‘I Deeply Respect The Senate’

Senator Lynn Beyak yesterday said she attended mandatory sensitivity training in a bid to avert expulsion from the Chamber. Beyak, a former Rainy River, Ont. realtor, was suspended last May 9 without pay on complaints she posted racist mail on her website: 'I look forward to working hard for all the people."

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Pay $4,000 For Turban Gibe

An unhappy Bell Canada customer has been ordered to pay $4,000 in damages over a salty exchange with a customer service agent. The Québec Human Rights Tribunal said the man “suddenly exploded” when the agent identified himself as Mohamed: "Take your bags and go."

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Demand A 50¢ Carbon Tax

A pro-carbon tax group with ties to the Department of Environment yesterday urged Parliament to quadruple the charge to fifty cents a litre for gasoline. The current tax cap of 12¢ a litre will not meet emissions targets, said the Ecofiscal Commission: "This will be insufficient."

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No Duty Of Care At CRA

A tax preparer that waged a decades-old feud with the Canada Revenue Agency over a “duty of care” has been ordered to pay $675,000 in court costs. Prosecutors filed, then dropped fraud charges against the firm: "There is no such thing as a perfect investigation."

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Canadians Would Erase PMs

Most Canadians want portraits of prime ministers removed from banknotes, according to in-house research by the Bank of Canada. The bank has issued bills depicting dead prime ministers for eighty-four years: 'Great Canadians from other fields should be featured.'

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Rail Service Resumed At 6 am

Canadian National Railway Co. today resumed regular freight service at 6 am local time in cities nationwide following an eight-day national rail strike. It was the first shutdown of its kind in seven years. Transport Minister Marc Garneau said Parliament would not be compensating shippers for losses: "It's part of life."

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Memo’s Hateful: U.S. Scholar

A declassified Department of Justice memo claiming to explain root causes of anti-Semitism cites language never used by postwar German prosecutors, says a Brown University scholar. Staff declined comment on the secret 1987 memo by the department’s war crimes unit that pointed to Jewish “financial power” and “the image of the ‘Jew-Communist’.”

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Gov’t To Go Easy On Fines

Federal regulators in Access To Information memos say they will “use discretion” in enforcing contentious new animal welfare rules that take effect February 20, 2020. Farmers and truckers are liable for up to $50,000 in fines for harm to livestock and poultry in transport: "It is a contentious topic."

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Uphold Sticky Note Citation

A federal labour board has upheld the one-day suspension of a Statistics Canada analyst upset over a sticky note. “The employer had the burden of proving that the incident took place,” wrote an adjudicator: "Come and see me right away."

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$26.6M In Legal Fees OK’d

A federal judge yesterday approved a billion-dollar settlement of sexual harassment claims by ex-military that will see assault victims receive a maximum $150,000 in compensation. Fees for five law firms that handled the case total $26,560,000: 'The legal fees are fair and reasonable.'

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Jarring Memo On Holocaust

The Department of Justice in a jarring memo claimed European anti-Semitism was fueled in part by “incontrovertible” evidence of Jewish “financial power”. The 1987 memo marked secret was released by the national archives through Access To Information. The department had no comment: "We knew even in 1987 those are loaded terms."

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Post Office Conceals Payout

Canada Post will not disclose the cost of a decades-old pay equity claim for fear it “could be prejudicial” to the Crown corporation. Management settled last May 12 with the Canadian Postmasters and Assistants Association in a dispute dating from 1992: "Information will not be provided."

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$114K For Drug Suspension

Alberta’s Human Rights Tribunal has awarded a Calgary millwright more than $100,000 in damages and back pay after he was suspended for failing a drug test. “Human rights damages are on the rise,” said the Tribunal.

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Press Endorsements Okay

A national press ombudsman has rejected complaints over newspaper editors’ campaign endorsements, calling it an old election tradition. One federal study found few voters recall endorsements: "About two-thirds of the voters interviewed had no idea."

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Quiet On Back-To-Work Bill

Transport Minister Marc Garneau yesterday would not confirm cabinet is drafting back-to-work legislation to end a national rail strike. Parliament forced an end to six previous rail shutdowns dating from 1950: "We are convinced there is a solution."

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