Federal employees opposed to a Treasury Board vaccination order yesterday said they are “working furiously” to file legal challenges including numerous union grievances. The Board earlier budgeted $81.9 million to enforce the order but would not say if the figure included legal fees: "Our first course of action will be filing 'cease and desist' letters to our employers."
Immigration Record Topped
The Department of Immigration yesterday said foreign arrivals topped a 108-year record. A target of 401,000 immigrants was surpassed, beating the one-year milestone set in 1913: "This is the most newcomers in a year in Canadian history."
Province Leads In Marijuana
More than 40 percent of New Brunswickers surveyed are daily marijuana users, the highest rate in the country, says federal research. A Department of Health survey also confirmed illegal marijuana dealers lowered prices to undercut retailers licensed under Parliament’s 2018 Cannabis Act: 'To say we’ll legalize marijuana and everything will fall into place, it does not work that way.'
Wife Bought Lockheed Shares
Natural Resources Minister Jonathan Wilkinson yesterday disclosed his wife Tara bought shares in a leading defence contractor five weeks after he was reappointed to cabinet. Mrs. Wilkinson is the most active stock trader of any cabinet spouse with shares in Pfizer, Enbridge and other federally regulated firms: "My spouse has purchased shares in Lockheed Martin Corporation."
Lib MP Shamed For Vacation
A Liberal MP last night was publicly censured for holidaying out of the country. MP Yves Robillard (Marc Aurele-Fortin, Que.) was stripped of committee assignments after ignoring cabinet's plea to avoid non-essential travel: 'It is unfortunate to see politicians not take their own advice.'
Christmas Holiday Renamed
The Federal Court yesterday took Christ out of Christmas. Administrators amended rules to remove reference to Christmas holidays on the Court calendar: "It is a shame that many feel the need to abandon their traditions to appease the sensibilities of non-Christians."
Feds Set Accessibility Clock
Cabinet yesterday began the slow rollout of regulations to remove accessibility barriers in public services. Bill C-81 An Act To Ensure A Barrier-Free Canada passed Parliament two years ago but will not be fully enforced until 2040: "There’s a nebulousness attached to it."
Will Track Advil & Shampoo
The Department of Environment that blacklisted plastic toys as toxic now seeks data on Canadians’ everyday use of toiletries and medicine cabinet items. The research is for “the purpose of protecting the environment and health and well-being of Canadians,” wrote staff.
Senators Seek Record Budget
The Senate proposes a 5.4 percent budget increase this winter, more than the rate of inflation. The hike would see the Senate cost almost $122 million next year, a record: "Those are big numbers."
Cabinet Folds On Plastic Ban
Environment Minister Steven Guilbeault yesterday postponed a threatened national ban on sales of plastic forks and other goods until 2024 at the earliest. Plastic straws blacklisted as an environmental peril may still be sold under the counter at grocery and hardware stores, said Guilbeault’s department: "It’s not a silver bullet to ban, ban, ban."
Got Twice The Minister’s Pay
Public feuding over a six-figure salary paid to a small town doctor is the basis of a defamation case in an Ontario court. The Owen Sound, Ont. physician last year was among the highest paid public health officers in Canada, earning more than twice Health Minister Jean-Yves Duclos: "Why not move to seven figures?"
All Relations “Equally Valid”
The Department of Justice in a report complains “polygamy remains a crime” in Canada and that family law fails to recognize other “equally valid relationship structures.” The remarks are from a newly-published federal research paper: "Biases within the justice system need to be actively uprooted."
Air Bailout Upset Taxpayers
Taxpayers are sharply divided over a federal bailout of Air Canada, says in-house research by the Privy Council Office. Critics questioned why Canadians should have to “assist a failing company.”
Feds Admit Cell Surveillance
The Public Health Agency yesterday disclosed it monitored lockdowns by confidentially tracking 33 million mobile devices. Cell tower locators were used to “understand the public’s responsiveness during lockdown measures,” the Agency said: "The Agency collected and used mobility data."
Another Donor Named Judge
Attorney General David Lametti yesterday named another longtime Liberal Party donor to the bench. The Commons justice committee has declined to investigate Party vetting of judicial appointments: "Our justice minister is one of the most ethical, decent, honest people I’ve ever had the pleasure of working with."



