There are no valid statistical studies confirming the number of green jobs in Canada, says the Department of Natural Resources. The admission followed cabinet claims of hundreds of thousands of jobs, and Minister Seamus O’Regan’s pledge to subsidize any green project, “anything really.”
Feds Poll On Western Unrest
Cabinet polled Prairie focus groups on Western alienation just days before appointing Winnipeg Liberal MP Jim Carr as the Prime Minister’s “voice in the West,” records show. Research indicated perceptions ranged from indifference in Manitoba to anger in Alberta: "Provide three words that would best describe the current relationship."
S.I.N. Card Is For Life: Judge
Social Insurance Numbers are assigned for life, says a federal judge. The ruling came in the case of a tax protester who petitioned to have his number deleted from a federal database that stores every SIN card issued since 1964: "Information is updated as required."
Must Buy Private Insurance
Employers who hire migrant labour will be required to provide workers private health insurance, according to a cabinet proposal. Changes to the Temporary Foreign Worker Program would also mandate that employers post labour regulations in the migrants’ own language: 'They have the same rights as Canadians.'
Review: With Fame Comes Caricature
Newfoundland & Labrador has per capita the greatest literary output of any province, producing a stream of wonderful novels and non-fiction accounts of island life. There were only 22 members in Premier Joey Smallwood’s 1949 Liberal caucus, but two of them – Herbert Pottle and Harold Horwood – wrote memoirs that rate among the most candid, insightful and intelligent depictions of Canadian political life.
With fame comes caricature. Newfoundlanders and Labradorians are long accustomed to being depicted as quaint, funny, hard-drinking bumpkins. In Most Of What Follows Is True, poet Michael Crummey of St. John’s laments the literary misrepresentation of his home province. Crummey has the self-awareness to note this has the ring of the Congolese bushman who protests that National Geographic photography expropriated part of his soul, but the complaint stands nonetheless. His target is a certain U.S. novel that “caused me to foam at the mouth,” says Crummey.
Fed Agency Holds Shares In Chinese Propaganda Movies
The Canada Pension Plan Investment Board holds millions’ worth of stock in Chinese propaganda film studios even after the Commons censured China for genocide, accounts show. The Board five years ago had claimed to make human rights a “focus area of concern” when investing Canadians’ money: "This is our great homeland."
Would Purge “Colonial” B.C.
A federally-subsidized history society in a published commentary says British Columbia should be renamed to purge its colonial past. “It’s not British; it never was,” Canada’s National History Society wrote in the August issue of its taxpayer-funded periodical: "These names direct us to a history of bloodshed and violence."
Candidates Must Be Masked
Candidates in an expected Covid election must campaign with masks on, Canada’s chief public health officer said yesterday. Dr. Theresa Tam said even candidates who are fully vaccinated should be masked in the company of strangers: "Is it safe to do this right now?"
‘I Don’t Have Disorder’: MP
Liberal MP Will Amos (Pontiac, Que.) says he consulted a psychotherapist after being censured by the Commons June 7 for misconduct. “The assessments from my health team suggest I don’t have any mental health disorder,” Amos told local Québec reporters in a videoconference from his constituency office: "My new wellness plan specifically addresses stress."
Electrics Aren’t For Everyone
Most Canadians looking at federal rebates to buy an electric car have six-figure incomes and university degrees, says in-house research by the Privy Council Office. The Commons environment committee in a report on the plug-in auto market acknowledged zero emission vehicles remain out of reach for many: "Tesla has received the most subsidies from this program."
Spent $4M On Failed Supplier
Federal agencies pumped millions worth of subsidies into a failing Covid contractor even as the company was headed for bankruptcy court, accounts show. Spartan Bioscience Inc. of Ottawa received the aid after “good meetings” with aides in the Prime Minister’s Office: "We are in good shape."
Aid To China Is Little Known
Few Canadians, only four percent, are aware Canada is still sending foreign aid to China, according to a Department of Foreign Affairs survey. Millions in aid last year included money for local Chinese projects on “empowerment” and “environmental justice.”
Ex-President Forgot To File
Kristina Namiesniowski, the former Public Health Agency president abruptly reassigned following the outbreak of the pandemic, has been formally reprimanded for late ethics filings. Cabinet transferred Namiesniowski to another $273,700-a year post as associate deputy minister in the Department of Employment: "I need a break."
Set Clock On Pay Equity Act
Labour Minister Filomena Tassi yesterday set the clock on enforcement of pay equity for federally-regulated private sector employers. Companies have until August 31, 2024 to draft equity plans, and up to five additional years to adjust wages for women: "I would love to have seen this corrected overnight."
‘No Such Thing As Lousy Job’
Too many professional people filing for bankruptcy consider ordinary labour “beneath them,” says a Nova Scotia adjudicator. The Court quoted Ayn Rand: “There is no such thing as a lousy job, only lousy men who don’t care to do it.”



