Spent $10.5M On Overtime

Taxpayers have paid nearly $10.5 million in overtime for communications employees at federal departments and agencies since 2016, say newly-disclosed records. Cabinet explained staff often worked late hours publishing Tweets and monitoring news media: "This government is really focused on image."

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Inspected 1 In 6 Fish Farms

Pacific fish farms have only a 1 in 6 chance of being federally inspected annually, according to data. The inspection rate follows an audit that faulted the Department of Fisheries for poor monitoring of the industry: "It's very, very alarming."

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Seeks Copyright Correction

Parliament must impose a “market correction” on free use of material under the Copyright Act, says a Liberal MP. The Commons industry committee yesterday was told middle-class creators have disappeared with loss of income under the Act: "Many live at or below the poverty line."

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Snooped Thru 39K Tax Files

Canada Revenue Agency employees snooped through private files belonging to more than 39,000 individuals this past tax season, say newly-disclosed records. A Conservative MP who requested the data expressed outrage: "This is absolutely stunning."

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Gov’t Bid-Rig Case Collapses

Allegations of bid-rigging at Library & Archives Canada yesterday collapsed with the acquittal of one former manager, and a stay of charges against another. Prosecutors claimed employees conspired in a $3.5 million scheme on consulting contracts. The most senior manager charged in the case was found not guilty on all counts: "There is no evidence the government actually suffered any deprivation."

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Want Pensioners To Buy Line

Federal agents are attempting to have Canadian pensioners buy the Trans Mountain oil pipeline nationalized by cabinet, the Commons finance committee learned yesterday. The Canada Pension Plan Investment Board said it was approached only days after cabinet agreed to buy the 1953-era line: "Has there been any pressure whatsoever?"

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“My God It Was Stressful”

Flood victims suffer anxiety years after their property is damaged, says a University of Waterloo study. Researchers said lost work time and mental stress remain incalculable costs from extreme weather related to climate change: "It's just an awful, awful experience."

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Target 2019 Harassment Bill

A federal anti-workplace harassment bill is unlikely to come into force until after the next election, Labour Minister Patricia Hajdu yesterday told the Senate human rights committee. Hajdu appealed to senators to quickly pass the bill without amendments: "Getting these things in place might take a year or more."

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Gov’t Quiet On Carbon Tax

Cabinet is quiet on the fate of its national carbon tax after 2.3 million Ontarians elected a government opposed to the levy. Conservative leaders in two other provinces with elections pending have sought intervener status in a Saskatchewan challenge of the tax: "It's just a bad tax."

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‘If It’s Legal It Can’t Be Bad’

Newly-disclosed Health Canada research shows a federal marijuana education campaign is ineffectual. Teenagers questioned by government pollsters said they assumed legalization signaled Parliament’s approval of cannabis: “I guess if it’s going to be legal it can’t be that bad.”

24% Suffer Bill Shock: CRTC

Federal data show 1 in 4 Canadians still suffer wireless bill shock five years after regulators introduced a national consumers’ code. Research by the CRTC found many Canadians remain unaware of the 2013 Wireless Code: 'It's seen as a kind of entrapment.'

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Privacy Breach Was Costly

A federal judge has approved a $17.5 million government payout to settle a class action lawsuit by Canada Student Loan borrowers. The Department of Employment was blamed for misplacing a hard drive with personal information on 585,236 Canadians. The data loss remains unsolved: 'It is unlikely the contents are in circulation on the dark web.'

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Feds Try Equity Contracting

Federal agencies should give preferential treatment to contractors with “socio-economic objectives”, says the Department of Employment. Staff launched a two-year pilot project on social procurement, but would not release the policy: 'It leverages the government’s buying power.'

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A Poem: “Kitchen Tale”

Poet Shai Ben-Shalom, an Israeli-born biologist, examines current events in the Blacklock’s tradition each and every Sunday: “Cast-iron stoves became standard in 19th century America. Over half a million produced in 1874 alone…”

Senate OKs Cannabis 56-30

The Senate last night voted 56 to 30 to legalize cannabis. Even supporters expressed wariness over far-reaching consequences of the bill, which now returns to the Commons for final debate: "My heart still worries."

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