Govt Tribunal A Time-Waster

The Federal Court of Appeal has faulted a whistleblowers’ tribunal for needless time and expense in investigating a workplace complaint. The ruling is the first of its kind since MPs urged immediate reforms to a whistleblower law intended to protect federal employees and contractors: "People’s lives are still being destroyed."

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Blue Christmas For Thief

The Prince Edward Island Supreme Court has imposed an unusual 33 conditions on a petty thief convicted of cheating her small business employer. “She behaved in a way that clearly does not show respect for the law,” wrote the Court.

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Want Mini-Reactors In Arctic

Provincial utilities propose that Canada install small nuclear reactors to meet climate change targets, especially in Arctic towns reliant on diesel-powered generators. The Department of Natural Resources must first “address any misunderstanding” about Fukushima-style disasters, said a report: "The likelihood of this type of accident is low."

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Minister’s Story Questioned

Labour Minister Patricia Hajdu embellished a story about a poor, disabled man facing homelessness to justify back-to-work legislation ending a mail strike. Hajdu would not take questions on the anecdote. Staff confirmed Hajdu never met the man. Canada Post management and employees disputed the story: “As far as fake news is concerned, it’s a possibility.”

Sparks Fly On Mail Strike Bill

The Senate today votes on a back-to-work bill to end a mail strike following debate that saw Canada Post called the nation’s worst public sector employer. Several Liberal-appointed senators and a former Liberal labour minister oppose the bill: "The employer is getting everything they want."

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Media Training Cost $923K

Federal departments and agencies paid consultants nearly a million dollars for media coaching in two-and-a-half years, records show. Liberal and Conservative MPs questioned the spending as pointless: "I’d rather see zero spent on media training and nearly a million bucks go to pumps for people with diabetes."

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Food Labels Will Cut Sales

Health Canada confirms red-and-black warning labels on foods high in salt, sugar and fat will cut sales. The department in consumer tests said front-of-package labels had shoppers think twice about buying foods deemed unhealthy: "It makes me scared to eat this."

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Death Benefits Above Board

A federal program to pay military-style death benefits to police widows has been delayed until 2019. The Department of Public Safety hired a private accounting firm to run the program to avoid any hint of favouritism in payment of $300,000 grants, it said: 'It demonstrates a fair and transparent decision-making process.'

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“Tell Us What You Think”

Poet Shai Ben-Shalom, an Israeli-born biologist, examines current events in the Blacklock’s tradition each and every Sunday: “They want to consult ‘at length’ where to sell pot in Ontario. Will delay store openings by half a year…”

Crown Co. Paid Image Maker

A Crown corporation charged taxpayers nearly $90,000 for an image consultant six weeks before the Christmas firing of its CEO, accounts show. The Freshwater Fish Marketing Corporation yesterday did not respond to an interview request: 'It's for general support in protecting the corporation’s reputation.'

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Senate To Speed Mail Bill

The Senate for the second time in 7 years faces a weekend sitting to pass back-to-work legislation to end a mail strike. Cabinet yesterday introduced a bill ordering the Canadian Union of Postal Workers to end rotating strikes under threat of $100,000-a day fines: "Here we are again."

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Too Close To Fish Farmers

Environment Commissioner Julie Gelfand yesterday said she worries the Department of Fisheries is too close to aquaculture companies. Gelfand told the Senate fisheries committee the department is open to suspicion it favours salmon-farming corporations over traditional fishermen: 'At what point do you say, stop?'

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Cash Police A Waste Of Time

The Senate banking committee yesterday questioned Parliament’s anti-money laundering scheme as ineffectual. Of nearly 100 million cash transactions analyzed in the period from 2009 to 2014, only two resulted in successful prosecutions: "It seems like a waste of time, actually."

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Farm MPs Curse Twitter

MPs on the Commons agriculture committee yesterday faulted animal rights groups for “social media attacks” on farmers. Remarks came a day after Agriculture Minister Lawrence MacAulay said advocacy groups have a right to free speech: "I follow social media and you’re attacking me."

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Spent $300K On Refreshments

A federal agency spent more than $300,000 on meals and refreshments in a two-month period, accounts show. The Canadian Institutes of Health Research did not reply to detailed written questions seeking an explanation of the billings. “Is this spam?” said David Coulombe, spokesperson for the agency.