Paul Glover, the $273,000-a year head of a federal IT agency, yesterday said his work was so secretive he couldn't comment on his own news releases. Glover invoked national security in refusing to tell Parliament the location of government data centres until MPs pointed out the street addresses were searchable on Google: "Are you serious?"
Decree “Government Vision”
Heritage Minister Steven Guilbeault in a draft order to federal regulators says enforcement of a YouTube censorship bill must comply with “the government’s vision” of internet content. Scofflaws are punishable by $15 million fines: "What you can’t change you desperately try to control."
Paid $925K To Delete A Word
CMHC spent nearly a million dollars to delete the word “mortgage” from its name, Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation. Staff in internal emails enthused the marketing exercise “gave them chills” and wanted to celebrate with champagne, according to Access To Information records disclosed yesterday by the Canadian Taxpayers Federation: "I wish we could pop open some bubbly together!"
MPs Vote To End Port Strike
The Commons this morning at 1:56 am passed a rush bill to end a strike at the Port of Montréal. Labour Minister Filomena Tassi claimed striking longshoremen were preventing delivery of life-saving pandemic supplies, though a Liberal MP clarified the union had offered to unload medical goods."The impact of this is grave."
Hands Off Plastics, Says Alta.
A proposal to ban single-use plastics is federal overreach, Alberta Energy Minister Sonya Savage yesterday told the Commons environment committee. Cabinet has no say over local waste management, said Savage: "This approach we believe intrudes into provincial jurisdiction."
Dep’t Fails Expenses Audit
Auditors are citing Canadian diplomats for billing unexplained moving expenses including business class flights and cash for “house hunting trips.” The Department of Foreign Affairs spends $36.9 million a year on staff moves: "Expenditures were not reasonable."
8.8M Masks, Gloves Thrown Away: “A National Scandal”
Health Minister Patricia Hajdu’s department threw away millions of dollars' worth of pandemic masks, gloves and other crucial supplies prior to the outbreak of Covid-19, officials disclosed yesterday. The Public Health Agency concealed the information for over a year, claiming national security. The MP who requested the disclosure said Agency mismanagement raised questions of criminal liability: "24,000 people died."
Defends YouTube Censorship
Heritage Minister Steven Guilbeault yesterday defended an abrupt policy change in support of censoring YouTube videos. Cabinet last Friday had MPs on the Commons heritage committee vote to regulate YouTube under the Broadcasting Act despite an earlier pledge to let “user-generated content” alone: "It is all about restricting content that ‘undermines social cohesion,’ but what does that even mean?"
OK’d $6M In China Contracts
Federal departments and agencies awarded $5.8 million in contracts to China suppliers last year even as Chinese jailers held Canadians in arbitrary detention, records show. It was “business as usual,” said an MP who sought the figures: "It is wrong."
Green “Savings” Cost Double
A federal “cost savings” program to electrify transit will see vehicles purchased at double the cost of conventional buses, data show. Infrastructure Minister Catherine McKenna launched the program March 4 on a promise of savings: "We’re tackling climate change."
Excess Profits Tax Worth $8B
A 30 percent tax on excess profits for large companies that saw pandemic gains would raise $7,947,000,000, the Parliamentary Budget Office said yesterday. The figures were sought by New Democrats who advocate what leader Jagmeet Singh called a “pandemic profiteering tax.”
Threaten $100K A Day Fines
Labour Minister Filomena Tassi yesterday introduced a rushed bill ordering striking Montréal longshoreman back to work under threat of $100,000-a day fines. Tassi called it “a matter of life and death.”
Holds Stock In Gas Company
Environment Minister Jonathan Wilkinson yesterday disclosed his wife Tara owns stock in one of Canada’s largest gas companies. Wilkinson has repeatedly invoked the couple’s school-age daughters in justifying federal climate change programs, but omitted mention of family shares in Enbridge Inc.: "It is something we must take action on in the short term if we want to leave a livable planet for our kids."
Won’t Regulate Whole Web
Cabinet is not interested in “regulating all of the internet,” the parliamentary secretary for Canadian heritage said yesterday. Remarks by Liberal MP Julie Dabrusin (Toronto-Danforth) followed a heritage committee vote to control YouTube content: "Should the government restrict access to the internet and social media to combat the spread of misinformation?"
Demand Speedy Strike Ban
Cabinet is seeking Parliament’s quick passage of a back-to-work bill to end a longshoremen’s strike at the Port of Montréal. A bill will be introduced today in the Commons: "The Port’s activities cannot be stopped. We need the Port."



