Probe Of Election Bias Claim

The Federal Court of Appeal has cleared the way for a human rights challenge of elections under the Indian Act. The decision came in the case of a woman who claimed she was disqualified from running for council because her husband was Caucasian: "She was not a person of good character."

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$385K Grant For News Lobby

A newspaper lobby group, the Canadian News Media Association, has received nearly $385,000 in federal grants – the equivalent of more than half its annual budget – to encourage people to buy newspapers, according to Access To Information records. The funding was never announced. Costs include having $160-an hour publicists encourage celebrities to pose for Instagram photos reading a newspaper: “I couldn’t agree more.”

Must Preserve Bullet Holes

Parliament must preserve bullet holes from a lone gunman’s 2014 attack on the Centre Block, says a Conservative MP. Multi-billion dollar renovations to the building should not conceal evidence of the incident, the Commons committee on House affairs was told: "These are records of something important that happened here."

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Death Prompts Alcohol Curb

Health Canada yesterday proposed to restrict alcohol in flavoured canned drinks following the death of a Québec schoolgirl. The Commons health committee urged reforms in a June 19 report: 'It represents a significant health problem.'

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House Prices Rise With Oil

Rising oil prices tend to hike the cost of housing in cities nationwide, says a Bank of Canada report. Economists did not speculate on whether falling oil prices had the opposite effect: 'We find this even in cities such as Québec City or Winnipeg where oil production is virtually non-existent."

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Cut Tax Credit Claims 11%

Corporate claims for a contentious federal tax credit fell 11 percent after the previous Conservative cabinet cut benefits, records show. The Canada Revenue Agency had described the program as so generous it was akin to an open bar for lobbyists: "It is one of the most generous systems in the world for supporting business."

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Research Graft In Prisons

A federal report says low pay for guards may contribute to graft in the prison system. The Correctional Service acknowledged it has little data on the extent of contraband smuggling by its own employees: 'Remarkably little research has been conducted.'

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Gov’t Cannabis Ads Pulled

Federal cannabis ads were pulled by Google and YouTube for breaching corporate rules on narcotics, says Health Canada. One website operator, TripAdvisor, rejected all marijuana public service announcements: "The advertisements were not approved."

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Feds Miss Air Code Deadline

Transport Canada yesterday acknowledged it won't meet its own deadline to enforce an air passenger rights code by year’s end. Enforcement is delayed at least six months though Parliament last May 23 passed a bill mandating automatic compensation for poor service: "We're almost there."

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Feds Change Migrant Permits

The Department of Immigration suspects hundreds of cases of abuse of migrant workers occur annually. It proposed first-ever regulations allowing Temporary Foreign Workers to quit their job without facing expulsion from Canada: 'The power imbalance favours the employer.'

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Seek Disclosure On Spending

The Senate's $114 million-a year administration should be subject to federal disclosure laws, says cabinet’s leader in the chamber. The remark follows one Manitoba senator’s unsuccessful year-long attempt to find out how much Senate managers spent on legal fees and out-of-court settlements in staff harassment claims: "I certainly believe sunlight kills germs."

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Won’t Cancel Facebook Ads

The Privy Council Office in an Access To Information memo defends millions spent advertising with Facebook and Google. Newspaper publishers have called the policy a Canadian job killer: "Those ad dollars are being sent offshore."

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Carbon Tax Will Cost Army

The national carbon tax will cost the army, navy and air force millions, according to cabinet. Staff would not detail actual increases for the military, one of the largest fuel buyers in the country: "It's hard paying a carbon tax."

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A Poem: “Judgment Day”

Poet Shai Ben-Shalom, an Israeli-born biologist, examines current events in the Blacklock’s tradition each and every Sunday: “He will ask us, ‘Why did you not save the planet I gave you?’ And we will reply, ‘We did not know…'”

Kitchen Museum For $30,000

A group of senators propose to spend $30,000 on a kitchen museum inaccessible to taxpayers. The Senate committee on internal economy yesterday postponed a vote indefinitely after members questioned the project as pointless and irritating: "This is a place that won't be visited."

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