Executive Hiring Is Up 56%

The number of executives in the federal public service has grown 56 percent since 2000, says the Treasury Board. Three departments combined – environment, finance and justice – now have 31 deputy, assistant deputy and associate deputy ministers: "During the same period, the overall federal public service grew by 24 percent."

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Copyright Act Worth $103

A Winnipeg novelist has told the Commons industry committee her income from royalties and licensing fees totaled $103 last year due to free photocopying under the Copyright Act. “Most artists have not seen compensation,” said one MP: "There is something deeply wrong."

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Feds Silent On Airline Pot

The federal airport security agency yesterday declined comment on how it proposes to regulate legal marijuana. The Canadian Air Transport Security Authority in 2017 suspended a longstanding policy of calling police whenever cannabis was found in travelers’ luggage.: "It is expending increased effort to manage marijuana incidents."

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Senators Taunt Atlantic MPs

Cabinet yesterday had no proposals to break a parliamentary deadlock over shippers’ rights in a federal rail bill. Two Conservative senators challenged Atlantic MPs to defy their leadership and amend the legislation: "They can end this really quickly."

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Broke Law At Crown Agency

A Crown corporation has fired a senior employee for illegal conduct involving contracting and leaked data. Managers at Export Development Canada made no mention of the incident in April 24 testimony at the Commons trade committee: "We're not perfect."

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No Free Speech In Nt’l Parks

Parks Canada is defending an obscure regulation allowing staff to censor permit holders’ signs or literature for objectionable content. A parliamentary committee said the rule is a clear violation of free speech: 'Change the regulation or it's wiped off the books.'

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VIP Menu: Alpen & Couscous

Access To Information records obtained by the Canadian Taxpayers Federation detail menus approved for Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and cabinet when traveling aboard Canadian Armed Forces aircraft. Catering charges totaled $576,723 in a fourth-month period last winter: "If you have any edible flowers that would be ideal."

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No Compromise On Rail Bill

The Commons on May 22 will vote to reject shippers’ amendments to a rail bill twice approved by the Senate. One MP described the impasse as a game of ping-pong over the rights of freight customers: "How can we explain the refusal to treat all regions of Canada fairly?"

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A Poem: “The Summit”

Poet Shai Ben-Shalom, an Israeli-born biologist, examines current events in the Blacklock’s tradition each and every Sunday: “No two could be more different than the North Korean Leader and the American President…”

Review: All Wrong On Climate Change

Cabinet’s climate change program is a demonstrable fiasco swallowed in acrimony, evasion and costly litigation. Authors of Public Deliberation on Climate Change ask, is it possible Parliament is incapable of getting the big jobs done?

The Commons finance committee was in session May 1. MPs noted the finance department had a 2015 memo detailing the cost of a carbon tax to Canadian households, but censored all the numbers. How much would it cost? “I would prefer not to expand,” replied Gervais Coulombe, a department tax director.

On March 22, the Commons environment committee met. MPs asked, what’s the impact of the carbon tax on emissions? “I don’t have that number offhand,” replied Deputy Environment Minister Stephen Lucas. He coughed up the data five weeks later. It’s 55 percent short of the emissions target.

Cites Post Office Bullying

Public Works Minister Carla Qualtrough yesterday cited Canada Post for an unacceptable culture of harassing employees. Qualtrough told the Commons government operations committee she personally interviewed postal workers who complained of workplace bullying: "There are tensions."

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1,559 Cut For Refusing Oath

More than 1,500 community groups have been denied federal funding for failing to sign a government oath, according to Department of Employment Records. The new Canada Summer Jobs policy is the target of a federal lawsuit: "It's deeply concerning."

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MP Would Revive The C.C.F.

The long-disbanded Cooperative Commonwealth Federation party would return to the Commons for the first time since 1961 by a legislator’s request. Independent MP Erin Weir (Regina-Lewvan) yesterday said he is petitioning the Speaker to sit as a Saskatchewan CCFer: “This is a tradition that is worth carrying on.”

‘My Income Is $12,000…’

A bestselling children’s author has told the Commons industry committee she took a 90 percent pay cut due to free photocopying under the Copyright Act. MPs are conducting a statutory review of the Act for the first time since 2012: ‘It is government-sanctioned theft.’

Joly Ups Facebook Ads 689%

Federal agencies tripled their spending on Facebook ads last year even as Heritage Minister Mélanie Joly lamented the state of local Canadian media. Joly’s own department increased its Facebook spending seven-fold. Newspaper publishers have cited cuts to federal advertising as a threat to newsroom jobs: "The aim of our government is to improve the fate of the industry."

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