Cabinet yesterday confirmed it will spend a record $91 million on Parliament Hill security this year. Costs have nearly doubled since a 2014 shooting: "We have to be vigilant at all times, and the nature of the work does increase the stress levels."
Senate OKs Shark Fin Ban
The Senate has passed a private Conservative bill to ban shark fin imports. Canada is the largest foreign market for fins outside Asia, witnesses earlier told the Senate fisheries committee: "Let’s be on the right side of history."
Fuel Tax Richer By Millions
The Department of Finance underestimated carbon tax revenues by millions in drafting its Greenhouse Gas Pollution Pricing Act, new data show. Actual revenues are from 19 to 58 percent higher than originally calculated: "We did not change the plan."
Climate Code To Cost $30K
Climate change amendments to the National Building Code will cost new homebuyers up to $30,000 on average, the Commons natural resources committee was told yesterday. MPs opened hearings on Code revisions planned for 2030: "Until we talk real numbers, we can’t talk reality."
Media Scrutiny Needed: Kent
A former Conservative candidate who won a record $650,000 defamation award against the National Post says election monitoring of Twitter falsehoods should include scrutiny of mainstream media. Federal Election Commissioner Yves Côté is monitoring social media to enforce a federal law prohibiting false statements against candidates: “Standing for office in the internet age means a reputational free-fire zone.”
Fisheries Dept ‘Full Of Holes’
Federal risk management of fisheries appears “shot full of holes”, a Liberal MP yesterday told the Commons fisheries committee. MPs reviewed a critical audit that faulted the Department of Fisheries for weak supervision of salmon farming: "The aquaculture industry demonstrates a deep lack of transparency."
Tariffs Hit Small Factories
Federal tariffs on U.S. metal imports have only hurt Canadian consumers and manufacturers, a factory owner yesterday told the Commons trade committee. Cabinet last July 1 imposed 25 percent duties on American steel and 10 percent on aluminum in retaliation against identical U.S. taxes on Canadian exports: "Does our government care?"
Real Journalists, Fake News
The Department of National Defence yesterday said it will hire real reporters to pose fake questions in a staff training session to expose “media techniques”. The department did not comment on the cost of the fake news exercise, or identify journalists who agreed to participate: “What would the public think?”
New Disability Regs In 2019
Airports and airlines will see new mandatory regulations on accessibility next year, the CEO of the Canadian Transportation Agency last night told the Commons human resources committee. Enforcement will include fines for non-compliance: 'It is a fundamental human right.'
Payroll Claims Hit $135,000
Federal departments and agencies have paid out $135,092 in damages to employees who did not receive paycheques, according to newly-released Public Accounts. The Public Service Alliance of Canada has requested a general compensation fund for employees affected by the failed Phoenix Pay System program: "No worker should be forced to sell their vehicle."
MPs Reject Postal Banking
The Commons yesterday rejected a motion to examine postal banking. Critics noted debate occurred as the Canadian Union of Postal Workers began rotating strikes to press contract demands on management: "We do not get great service, but we are well served by the banking industry."
Want Telco Consumer Code
Cabinet yesterday said it may seek a wider Code Of Conduct on internet and TV service providers’ sales practices. Federal data show 1 in 4 Canadians still suffer bill shock five years after regulators first introduced a consumers’ code for wireless subscribers: "It’s basically a cartel, let’s face it."
$2M Loan Created One Job
A $2 million taxpayers’ loan to a green technology company created a single job, according to Access To Information records. The loan to a money-losing Québec firm was awarded a year-and-a-half after it received an outright grant of $2.4 million: "We are grateful."
OK To Use Street Talk On TV
Street language is okay on TV political talk shows, a national broadcast council has ruled. The decision follows “insulting” remarks by a former co-chair of Ontario’s failed Liberal campaign: 'He could have used equivalent terms such as ‘idiot’ or ‘goofball’."
Feds Review Odd Speech Gag
Parks Canada says it may rewrite rules to amend speech gag regulations under the Canada National Parks Act. MPs and senators on Parliament’s scrutiny of regulations committee called it a breach of the Charter of Rights: "You know what? We’re just going to leave it the way it is."



