Motion To Shun Ex-Senator

The Senate yesterday agreed to consider a motion for a rare, symbolic shunning of former legislator Don Meredith. The ex-senator would be stripped of the “honourable” title for life: 'It's to preserve the authority, dignity and reputation of the Senate.'

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StatsCan Bent Rules: Report

Statistics Canada bent the rules in attempting to scoop banking data on some 1.5 million people, Privacy Commissioner Daniel Therrien said yesterday. The project was suspended in 2018 following a public outcry: "The project would have exceeded Statistics Canada’s legal authority."

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Bill Federalizes Bldg Permits

A bill yesterday introduced in the Senate would give federal regulators sweeping new powers to limit commercial redevelopment near Parliament Hill. The bill follows protests after Ottawa councillors approved an addition to the famed 1912 Chateau Laurier hotel that one senator likened to a pile of shipping containers: 'No wild development around Parliament Hill.'

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47 Claim Wrongful Jailing

The Department of Justice is currently reviewing forty-seven claims of wrongful conviction. Cabinet in 2018 appointed a former Supreme Court justice to investigate “any systematic problems” in federal prosecutions: "Wrongful convictions happen every day in court when people plead guilty to things they didn’t do."

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Don’t Know If Rebates Work

Transport Canada has no estimate of the climate change impact of its $300 million electric car rebate program. The department credited rebates with increasing the market share of electrics by one percent this year, but could not calculate actual reductions in tailpipe emissions: "The objective is not to sell the cars; the objective is to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, right?"

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Vegas Sports Bet Bill Is Back

New Democrats yesterday said they will reintroduce a Vegas-style sports betting bill in the Commons. MPs passed the measure in 2012 but saw it lapse in the Senate following protests from the Toronto Blue Jays: 'It would open a Pandora’s box of match fixing.'

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Dep’t Split Costing Billions

Parliament is spending billions more on Indigenous services since creating two new departments out of one, the Senate national finance committee was told yesterday. A total 8,315 federal employees now work at the two departments compared to 4,627 at the previous Department of Indian Affairs: "That's a lot of extra money."

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Media Grants No “Panacea”

Taxpayers’ subsidies are no panacea for failing media, the Department of Canadian Heritage said yesterday. Grants under a program first announced two years ago should be paid in 2020: "I can’t comment on whether it’s sufficient."

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Payroll Costs $44M More

The Treasury Board has budgeted $44 million in early compensation awards to federal employees affected by the failed Phoenix Pay System. It is only the beginning, managers told the Senate national finance committee: "Who is tracking the cost?"

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VW Charged With 60 Counts

The Department of Environment yesterday said it formally charged Volkswagen AG with sixty breaches of federal law over faked emission data for its “green” diesels. It follows multiple lawsuits by environmental groups: "Laws would be respected."

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Senator Hired Media Coach

A new Liberal appointee to the Senate billed taxpayers $3,250 for a single day’s coaching on how to speak to media. Senator Margaret Anderson (Independent-NWT) did not take media questions about the expense: "What will I receive? Practical, hands-on training from leading practitioners."

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Could Win A Free Muffin

The Privy Council Office offered employees free muffins to curb security breaches involving classified records, according to Access To Information files. Memos detail numerous breaches including lost BlackBerrys, stolen laptops and unlocked filing cabinets: "Be rewarded with a muffin break."

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Would Mandate Home Refits

New Democrats are asking the Commons to endorse a “green new deal” mandating energy refits to every building in the country. The motion also proposed to eliminate all tailpipe emissions from cars and trucks where possible: "We want to fight the climate crisis like we want to win it."

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Cite Justice Dep’t Bullying

The Department of Justice has been cited for abuse of process in bullying witnesses in a contract dispute. Federal lawyers ordered witnesses to appear for questioning on four days’ notice with “all relevant documentation” in what Ontario Superior Court called a fishing expedition: 'They constitute an abuse of process.'

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Review: Schooling

Canada, unlike Zimbabwe, has no federal department of education, to which Professor Jennifer Wallner of the University of Ottawa comments: And your point is – ?
Parliament regulates the minutiae of labels on fertilizer bags; the price of mozzarella; the CDs they play at Radio CJLR in Meadow Lake, Sask. Yet in 147 years legislators have never set any federal standards on basic elementary and secondary education. Critics lament the fact. Professor Wallner argues this does not mean standards don’t exist.
“Provinces can work together,” Wallner writes; “When we compare the provincial education systems to one another, all ten show remarkably strong similarities in investments, achievements and substantive policies.”