Energy Bills Stay As Is: Feds

Cabinet yesterday said it will not rewrite two contentious energy bills passed by Parliament last June 20. One measure is currently the target of a constitutional challenge in the Alberta Court of Appeal: "Look, the legislation is now in force."

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Complaint Took Ten Years

Federal judges have sharply criticized the Office of the Information Commissioner for a ten-year delay in processing an Access To Information complaint. “The administrative procedure in question constitutes a gross and outrageous abuse,” said the Federal Court of Appeal.

VIA Rail Redefines “Late”

VIA Rail in Access To Information records indicates one commuter train ran late 173 business days in a row though management claims on-time performance of seventy to eighty percent. The Crown railway yesterday did not comment on its definition of punctuality: "Passengers want to be on time."

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Supreme Court Is Too Drafty

The Department of Public Works yesterday placed a rush order for new windows at the Supreme Court of Canada, though the building will undergo a billion-dollar refit in 2023. The Court did not comment: "We like working here."

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See Quick End To Rail Strike

Transport Minister Marc Garneau yesterday predicted a quick end to a three-day national strike at Canadian National Railways. “We think there is a possible solution,” said Garneau: "I’m not going to predict whether it’s hours, days."

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Gov’t Cites CBC ‘Disruption’

A federal review of the Broadcasting Act must address industry complaints over the CBC and Canadian content rules, says an Access To Information memo from the Department of Heritage. “The Canadian broadcasting system continues to experience significant disruption,” wrote staff.

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Failed Probe Cost $1,320,000

The Competition Bureau yesterday would not disclose total cost of its failed anti-trust investigation of the Vancouver Airport Authority. Expenses included $1.32 million in legal costs paid to airport managers falsely targeted with anti-trust allegations: "Who did what?"

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Feds Fine First Nation $100K

Environment Canada has pressed a $100,00 fine against a First Nation for breach of federal green laws. Saskatchewan’s Big River First Nation pleaded financial hardship, though Court records showed it had a surplus of $1.2 million: '$100,000 would not cause hardship.'

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Rail Strike Tests Parliament

New Democrats yesterday vowed to oppose any measure to speed back-to-work legislation to end a national rail strike. The walkout by 3,200 Teamsters is the first to confront a minority Parliament in forty-six years: "These workers have serious concerns."

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Charity Healer Fined $29K

A spiritual healer with a federal charity has been fined $29,000 for practicing medicine without a license. The Québec church remains listed by the Canada Revenue Agency as a registered charitable organization: "I feel it. There is really something happening."

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Sweetheart Contracts Found

Auditors have uncovered common breaches of federal contracting rules by the National Research Council. Favoured contractors received work without having to bid for it, including six-figure deals divvied up in small, piecemeal invoices in an improper practice called contract splitting: "One of the central principles of federal contracting is openness."

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Lost $257K On Credit Curbs

A homebuyer who blamed new federal mortgage rules for knocking eighteen percent off the value of his house has lost a claim for damages in Ontario Superior Court. Cabinet from 2016 introduced credit curbs on mortgage buyers: 'It was the height of the local real estate boom.'

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Canada’s A Top Drug Dealer

Canadian drug dealers have become a top source of global marijuana shipments since Parliament legalized cannabis in 2018, says Department of Public Safety research. Black market dealers now ship tons of marijuana annually: "Canadian vendors are willing to ship anywhere in the world."

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Tinnitus Claims Increase 50%

A dramatic increase in RCMP disability claims is due in part to tinnitus, says federal research. Mounties’ disability benefits will cost nearly a half-billion dollars a year by 2023: "Hearing loss is the most prominent medical condition among released members."

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Airlines Lose Fare Fight

Federal regulators yesterday rejected a request from airlines for a blanket exemption from a decades-old rule that they calculate basic fares on all routes. “The fare, in Canadian dollars, must be identified,” wrote the Canadian Transportation Agency.

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