Cabinet yesterday threatened airlines with $25,000 fines for allowing anyone, including citizens, to return to Canada without proof they are Covid-free. Even air passengers who’ve been vaccinated cannot enter the country without a negative test, said Transport Minister Marc Garneau: "Our country must continue to function."
Plan National Shelter Survey
A national count of homeless Canadians, the most comprehensive to date, is proposed for March and April. A 2020 survey was cancelled due to the coronavirus: "Many municipalities had to postpone their counts."
Minister Escapes Disapproval
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau yesterday said he was disappointed in politicians who ignore bans on non-essential travel, but stopped short of censuring his own health minister. Patricia Hajdu repeatedly jetted home for weekends in Thunder Bay after advising the public to limit their travel to buying groceries: "We are all in this together."
Launch Refit Program By July
The Department of Natural Resources yesterday said it will take homeowners’ applications by July 1 under a multi-billion dollar national refit program. A similar program was cancelled in 2012 over costs: "The program will last for a period of six years."
Rejected 82% Of Applications
Eight in ten applications for Canada 150 grants were rejected after cabinet changed the rules, says a newly-released audit. Criteria for funding were so confusing even the Minister of Tourism couldn’t recite them: "We only get to do it one time."
Feds Fail Veterans On Hiring
Less than half of one percent of new federal employees hired last year were medically released veterans despite a 2015 law mandating priority hiring of ex-army, navy and air force members. The Public Service Commission noted the low compliance rate came amid a ten-year hiring boom: 'They served our country.'
Gov’t To Fix Pandemic Bill
Cabinet yesterday said it will veto pandemic relief payments to sun holidayers but did not explain if it must rewrite legislation. A bill passed by Parliament October 2 allows returning vacationers to claim $1,000 while under two weeks’ quarantine: "It doesn't make any sense."
Concealed $123K From MPs
Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation buried a six-figure “re-branding” expense in its budget and lied about it at parliamentary hearings. The federal insurer contradicted testimony by its own CEO Evan Siddall over money spent on a new name for the corporation: "Can you tell me how much?"
Contradict Carbon Tax Claim
Canadians paid millions more in carbon taxes than they received in rebates, newly-released data show. Figures contradict claims by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau that households “actually get more money” under the program: "How is that possible?"
Order 2M Kits Before Testing
Health Minister Patricia Hajdu approved orders for 1,920,000 failed Covid-19 test kits without first finding out if they worked, according to internal records. A total 5,500 kits from Spartan Bioscience Inc. of Ottawa were initially delivered before regulators discovered the devices failed clinical trials: "Many businesses put up their hand and asked us what they can do."
No, No, No Profit On Award
A Liberal MP says he never profited from investments in a company that received a half-million, sole-sourced federal contract. “No, no and no,” said MP Sean Casey (Charlottetown) when asked if he was aware of the contract, or played any role in its award.
Wasn’t Us, Says Rideau Hall
Rideau Hall yesterday said it played no role in censoring a newspaper column critical of Governor General Julie Payette. The weekly Hill Times, a subsidized federal contractor, said it deleted, revised then republished the column due to “negative feedback.”
Brother’s Firm Paid $508,732
The Department of Agriculture is awarding a sole-sourced contract for “cultural literacy” to a company led by Victor Tootoo, brother of a former Liberal cabinet minister. Tootoo’s firm has received seventeen federal contracts in four years: "It is believed no other organizations have the experience."
“Charities Are Being Used…”
Revenue Minister Diane Lebouthillier has quietly expanded audits on charities after publicly condemning the practice under a previous Conservative cabinet as harassment. “Charities are being used,” the Canada Revenue Agency wrote in Access To Information memos.
Warehoused 8km Of Records
The national archives has warehoused thousands of donated treasures without looking at them, says an auditors’ report. The backlog of unprocessed boxes laid end to end would run to eight kilometres: "It represents 8.34 kilometres of material."



