The Privy Council Office yesterday disclosed it conducted confidential polling related to an out-of-court settlement with SNC-Lavalin Group Inc. months before Liberal aides sought a deal with the company. The issue polled badly: 'There were doubts about the fairness of the justice system when dealing with the rich and powerful.'
Gov’t To Ban The Dollar Bill
Cabinet yesterday ordered $686.6 million in old banknotes out of circulation including the iconic dollar bill. Owners of banned bills can only exchange them at the Bank of Canada after January 1, 2021: "Banknotes are widely used by criminals."
News Bailout “Dangerous”
Cabinet’s $595 million newspaper bailout opens reporters to suspicion their coverage is bought and paid for, a former Toronto Star editor told the Senate national finance committee. Subsidies include a 25 percent payroll tax credit worth up to $13,750 per newsroom employee at government-approved media: "This constitutes one of the gravest threats to freedom of the press that I have seen in this country."
Open Work Permits OK’d
Migrants in Canada may apply for open work permits in specific circumstances effective June 4, the Department of Immigration said yesterday. The change follows an assurance from Labour Minister Patricia Hajdu that cabinet won't open “the flood gates to temporary foreign workers”.
Prolific Tweets Cost $50K
Tweets by a former Nova Scotia professor prompted the loss of a $50,000 payment by his former employer, Acadia University. A labour arbitrator ruled Prof. Rick Mehta breached confidential terms of settlement on his Twitter feed: "Settlements in labour law are sacrosanct."
Question 50,000 Jobs Claim
Industry Minister Navdeep Bains yesterday promised to release confidential business plans by subsidized technology centres that claim to create 50,000 jobs. The claim was questioned yesterday at the Commons industry committee: "What is the name of the study that gives these results?"
Ban Gas Autos By 2040
A cabinet advisory panel yesterday recommended Parliament ban the Canadian manufacture of gas and diesel-powered cars by 2040. The proposal echoed Green Party policy: "There is a need to send a clear regulatory signal."
Farm MPs See Hate Crimes
Hate crime provisions of the Criminal Code should be used against animal rights activists that target farmers, the Commons agriculture committee said yesterday. MPs proposed amendments to prohibit “any form of intimidation or cyberbullying targeted at any group of Canadians based on their occupation or place of residence.”
No Pot At School Boards
School boards should consider whether trustees can consume marijuana at public meetings, says a privacy commissioner. The warning follows a Saskatchewan case in which a trustee admitted to eating cannabis at board sessions: "He was responsible to his electors."
Consider A Quake Mandate
Parliament should consider mandating earthquake coverage on homeowners, say insurance brokers. Data show 19 in 20 property owners in one of Canada’s largest seismic zones do not have coverage: "It's clear there is a potential risk."
Gun Bill Is Law By 55-33 Vote
A cabinet bill mandating lifetime background checks on gun buyers last evening was passed into law by a 55 to 33 Senate vote. Gun clubs and criminal defence lawyers opposed the bill as unnecessary: "It has nothing to do with gangs."
Panel Okays Press Bailout
The Commons finance committee yesterday approved terms of a media bailout amid protests the program is weighted with pro-government bias. “We have absolutely no faith whatsoever this will be non-partisan,” said Conservative MP Tom Kmiec (Calgary Shepard).
Feds Like Pot ‘Opportunity’
The Department of Industry in an Access To Information memo calls legalization of cannabis edibles an opportunity for small business. Edibles are to be legalized this October 17 under la bill passed by Parliament last year: "Opportunities exist."
See Little Take-up On Loans
Mortgage brokers predict few applications for a new federal home equity loan program. A similar plan in British Columbia folded after less than a tenth of expected buyers applied for provincial aid: "That lasted about fifteen months."
Agency Cites Hockey Myth
Eighty-eight percent of minor hockey players, and even more parents and teachers, mistakenly believe helmets prevent concussions, says Public Health Agency of Canada research. Federal regulators have fined helmet manufacturers over misleading claims that helmets can prevent brain injury: "Some pervasive myths continue to persist."



