Fired Over $1.80 In Bread

A grocery store worker fired for “stealing” $1.80 worth of bread at a self-checkout scanner has been ordered reinstated. A Saskatchewan labour arbitrator ruled scanner price codes were so complicated it was not obvious how any customer could figure them out: "The self-checkout process is anything but straightforward."

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Feds Broke Rules, Paid $618M

The Public Health Agency breached federal rules in paying out more than $600 million in cash advances to contractors for rush orders on pandemic supplies, auditors disclosed yesterday. The value of money lost on goods never delivered was not revealed: "These contracts are considered riskier."

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Seek Emails On PM’s Brother

The Commons government operations committee yesterday by a 6-5 vote ordered disclosure of confidential emails regarding a sole-sourced federal contract to the Prime Minister’s half-brother. Kyle Kemper, an Ottawa bitcoin developer, was paid to attend a Swiss conference as a “champion speaker” on behalf of the Government of Canada: "What is the suspicion here?"

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Royal Mint Plays Favourites

The Royal Canadian Mint yesterday deleted Nobel Laureate Frederick Banting from a coin commemorating the discovery of insulin, but honoured James “Skookum Jim” Mason of the Tagish First Nation in a separate coin marking discovery of gold in the Yukon. The decision follows a 2019 cabinet policy to address “colonialism, patriarchy and racism” in historical observances: "This contributes to the ongoing process of truth-telling and reconciliation."

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10-lb Fish Blocks $750M Dock

The future of a proposed $750 million St. Lawrence River container terminal is in doubt after cabinet yesterday banned any work threatening the habitat of a rare fish, the Copper Redhorse. An environmental group threatened to sue if the Port of Montréal expansion proceeds: "It is a wonderful fish."

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Pay Equity’s Too Slow: MPs

Cabinet must eliminate long delays in enforcing a Pay Equity Act passed into law three years ago, an all-party committee of MPs yesterday told Parliament. Enforcement could take until 2026 or later: "This cannot be done overnight."

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Blockades Were Costly Crisis

VIA Rail blames First Nations blockades as well as the pandemic for a record operating loss last year, $415.8 million. “We faced two crises, the blockades and the pandemic,” wrote VIA’s $401,000-a year CEO: "My empathy extends to our passengers."

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Heroin Laws Failed: Senator

The war on drugs has failed, a Liberal Senate appointee last night told the chamber. Senator Gwen Boniface (Ont.), a former Ontario Provincial Police Commissioner, said simple possession of heroin, cocaine, methamphetamine and other drugs should be decriminalized: "We must consider an alternative."

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Won’t Speed Bankruptcy Bill

The Commons industry committee yesterday dismissed a bid to speed a rewrite of federal bankruptcy law. MPs on May 12 gave Second Reading by a 189-139 vote to a private bill granting priority treatment to pensioners in bankruptcy settlements: "I am not elected by banks."

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Seek Drone Traffic Controls

Canada has so many drones it needs a drone air traffic control system, says the Department of Transport. Staff counted 53,000 registered drones nationwide compared to 37,000 licensed aircraft: 'It requires a re-think of how our airspace is managed.'

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MP Told To Remove Button

A Conservative MP yesterday was threatened with expulsion from the Commons for wearing a pro-oil button. House rules forbid props: "Remove that button."

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992,000 Covid Files Concealed

The Privy Council Office is concealing hundreds of thousands of records on pandemic mismanagement, the Commons health committee was told. Disclosure of a few records to date detail favouritism in contracting and attempts to hide supply shortages: "Who in government is responsible?"

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Reveal Plague Of Drug Thefts

The Department of Health receives an average 100 reports a day of opioids lost or stolen from pharmacies nationwide, says an internal audit. The department had a backlog of 20,000 reports it failed to track, and no idea of the volume of drugs diverted to the black market: "I’m dumbfounded the system could allow that much loss and not do anything about it."

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Covid Cost Gas Tax Millions

Pandemic stay-home orders and lockdowns were so widespread it cost the federal treasury more than two-third of a billion in lost gas taxes, according to finance department accounts. Fuel tax revenue will remain “well below expected GDP growth” for years to come, wrote staff: "Revenues are projected to fall by 12 percent."

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Cannabis Use Up On Campus

University students are now three times more likely to smoke legal marijuana than tobacco, says Public Health Agency research. New data follow studies that marijuana use among teenagers was declining prior to Parliament’s 2018 legalization of cannabis: "There is a difference between ‘I shared a joint at a party last weekend’ and using marijuana every day."

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