Finance Minister Bill Morneau yesterday said cabinet is ready to ‘roll up its sleeves’ on the Trans Mountain Pipeline expansion project. The Federal Court of Appeal yesterday rejected a challenge by six Indigenous groups of federal licensing for the oil pipeline: "Do you expect backlash?"
Senate Suspension Is Certain
Senators yesterday expressed unanimous approval to again suspend Senator Lynn Beyak without her $153,900-a year salary for conduct unbecoming a legislator. A formal vote expected as early as this afternoon will make Beyak the first senator in Canadian history to be suspended twice: "Racism has no place within the institution of the Senate."
Confirmed Serious Bullying
A federal agency, the National Capital Commission, confirms a case of office bullying so severe it prompted a complete review of its Code Of Conduct. A private investigator was hired in the case: "Employees constantly strive to achieve excellence."
Cost Overruns ‘No Surprise’
The Department of Finance yesterday acknowledged taxpayers will see cost over-runs on the Trans Mountain Pipeline. “Costs tend to go up over time,” Associate Assistant Deputy Finance Minister Evelyn Dancey told the Commons finance committee. “I would not be surprised if that’s the direction based on the delays and so on.”
Media Registry “Confusing”
Heritage Minister Steven Guilbeault yesterday distanced cabinet from a federal report recommending the licensing of internet news media. “Who should have a license?” asked a reporter. “We will have to wait until I table the bill,” replied Guilbeault.
Bill Co’s For Plastics Cleanup
Federal regulators have privately polled Canadians on whether to charge companies for clean-up of plastics. In-house focus groups commissioned by the Privy Council Office asked: 'How would you feel about legislation to make companies responsible for damage?'
Gov’t Hiked Ad Budget 49%
Federal agencies hiked pre-election advertising last year by 49 percent, says a Treasury Board report. Spending on Canadian newspaper and magazine ads increased but remains a fraction of ad buys with Facebook, Google and other U.S. social media corporations: "It seems to be going south."
Spent $3.1M On Pharmacare
The Department of Health has spent $3.1 million to date on an unannounced pharmacare plan, according to records. Most spending went for production of a 2019 report that recommended Parliament offer free life-saving medication like cancer drugs by 2022: "These figures are approximations."
Probe Targets Chemical Firms
Federal anti-trust investigators have opened a mammoth probe of the nation’s largest farm chemical manufacturers accused of targeting a start-up discounter. Records in the case include an email from a Winnipeg executive with Univar Canada Ltd. who wrote suppliers: “If anyone thinks socialism is going to feed the world just call Russia.”
Tax Cut Worth $90 This Year
A federal tax cut billed as significant savings for middle-class Canadians is worth $90 this year, the equivalent of $1.73 a week, says the Parliamentary Budget Office. Prosperity Minister Mona Fortier suggested taxpayers use the proceeds to buy food: "Buy healthy food, send kids to camp."
Senator Talked Back In Class
The Senate ethics committee recommends Senator Lynn Beyak be suspended again for talking back in sensitivity training class. Beyak was awarded an Indigenous Awareness certificate but remained a poor student, said an instructor: 'I want to move forward and not be stuck in the past.'
Orders Water Bottle Boycott
Environment Minister Jonathan Wilkinson has told department employees to lead by example on plastic waste by boycotting bottled water. Records show other federal departments bought water by the caseload: "More needs to be done within government."
Lawyers A “Violence Risk”
The Department of Justice has hired consultants at $166,337 to conduct internal “violence risk assessments” among staff. Attorney General David Lametti told the Commons the investigations involved lawyers’ offices in two cities: 'There was a workplace violence complaint.'
Asian Jibes No Cause To Fire
A federal labour arbitrator has overturned the firing of an Air Canada flight attendant for hurtful remarks to an Asian coworker. The words were unpleasant but not worth termination, said the ruling: "You must live in Markham."
Book Review: High Noon At Lakeside
One day in 2004 two co-workers – one black, one white – had an unpleasant physical alteration at a slaughterhouse in Brooks, Alta. The black man was fired. About 200 Sudanese employees protested the wrongful dismissal. “Management told them, go back to your jobs or we’ll fire you,” one witness recalled. They refused. Sixty were fired.
The incident set in motion an extraordinary series of events documented in Defying Expectations by Prof. Jason Foster of Athabasca University. Foster is a former policy director with the Alberta Federation of Labour, and a skillful writer whose account reads like a screenplay. The Brooks plant was the least promising candidate for a union drive anywhere in Canada. Merely posting an NDP lawn sign was an act of bravura.



