Cabinet’s $393,000-a year science advisor Dr. Mona Nemer assigned seven employees to work on UFOs, according to records. Authorities yesterday said staff compiled tens of thousands of pages of research most Canadians rated pointless when questioned in a federal survey: "Enthusiasm and responses have been uneven."
First Petition Seeks Apology
The first petition of the 45th Parliament asks that cabinet apologize for the transatlantic slave trade. The petition was sponsored without comment by New Democrat MP Gord Johns (Courtenay-Alberni, B.C.): "Apologize for the historical and ongoing injustice."
Israel Was Rated A Good Buy
The Canada Pension Plan tripled wartime investments in Israel even as dozens of MPs demanded an international boycott of Jewish industry. Pension managers put more than a third of a billion in Israel from banks to supermarkets: 'We navigate these turbulent times.'
Feds Revive Broken Promise
Finance Minister François-Philippe Champagne yesterday announced a “call to action” on financial crime after meeting with G7 counterparts. Champagne made no mention of cabinet’s broken 2021 promise to create a white collar crime unit: "I can think about tackling financial crime."
Says Public Business Is Public
Canadians can do what they like with public records including videos of open meetings, says an Information Commissioner. The ruling by Saskatchewan Commissioner Ronald Kruzeniski came in the case of a provincial board that threatened sanctions over the posting of a videotaped hearing on YouTube: "Applicants do not need to justify a request."
51% Struggle With Mortgage
Most mortgage holders are struggling to pay their debts with nearly a quarter now using credit cards or other borrowing to meet bills as they fall due, CMHC said yesterday. The federal insurer said financial well-being of householders had deteriorated over the past year: "Fourteen percent missed a mortgage payment."
Pension CEO Won 24% Raise
The CEO of the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board last year won a 24 percent hike in benefits to $6.3 million, records show. John Graham yesterday told Canadian workers it was his “privilege to lead this institution.”
Pension Sank $1B In Tesla Inc.
The Canada Pension Plan Investment Board more than quadrupled its holdings in Tesla stock even as share values yo-yoed and cabinet suspended its electric car rebate program, records show. Pension managers said they had a “focus on climate change.”
Petition For Zero Percent Tax
Advocates yesterday petitioned cabinet to eliminate the federal corporate income tax on small business. The rate has ranged from 20 percent in 2001 to the current nine percent: "Parliament needs to act quickly."
Praise For Disgraced Agency
A scandal-ridden federal agency did important work in meeting climate targets, says an in-house Department of Industry report. The evaluation made only cursory reference to inside dealing that led to the collapse of Sustainable Development Technology Canada last June: "Yes, it has been seen as a great success."
Tells Feds To “Take A Stand”
Parliament must “take a stand” against Canadian companies that move jobs to the United States to bypass Trump tariffs, the nation’s largest private sector union said yesterday. “This is the fight of our lives,” Lana Payne, Unifor national president, told reporters. “We must take a stand now.”
Cites 1985 No-Layoff Promise
Canada Post management that agreed to iron-clad job security for employees 40 years ago now finds the commitment “untenable,” says a federal report. “It agreed to it,” said the Report Of The Industrial Inquiry Commission: "Canada Post might no longer like this provision but it agreed to it. It is a legal obligation.”
Called The Protest A Privilege
A municipal councillor arrested for participating in the 2022 Freedom Convoy yesterday was acquitted of all charges. Harold Jonker of St. Ann’s, Ont. earlier told a public meeting he was proud to be among the first truckers to join the protest on Parliament Hill: "I am humbled that I was able to participate in a protest that brought immense joy and hope to so many Canadians across the country."
Border Program Fails Again
A costly program to computerize records of cross-border freight trucks saw the Canada Border Services Agency flooded with so much information it was “impossible for them to analyze all of the data,” says an internal report. It was the second time in six years that auditors questioned the eManifest program: "Performance has not been monitored."
Skeptical Of “Open Banking”
Canadians remain skeptical of a Department of Finance proposal for “open banking,” calling it suspiciously vague. The department since 2017 has studied the plan it claims would benefit consumers: "Awareness of the terms ‘open banking’ and ‘consumer-driven banking’ was nearly non-existent."



