Quarantine App Cost $19.8M

Federal agencies spent almost $20 million on the ArriveCan app for cross-border travelers, records show. Cabinet defended the program as essential in enforcing the Quarantine Act: "You want to keep it mandatory?"

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Subsidized Press Not Popular

Unpopular federal subsidies have turned corporate media into targets of public scorn, the Commons heritage committee has been told. Taxpayers believe reporters are “on the take,” testified an Alberta editor: "I don’t want money from this government."

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Stick With Student Loan Vow

Cabinet says it remains committed to eventually abolishing interest charges on Canada Student Loans despite raising the charges. Authorities gave no deadline for fulfilling the 2021 Liberal Party campaign promise: "We have had students’ backs every step of the way."

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Cannot Count Jobs For $510M

A half-billion in federal spending on a China-based bank resulted in contracts for a handful of Canadian companies, documents show. Cabinet said it did not know how many, if any, jobs were created for its purchase of shares in the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank of Beijing: "The Canadian government cannot estimate how many jobs have been created."

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Review: Dreams Of Boiling Water

Explorer Vilhjalmur Stefansson said the Arctic was at the very centre of national life though southerners thought of it as the edge of the frontier. The unforgiving land and its rugged people are instantly recognizable worldwide as uniquely Canadian. Say “Canada” from Germany to Japan and foreigners see Inuit art, Northern lights and merciless winters.

Johnny Neyelle, a Dene Elder with the Bear Lake people, from the 1980s made cassette recordings of ancient lore and his life experience. Neyelle had a stark purpose. As his son Morris puts it, “I realized that storytelling was changing and that kids weren’t coming to listen to the Elders’ stories anymore.”

MPs Question $218 Breakfasts

MPs yesterday demanded to see actual menus for costly in-flight meals for Governor General Mary Simon. Food expenses on a junket to Dubai were the equivalent of $218 per plate for breakfast, lunch and supper servings for Simon and 45 others: "We’d like to know whether we are dealing with caviar and champagne."

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Bracing For Painful Recession

Canada is headed for recession and it is “not going to feel so good,” David Dodge, retired Bank of Canada governor, yesterday testified at the Senate banking committee. Dodge faulted his successors at the Bank for incorrect forecasts that were “not very helpful.”

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Pandemic Bonuses At $190M

Bonuses for federal executives and upper management cost more than $190 million last year. The Treasury Board called it a credit to the “world class public service.”

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“Shoot Them” Draws Protests

A reporter for the Canadian Bar Association National Magazine faces a Commons review after posting a Twitter comment about shooting a Conservative MP. Protests yesterday coincided with a parliamentary report that complained of online abuse targeting public office holders: "This is not normal political discourse."

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Too Late To Avert Pot Losses

A statutory review of marijuana legalization comes too late to save dozens of federally licensed wholesalers and retailers that have filed for bankruptcy, a cannabis trade group said yesterday. A total 34 marijuana corporations have become insolvent since 2020: 'We cannot wait for changes.'

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Lobbyists Got RCMP Blacklist

A police blacklist of bank account holders named as Freedom Convoy sympathizers was emailed to lobbyists, records disclose. The RCMP distributed names, birth dates, phone numbers and other personal information by unencrypted email, contradicting public claims by cabinet: "Haphazard would be an understatement."

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Gov’t Admits $3 Billion Error

Nearly $3 billion in pandemic relief was paid to undeserving claimants, records show. Less than a billion has been recovered to date, cabinet disclosed in an Inquiry Of Ministry tabled in the Commons: "The intended total recovery amount cannot be predicted with accuracy."

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Took Years At Passport Office

The passport office took more than two years to restore in-person staffing levels despite warnings of increased demand for travel documents. Newly-disclosed records also confirmed as late as this past summer more than a tenth of staff continued to work from home: "We are doing everything we can."

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Sorry For Misguided Dealers

Criminal law should not punish misguided drug dealers who just want to “put bread on the table,” Attorney General David Lametti said yesterday. Lametti made the comment in defending a cabinet bill to repeal mandatory minimum sentences for cocaine traffickers: "Did you talk to victims’ groups?"

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French Trails Russian & Hindi

French is a fifth or sixth language in provinces west of Québec, says new Census data.  Figures show in the largest English-speaking cities francophones are outnumbered by residents who speak Russian or Hindi: "We know French is on the decline across Canada."

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