No Climate Emergency: MPs

The Commons by a 227 to 42 vote yesterday rejected a New Democrat motion to declare a “climate emergency”. Liberals complained the motion had too many strings attached, including abandonment of the Trans Mountain Pipeline expansion: "This is not fearmongering."

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Journos Wary Of Meddling

Journalists testifying at the Commons finance committee yesterday expressed wariness over practical or perceived government meddling in news coverage under a $595 million industry bailout. One MP called the program a “blank cheque” that leaves cabinet appointees to decide which publishers win subsidies: "If the impression is left to linger that the government is forking over cash grants to their journalist buddies, trust in media will only plummet further."

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MPs Seek Copyright Reforms

The Commons heritage committee yesterday endorsed sweeping copyright reforms to raise by millions the royalties paid to authors, musicians and performers. Creators testified they earned a pittance – one bestselling novelist reported a $12,000 annual income – due to Copyright Act exemptions: “They need to keep producing the works that we love.”

Cut Audits, Blame Funding

The Office of the Auditor General says it is so short of funding it's cutting audits. MPs on the Commons public accounts committee expressed alarm: "This is about as big as it gets."

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Auditor Fired For Snooping

A federal labour board has upheld the firing of an $86,000-a year auditor at the Canada Revenue Agency for snooping through tax files. “Employees are required to conduct themselves in an exemplary manner,” says the Agency’s Code Of Ethics And Conduct: "No, no and no."

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Late Rewrite To Fish Act

Cabinet has proposed 11th hour amendments to the Fisheries Act to allow more exemptions to habitat protection. The changes introduced in the Senate fisheries committee follow lobbying by farmers and industry: "The government is balancing the needs."

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Gov’t Named In Bee Lawsuit

Health Canada faces a federal lawsuit over its long phase-out of a pesticide rated lethal to bees. Four environmental groups in a Federal Court application allege regulators breached their own Act: 'The effect is the environment is exposed to unacceptable risk for years.'

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Feds To List Approved Media

Federal agencies will publish an A-list of newspapers and websites deemed reliable under a multi-million dollar subsidy program, the Department of Finance yesterday told the Senate national finance committee. Subsidies to federally-approved news media invite government meddling in a free press, cautioned one senator: “It’s very dangerous ground.”

No Lavalin Deal, Says AG

Attorney General David Lametti last night told the Commons he has not offered SNC-Lavalin Group Inc. any out-of-court settlement of fraud and bribery charges. Lametti said he discussed the company’s legal troubles with two aides to the Prime Minister, but “felt no pressure”.

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Says CRA Is Overstaffed

The Canada Revenue Agency is grossly overstaffed, the Commons finance committee was told yesterday. The Agency has five times the number of agents per capita, and three times per actual taxpayer, than the U.S. Internal Revenue Service: "How is that possible?"

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‘Why Should I Vote For You?’

A Liberal senator yesterday asked Finance Minister Bill Morneau “why should I vote for you” over inadequate federal measures to curb tax avoidance. The Senate last November 27 passed a private Liberal bill compelling the Canada Revenue Agency to publish a yearly blacklist of tax cheats, including those with offshore accounts: "What are you waiting for?"

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RCMP Miss Equity Targets

The RCMP in an internal audit acknowledge they’ve failed to meet equity hiring targets. Auditors blamed a decline in overall recruitment: "The pool is limited."

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Senate OKs Accessibility Act

The Senate last night unanimously passed a cabinet bill to remove accessibility barriers nationwide. A handful of amendments must still be ratified by the Commons before the bill becomes law: "We can get to work."

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Snooped Thru 664 Tax Files

An unidentified Canada Revenue Agency employee was cited for snooping through nearly 700 tax files, according to Access To Information records. A federal labour board in 2016 upheld firing as discipline for Agency staff who browse taxpayers’ private information: "Don't put your careers on the line."

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Electrics ‘Difficult To Justify’

Electric vehicles cost too much and are unreliable in winter conditions, says a Crown agency. The analysis by Defence Research & Development Canada contradicts a $5,000 federal rebate program to promote sales of electric passenger cars: "Hybrid vehicles would be difficult to justify on cost alone."

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