Cabinet cannot risk censure for concealing We Charity documents for fear of losing control of Parliament, a Liberal MP said last night. MP Julie Dzerowicz (Davenport, Ont.) made the remarks as Liberals continued a three-week filibuster against disclosure: "It's unpredictable."
Privacy Office ‘Dysfunctional’
Privacy Commissioner Daniel Therrien spent four years and assigned seven investigators to a cursory review of a privacy complaint, records show. The complainant, a retired policeman, described Therrien’s office as slow and dysfunctional: 'If I conducted investigations the same way they did I would have been charged.'
Judge Tosses Suit Against MP
A British Columbia judge has dismissed a lawsuit against an MP as a waste of Court time. Litigation is not “some sort of megaphone for indignation or therapy for hurt feelings”, said the Court: 'It is not a soapbox to complain.'
No Doctor’s Note Required
Labour Minister Filomena Tassi yesterday rewrote rules to save federally-regulated employees from having to get a doctor’s note in claiming unpaid sick leave. Tassi did not comment, but acknowledged in a regulatory notice that employers protested the change: "Of course we believe Canadians are honest."
Agency Halts Computer Sales
No state secrets were disclosed in the inadvertent sale of encrypted hard drives to a used equipment dealer, the Communications Security Establishment said yesterday. The foreign spy agency said no one was fired for the security breach, but that it's halted all resale of used computers: "We now physically destroy our electronic assets."
$400K For Senate Video Votes
The Senate spent more than $400,000 to hold videoconference sittings including free computers for members, the chamber was told yesterday. Total costs of so-called hybrid meetings were not disclosed: "It is money well spent."
‘What Is Average Wait Time?’
The Department of Veterans Affairs yesterday said it will take at least until 2022 to eliminate a lengthy backlog of benefit claims by disabled veterans. Officials testifying at the Commons veterans affairs committee could not estimate current average wait times: "There are a variety."
Plastics Ban “A Fight”: Exec
Cabinet appears to have skewed data to justify tighter regulation of consumer plastics, an industry executive said yesterday. MPs have yet to open hearings on a proposed ban of six products and blacklisting of plastics as toxic under the Canadian Environmental Protection Act: "We find ourselves in a fight with our own federal government."
Wants Teeth In Regulations
Federal agencies that breach contracting rules should have to pay the true cost of compensation to suppliers, Procurement Ombudsman Alexander Jeglic said yesterday. Current rules limit damages to a few thousand dollars: "At times like these, Canadians must be assured their government is exercising responsible stewardship over public funds."
Gov’t Shelves 1985 Sales Plan
The Department of Public Works has quietly shelved a longstanding plan to sell the last federally-owned bridges, roads and dams nationwide. No buyers could be found after a thirty-five year search, wrote auditors: "There is currently no market demand."
Gov’t Auctioned Secret Data
Canada’s foreign spy agency unwittingly auctioned federal secrets at a computer equipment sale. Access To Information records withheld four years disclosed the Communications Security Establishment only learned of the security breach when the buyer of discounted hard drives reported the fact: "Do you guys actually open up the computers and check?"
MPs Give Up On Family Fees
The Commons ethics committee by a 7-3 vote yesterday blocked disclosure of contractors’ fees paid to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s brother and mother. MPs had sought the records since July 22 but gave up following a lengthy government filibuster: "We safeguard the privacy of Canadians regardless of what the context is."
House Orders File Disclosure, MP Baylis Contracts Are Next
The Commons by a 176-152 vote yesterday ordered the health department to surrender by December 7 a trove of records on pandemic mismanagement. Liberal MPs balked at further disclosures regarding contracts awarded to a former caucus member’s company: "Frank Baylis is a significant issue."
Pledge More Electric Rebates
The Department of Transport yesterday said it’s considering more subsidies to promote electric car sales though data on existing buyers are unknown. One MP said federal rebates on vehicles worth up to $55,000 including options appeared to benefit luxury car shoppers: "Taxpayers are essentially underwriting a luxury purchase."
Lift Rule On Small Biz Loans
Cabinet after months of petitions yesterday said it will rewrite a small business aid program for operators who never opened a commercial account at their bank. The Department of Finance had claimed the technical exclusion was intended to prevent mob fronts from applying for interest-free loans: "It provides protection against abuse by organized crime."



