This content is for Blacklock’s Reporter members only. Please login to view this content. (Register here.)