Federal grant agencies promise to “improve equity, diversity and inclusion” after a Canada Research Chair complained affirmative action discriminates against men. The Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council called the views of a Brock University professor deplorable: "Preferential treatment of one group leads to disadvantages for another."
Never Heard Of $1.5B Plan
Cabinet’s signature ecological program remains little known though it was launched four years ago with a promised $1.5 billion in funding. “Relatively few Canadians have heard of the Oceans Protection Plan,” researchers wrote in a report for the Department of Transport.
Pandemic Costs Post $66M
Canada Post lost $66 million in the first quarter of the year despite record spring shipments of parcels. The Crown corporation earlier blamed “fierce” competition from Amazon Canada: "The financial impact of Covid-19 is unknown."
Bid You Happy Canada Day
Blacklock's pauses for the Canada Day observance to wish all friends and subscribers a happy First of July. We're back tomorrow -- The Editor
Railway Loses $373,000 Daily
First Nations blockades and pandemic travel bans have cost VIA Rail more than a third of a million dollars a day, says management. The Crown railway predicted it could be headed for a record deficit this year: "It’s almost been impossible to get a handle on what is happening."
Zero Evidence Of Interference
A federal agency yesterday confirmed there was no foreign meddling in the 2019 campaign despite cabinet fears that Russian agents and fake news operatives would disrupt the vote. The finding came as a cabinet minister again claimed “trolls and bots” make the internet unsafe: "Can you elaborate on specific examples?"
Grant Promise Not ‘Finalized’
The Department of Finance says it is still finalizing a pandemic program for children though Prime Minister Justin Trudeau announced it three months ago. Trudeau in a TV message to Canadian youth said: “Whoever you are, whatever you need, we’re here for you.”
Predict Only 1 in 10 Infected
Chief Public Health Officer Dr. Theresa Tam yesterday said fewer than one in ten Canadians will contract Covid-19 but would not release modeling data used to justify the forecast. One epidemiologist described the claim as “unscientific rubbish”.
Not My Fault, Says Minister
Provinces are to blame for failing to stock up on pandemic supplies, says Health Minister Patricia Hajdu. Testifying at the Senate social affairs committee, Hajdu said the Public Health Agency "isn't really in the business” of maintaining a national stockpile though Parliament created the Agency in 2004 specifically for pandemic preparedness: "What went wrong?"
Senator Under Medical Order
A Nova Scotia senator has missed a year’s work with pay under doctor's orders. Senator Dan Christmas was unable to work after his wife died seven months ago, a spokesperson said: 'It was ordered by his physician.'
Big Waiver On Raw Sewage
Environment Minister Jonathan Wilkinson is granting municipalities a twenty-year waiver to keep dumping raw sewage in fish habitat. The regulatory notice follows a 2019 promise to “keep our waters safe, clean and well-managed”.
Claim Heat Deaths, No Data
The Department of Environment predicts extreme heat will become a killer due to climate change, though data show more Canadians die in winter than summer. An earlier questionnaire of physicians nationwide concluded extreme heat is a rare problem: "They don’t consider it to be an issue."
Second Wave Is “Very Real”
The likelihood of a second, more severe wave of coronavirus infection is “reasonable” as the economy reopens, says the nation’s chief public health officer. Federal researchers predict as many as seventy percent of Canadians may become infected before the pandemic runs its course: "What is your plan?"
“Astronaut In Rideau Hall”
Poet Shai Ben-Shalom, an Israeli-born biologist, examines current events in the Blacklock’s tradition each and every Sunday: “The Governor General could go easy on those who prefer astrology, alternative medicine, or biblical stories, over facts and reason…”
Auditors Target U.S. Property
The Canada Revenue Agency yesterday said it will review six years’ worth of U.S. real estate transactions in a hunt for Canadians with unreported income. Auditors will examine “current and historical records”, the Agency said: "Penalties and interest associated with unreported real estate sales can be substantial."



