Dr. Tam Failed Us, MPs Told

Mismanagement of pandemic supplies by the Public Health Agency of Canada was “my worst nightmare”, a senior advisor to a 2003 SARS Commission said yesterday. Chief public health officer Dr. Theresa Tam failed in her legal duty to stockpile masks, the Commons health committee was told: "They weren't ready."

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Found Sweetheart Contracts

A federal audit has uncovered sweetheart contracting in the Department of Fisheries, including cases where “winning bidders and evaluators were former colleagues”. Procurement Ombudsman Alexander Jeglic cited numerous irregularities in the department that awarded more than half a billion in contracts over the past two years: "There were six cases where the department appears to have manipulated the number of bidders invited to bid."

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China Mills Pollute In Canada

The Department of Environment says mills and factories in East Asia – it would not identify China by name – account for most airborne mercury pollution in Canada. Chinese mines, mills and factories were blamed for high mercury deposits at remote Canadian lakes and mountains: "97% of mercury deposited in Canada as a result of human activities originates outside the country."

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Press Advisors’ Record On Bias: “We Need Justin….”

Two cabinet advisors hired to vet press applications for millions in federal subsidies made anti-Opposition remarks and publicly ridiculed editorial standards at a newspaper that endorsed Conservatives in past elections. One appointee, Professor Karim Karim of Ottawa, in a Twitter comment said Stephen Harper played the politics of hate: “No, I do not see a problem.”

Agency Too China-Friendly

Federally-funded research says the World Health Organization was too quick to praise China and “created confusion” over the true peril of Covid-19. The study was financed by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research: "China’s actions were praised on multiple occasions by the WHO without scientific background."

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Blasphemy Not Our Business

Taking the Lord’s name in vain is not Parliament’s business, says a justice department Access To Information memo. Parliament in 2018 repealed a law on criminal blasphemy last used to prosecute distributors of a 1979 Monty Python film: "It stems from an antiquated perception that an attack on Christianity was an attack on government."

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McD Wins Food Poison Case

McDonald’s Restaurants of Canada has won $500 in costs from a customer who claimed he was poisoned by an Egg McMuffin. Evidence included data on McMuffin sales from clients who did not become violently ill: "Symptoms may have been triggered by dehydration related to gastroenteritis or food poisoning."

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Agency Offers Sex Advice

People seeking casual sex should avoid bars and consider meeting outdoors, says the Public Health Agency of Canada. Federal epidemiologists made the remarks under questioning by a women’s magazine at a Parliament Hill briefing on the pandemic: "Is there any way for single people hoping to have sex this summer to do so safely?"

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Frequent Flyer Billed $50,283

A federal prison manager billed more than $50,000 in travel expenses in the past year, according to records. Costs by Deputy Commissioner France Gratton included thousands to stay in a furnished suite on “temporary assignment” in Saskatoon even after cabinet ordered Canadians to stay home: "Enough is enough."

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Stop Cop-Bashing: Senator

Black Lives Matter demonstrators are wrongly stereotyping police who are “the finest people you will ever meet”, Senator Bev Busson (B.C.) said yesterday. The former RCMP Commissioner lamented what she called a “wave of hatred” against law enforcement: "I cannot stay silent any longer."

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Judge Strikes Fed Drug Law

A federal judge has struck a drug consumers’ protection regulation that was to take effect January 1. Seventeen pharmaceutical companies successfully challenged a cabinet order intended to lower costs of medication through the Patented Medicine Prices Review Board: "The Board does not regulate profits."

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Burn Oil ‘For Years To Come’

Canada will rely on oil and gas for “years to come”, says the Department of Employment. Staff in a report said the oil industry remains “fundamental” even as cabinet subsidizes electric cars and taxes carbon: "You could try to stop using fossil fuel but that’s impossible."

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Grants OK’d Months Later

The Department of Health yesterday said pandemic funding for children’s counseling will “begin to flow shortly” three months after it was announced by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau. No reason was given for the delay: "Kids tell us something they would not have told anyone else."

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Bit Of Navy History Scrapped

A piece of Canadian naval history is being scrapped. HMCS Cormorant forty years ago was the first ship in the fleet with a co-ed crew, and is now designated a pollution risk after rotting at its moorings in Bridgewater, N.S.: "It’s still there."

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Epic Tax Claim Goes To Trial

A Canadian Pacific Railway claim that it’s exempt from income tax is prompting the Federal Court to review reports on 140 years’ worth of tax records. A judge noted expert testimony will have to do since there are no surviving witnesses to an 1880 contract: "There are no fact witnesses to events that occurred nearly a century and a half ago."

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