Finance Minister François-Philippe Champagne today is repealing a luxury tax on boats and personal aircraft. A separate tax on foreign-owned vacant property is also ending but was never collected in the first place: "Congratulations!"
Tree Scheme Cut After $268M
Cabinet yesterday confirmed it will end its failed Two Billion Trees Program after six years, $267.7 million and the work of 50 federal employees. Then-Environment Minister Catherine McKenna announced the plan in 2019 as a “huge asset.”
Federal Deficit Hits The Roof
Finance Minister François-Philippe Champagne projects the 2025 deficit will be 192 percent higher than forecast but advised Canadians to sleep well tonight. The deficit, originally targeted at $26.8 billion, is now closer to $78.3 billion: "Tonight people will go to bed and say, ‘We’re going to be okay.’
Press Feds For Auto Contracts
The Department of Industry yesterday said it will not release terms of any job guarantees by heavily-subsidized Stellantis without permission of the automaker. Conservative MP Raquel Dancho (Kildonan-St. Paul, Man.) questioned whether the guarantees exist: "The problem is 3,000 people were laid off and your government committed millions and billions of taxpayers’ dollars and we’re trying to understand."
Intercepted Five Railway Cars
Border agents recovered contraband from a total five rail cars last year, new figures show. Nearly two million train cars entered the country. The data followed warnings from the Customs and Immigration Union that smugglers shipping guns or drugs by rail had “almost a zero percent chance” of getting caught: "We don’t really have rail examination."
Tout Electric ‘Health Benefits’
Electric cars reduce medicare costs, says the Department of Environment. Authorities yesterday made the claim at the Commons environment committee but would not put a cash value on specific savings: "Electric vehicles bring health benefits and cost savings."
No Limits On Drug Locations
Health Canada does not require that drug injection sites be located a minimum distance from schools, daycares or playgrounds, according to a departmental report. It was not cabinet’s job, Health Minister Marjorie Michel told MPs: "You are aware they’re next to playgrounds, schools and daycares but you don’t know how many?"
No Kids Here, Say Gamblers
Federal regulation of sports betting ads is unnecessary since “kids aren’t watching television,” says the gaming lobby. A bill mandating federal regulation passed the Senate unanimously and is currently before the Commons: 'It is unnecessary.'
MPs Hit Carney Tax Planning
The Commons finance committee today is expected to open hearings into corporate tax avoidance through offshore accounts. Liberal MPs have called the hearings a bid to “dig dirt” on Prime Minister Mark Carney who benefited from Bermuda tax shelters as chair of Brookfield Asset Management: "They dig dirt on day one."
StatsCan Disciplines 72 Staff
Statistics Canada disciplined 72 employees for misconduct last year including 15 who were fired, according to first-ever disclosure of wrongdoing in the workplace. The agency counted another 21 complaints of harassment and 31 cases of lost or stolen taxpayers’ property, mainly cellphones and laptops: "Everyone is responsible for fostering an ethical workplace."
Finds Suppliers Game System
Unnamed contractors appear to be gaming the federal system by bidding low on tenders with ambiguous wording to take advantage of revisions at escalating costs, says Procurement Ombudsman Alexander Jeglic. He called it “bid low, let it grow.”
Protest Mandatory Beer Label
Small independent brewers face steep costs under a Senate bill mandating cancer labels, says a lobby group. The private bill would compel all packaging to carry warnings of health risks: "I have never met anybody who thought beer was health food."
Threaten Jail For “Denialism”
Canadians face jail for “justifying the Indian Residential School system” under a Commons bill introduced by New Democrat MP Leah Gazan (Winnipeg Centre). The maximum penalty is needed to “end Residential School denialism,” said Gazan.
Poem: ‘Get Tough On China’
Poet Shai Ben-Shalom writes: "A guy bigger than me comes my way..."
Review: Circus But No Big Top
Professor Gene Allen has compiled a history of The Canadian Press from a corporate secretary’s perspective. I didn’t think that was possible. Writing about a newsroom without the people is like writing about the circus without the big top.
Making National News covers ground already ploughed in The Story Of The Canadian Press, a 1948 account by former CP president Mark Nichols of the Winnipeg Tribune. Neither is compelling.
The story of any organization – a newsroom, a box factory, a daycare centre – is the story of humans. Allen, a professor of journalism, appears to miss the point. The result is predictably lifeless. An example is his story of Jack Best.



