$5M Won In Copyright Case

A federal judge has issued a $5 million award in a copyright case. The default judgment cited an internet TV operator for ignoring years’ worth of warnings to stop the broadcast of bootlegged programming: "There is no reasonable explanation."

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Sunday Poem: “Hawking”

Poet Shai Ben-Shalom, an Israeli-born biologist, examines current events in the Blacklock’s tradition each and every Sunday: “Like Einstein before him, Newton before him, Galileo before him, Copernicus before him…”

Fed Bias Inquiry At VIA Rail

VIA Rail faces an inquiry by the Canadian Human Rights Commission into alleged discriminatory hiring practices against women, according to Court documents. The railway in its last Annual Report described itself as a “leader in diversity".

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Juice Lobby Protests Guide

Lobbyists have pressed cabinet not to write fruit juice out of the Canada Food Guide, according to Access To Information records. The industry fears lost sales in the $1.6 billion-a year trade after a 2016 Senate committee report on obesity described 100% fruit juice as “little more than a soft drink without the bubbles.”

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Wants Carbon Data Disclosed

Cabinet should disclose any data it has on the financial impact of its national carbon tax, says the former chair of the Senate energy committee. Access To Information files indicate regulators as early as 2016 calculated costs and impacts on jobs, but would not release the information: "Our economy is going to hell if we continue to do this."

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See Pressure On Fed Pensions

A typical federal employee will now spend as many years in retirement as they do in the workforce, says a pension report. Chief Actuary Jean-Claude Ménard said longer life spans are putting “upward pressure” on public service pensions: "For recent retirees, average working life is less or equal to average retirement life."

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Feds’ Fake News Cost $577K

Ten federal agencies last year paid a national broker almost $577,000 to distribute newspaper stories ghostwritten by government employees. The payments came as Heritage Minister Mélanie Joly lamented “fake news” in Canada. Joly’s office yesterday did not comment: ‘Creators of fake news are not constrained by research or fact-checking.’

14% Of Restaurants Audited

Restaurant owners suffer a high rate of tax audits, according to Canada Revenue Agency records obtained through Access To Information. A total 14 percent of all restaurants nationwide have been targeted by auditors since 2013: "Canada Revenue Agency dedicates too much energy to minor issues with small businesses and individuals."

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Sued On Copyright, Library Seeks To Explain Copyright

The Library of Parliament, defendant in an ongoing federal copyright lawsuit, yesterday announced it will host a seminar to educate parliamentarians on copyright. The notice made no mention of the Federal Court case in which librarians admit to copying others’ work without permission or licensing fee: “As a library, we expected that a minimal amount of redistribution to clients would be permissible.”

Maybe Try Asbestos Tourism

A federal agency says tourism is a possible job creation scheme for mining towns hit by asbestos bans. The agency Canadian Economic Development for Québec Regions acknowledged there has been slow take-up of federal funding for diversification by former asbestos miners: "Tourism products and activities remain possible."

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Gov’t Quiz 40% Over Budget

The Department of Canadian Heritage yesterday confirmed it fast-tracked subsidies for a failed Canada 150 venture even as a contractor skipped production deadlines. Records show spending on the $805,000 scheme went 40 percent over budget: "The final financial report will be submitted on June 1."

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Crown Corp. Still For Sale

Cabinet says it is still attempting to privatize the nation’s only federally-owned coal export terminal after years of effort. Access To Information documents indicate an initial bid to sell Ridley Terminals Inc. fell through following First Nations protests in 2013: 'To proceed with this sale is contrary to law.'

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Home Peril Ignored, Say Feds

Health Canada research shows most homeowners exposed to radon, even at unsafe levels, do not make necessary repairs to reduce their risk of exposure. Radon accounts for 16 percent of annual lung cancer deaths, second only to smoking: "Too many people remain unconvinced about the hazard of something that is invisible."

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Auditors Target Beer Sales

Canada Revenue Agency is expanding a search for retail tax evaders using beer receipts. Agency lawyers asked that a federal judge issue an order for the names and addresses of bars licensed through Brewers Retail Inc.: "This is a very important topic."

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Rush Order For Cannabis Kits

The Department of Public Safety is short of roadside marijuana test kits eight weeks ahead of cabinet’s deadline to have the Senate pass a cannabis legalization bill. The department yesterday issued an appeal to manufacturers following warnings police are not prepared for an expected rise in drug-impaired driving: "How long would it take to manufacture 500, one thousand, 2000 or 3000 devices?"

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