Health Minister Ginette Petitpas Taylor yesterday rejected a parliamentary proposal to appoint a federal advisor on the perils of antimicrobial resistance. The health department has no data on the number of Canadians who die from superbug infections that cannot be treated with antibiotics: "There is significantly more work to be done."
“Shameful”: Health Canada Broke Law, Fed Judge Rules
A federal judge has ruled Health Canada breached its own drug safety law. A former Conservative MP who sponsored the 2014 legislation yesterday described the department’s misconduct as shameful: "They were in Federal Court fighting against transparency; they still don’t get it at Health Canada."
Gangland Data “Critical”
The Department of Public Safety in an Access To Information memo says it has a critical need for data on organized crime in Canada. The Prime Minister yesterday appointed a new Minister Responsible for Organized Crime Reduction, former Toronto police chief Bill Blair: "There is no higher responsibility for a government."
16% Of Income Tax To Debt
The Parliamentary Budget Office yesterday forecast interest charges on the national debt will eat 16¢ of every $1 collected in income tax by 2024. Parliament has not balanced a budget in eleven years, and has fixed no deadline to bring in a surplus: "Debt charges for the federal government will increase."
Gov’t Unfair To Vet’s Widow
The Department of Veterans Affairs unfairly dismissed a widow’s appeal for benefits based on inaccurate assumptions, a federal judge has ruled. The decision followed six years of appeals: "In my view this is an unsatisfactory situation."
No Speech Gag On Charities
Canada’s 60,000 federally-registered charities may engage in non-partisan political activities under a sweeping Ontario Superior Court ruling. A judge yesterday struck down Canada Revenue Agency guidelines on advocacy as an illegal curb on free speech: "The impact of this case is huge."
Canadians Gloomier: Survey
A chartered accountants’ survey warns of spreading gloom over Canada’s economic prospects in the face of taxes and U.S. trade battles. A majority of executives, 68 percent, said the nation is now less competitive than it was a year ago: "This matters."
Staff Wanted To Be “Cool”
A misfired climate change gag written by federal staff to “make us cool” prompted a flood of public complaints, according to Access To Information records. The Privy Council think tank Policy Horizons Canada received so many protests it hasn’t published anything since: "I had an idea to make us look cool on the internet."
Tested Label On 5-Yr Olds
Health Canada interviewed children as young as 5 in devising standard labels for use on legal cannabis, according to records. A research study made no mention of similarities between the red marijuana leaf symbol and Team Canada's hockey logo worn at the PyeongChang Winter Olympics: "The red background was attention-grabbing."
Exec Innocent But Ruined
A former manager found innocent of wrongdoing at Library & Archives Canada says he was ruined by prosecutors. The longtime executive was acquitted at trial June 11. Prosecutors are not appealing the verdict: "I've lost four years of my life."
Illegal Migrants Alarm MPs
The Commons immigration committee yesterday ordered rare summer hearings on illegal immigration. MPs accused cabinet of skewing data to downplay a sharp rise in border crossings: "We're concerned about the safety of our border."
29% Do Not Claim Benefits
About a third of homeless people, 29 percent, do not file yearly tax returns though they could earn thousands in benefits, says the Canada Revenue Agency. The study followed 2017 research that found the poor are so intimidated by the Agency they would forego a federal cheque: "Individuals did not realize they stood to benefit."
Highest-Paid Public Servants
Public servants in Nunavut are among the best paid in Canada despite high local unemployment, according to evidence in a wrongful dismissal lawsuit. More than 1 in 4 positions in the territorial service are vacant: "There is no shortage of job opportunities."
Not Sure If $25 Cable Worked
Federal regulators say they have no data on the success or failure of a program to have cable providers offer $25-a month TV packages. One consumers’ group described the 2016 campaign for so-called “skinny basic” cable as a marketing ploy: 'We do not have statistics.'
C.R.A. Fails Internal Audit
The Canada Revenue Agency in an internal audit admits it has no accurate reporting of how long taxpayers must wait in applying for relief from interest and penalties. The Agency receives more than 400,000 applications a year from taxpayers who seek help in hardship cases: "These recurrent problems create increased frustration for individual citizens."



