Federal employees write too many English emails, says Official Languages Commissioner Raymond Théberge. The Commissioner in an Access To Information letter faulted public service managers for ignoring his repeated complaints on the subject: "They cannot be accepted."
Want Steepest Cuts Since ’82
Three Green MPs will never support a Liberal motion of confidence in the minority Parliament without tougher climate change targets, Party leader Elizabeth May said yesterday. May proposed lowering greenhouse gas emissions to levels not seen since the 1982 recession: "It’s past time for Liberals to stop pandering."
High-Low Scheme Unravels
Tax Court has dismissed appeals by taxpayers stung in an audit of an Ontario charity suspected of running a receipt mill. Thousands of participants donated software and CDs to a children’s charity for inflated receipts: "They were to a certain extent willfully blind."
Most Voters Skipped Debate
Newly-released figures indicate only one in six voters watched the election campaign’s lone national English-language television debate. More CTV viewers tuned in to an episode of The Good Doctor, data show: "We will have to work very hard to make people care."
Says First Job Is Budget Bill
A new cabinet will take office November 20 and won't include any opposition members, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau yesterday told reporters. “It is not in our plans at all to form any kind of formal coalition,” he said. Trudeau added the first legislation in the 43rd Parliament will be a budget bill to amend the Income Tax Act: "Next decisions will be made in the coming days."
Equifax Lawsuit Dismissed
A Canadian class action lawsuit over Equifax privacy breaches has been dismissed by Québec Superior Court. Equifax last July 20 settled similar American claims with the U.S. Federal Trade Commission for US$700 million: 'That does not change anything.'
Buy $300K In Sleep Monitors
Statistics Canada yesterday said it will spend $308,305 on electronic monitors to measure how much people sleep. The agency said it needs “more robust indicators of health”.
Feds Hire Private Auditors
The Office of the Auditor General yesterday said it will hire private accountants to review one Crown agency’s budget. Staff earlier complained they were so short of funding they had to cut audits to save money: 'It allows the office to better manage its resources.'
Senator Details Ethics Case
Former Senator André Pratte (Independent-Que.) yesterday released a confidential ethics report detailing a mild reprimand for an “apparent conflict of interest”. The Liberal appointee abruptly quit the Senate Monday: "This played no role at all in my decision to resign."
Didn’t Count Illegal Voters
Elections Canada yesterday said it has no idea how many foreigners were on voting lists in Monday’s general election. The agency in an Access To Information memo confirmed it was aware of dozens of cases of illegal balloting since 2015, but concluded prosecution was “not in the public interest”.
SNC-Lavalin Shares Up 14%
Shares in SNC-Lavalin Group Inc. yesterday jumped fourteen percent following opposition parties' election defeat Monday. Critics had sought an independent investigation of Lavalin influence in the Prime Minister’s Office to avert a pending trial on fraud and bribery charges: "Canadians deserve to know the truth."
Oil Spill Fund Is Still Short
A compensation fund intended to save taxpayers the cost of cleanup from a catastrophic rail oil spill totals just $44.1 million in its third year. Claims from the 2013 Lac-Mégantic disaster were nearly ten times as much, a total $409 million: "It was a matter of ensuring that we have something in place."
Nt’l Vote By The Numbers
The Liberal Party yesterday lost more than a million votes and 27 seats nationwide but clung to a minority in Parliament. Final returns in the 338-seat Commons were 157 Liberal MPs, 121 Conservatives, 32 Bloc Québécois, 24 New Democrats, three Green Party MPs and a lone independent. The government saw its share of the vote fall by 1,026,987 ballots from 2015 but polled heavily in Ontario. Eight former cabinet ministers, parliamentary secretaries and Liberal committee chairs were defeated.
Feared Carbon Tax Protests
The Privy Council Office in Access To Information records acknowledged public protests in cancelling an appearance by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau at a Regina Canadian Tire outlet last March. Ten pages of the 54-page file were redacted: "When you come to Canadian Tire..."
Tribunal OKs Cannabis Ban
Condo boards may ban marijuana smoking in their buildings, a human rights panel has ruled. Property owners earlier predicted endless squabbles between condo owners and apartment renters when Parliament legalized marijuana in 2018: "This opens up the whole issue."



