CMHC will spend up to $6 million on data for cabinet’s National Housing Strategy, including a country-wide count of homeless. Legislation mandating aid for social housing and rental subsidies is expected this year: 'Make sure public resources are used to create things that work.'
A Poem: “Healthy Choices”
Poet Shai Ben-Shalom, an Israeli-born biologist, examines current events in the Blacklock’s tradition each and every Sunday: “Obesity in Canada tripled in 30 years. Eight million affected. The federal government develops an online tool…”
Court OKs Marijuana Firing
An appeal court has ruled companies may fire staff that take marijuana to work. Employers have sought amendments to cabinet’s cannabis legalization bill to permit enforcement of company drug bans: "A person must have their wits about them."
Confirm More Steel Dumping
A federal tribunal has cited South Korean mills for steel dumping in Canada. Liberal MPs this winter propose the Commons industry committee open hearings on unfair practices in the trade: 'There have been massive layoffs; it's had a huge impact.'
Prove Caller I.D. Or Else
Federal regulators are giving telecom firms one year to adopt filters to block so-called “spoofing” calls using fake identification. Failure to voluntarily comply will result in regulation, said the CRTC: "There is no silver bullet here."
Lawyers To Get Bike Locks
A privacy commissioner recommends lawyers secure unattended briefcases with bicycle locks following an incident at a Saskatchewan courthouse. Personal files of a Legal Aid client vanished at court with five lawyers and a clerk in the room: 'Electronic records would be much easier.'
Watchdog Keeps The Money
The Office of the Commissioner of Lobbying says it will keep special funding approved by Parliament last year to defend an investigation it never finished. The agency yesterday offered no refund for hundreds of thousands of dollars it appropriated for work it failed to complete: "We really need this funding."
Cut To Daily Mail Proposed
Cabinet is proposing Canada Post cut daily mail delivery. Savings would average more than $70 million a year if service was reduced to every second day, according to federal consultants: "We really had high hopes."
70% Of Execs Would Quit
Nearly three quarters of senior federal managers, 70 percent, say they’ve thought of quitting, says new research by the Association of Professional Executives of the Public Service. A detailed survey of thousands of executives also found 13 percent are problem drinkers, and 19 percent complained they were “verbally harassed or tormented at work”.
Legal Test On Access Delays
Cabinet faces a legal test over refusal to make timely disclosure of documents under the Access To Information Act. A federal lawsuit by a leading law firm cites the Department of Employment for disregarding statutory deadlines in releasing public records: “You just scratch your head.”
Air Kills More Than Traffic
More Canadians die from air pollution than traffic or industrial accidents combined, says new Department of Health research. The number of deaths attributed to smog and other pollution is more than double original estimates from 2004: "The underlying science is consistent."
Drug Driving Up 11 Percent
Incidents of drug-impaired driving increased 11 percent in 2016 as cabinet began its review of new marijuana legislation, say Statistics Canada figures. The Department of Justice in an Access To Information memo cautioned rates may rise further if cannabis is legalized: "It's going to get worse, there is no question."
Fireplaces A Climate Threat
Cabinet is targeting home fireplaces and wood-burning stoves in its climate change plan. The Department of the Environment said federal emission standards on crackling fires will help achieve climate goals: "Targeted efforts will now be undertaken."
Honour Follows Price-Fixing
Rideau Hall sanctioned an award for the chairman emeritus of George Weston Ltd. eleven days after the company admitted to a bread price-fixing scheme. The Office of the Governor General declined comment on the honour: 'This is a personal gift of the Sovereign.'
‘Cowboy’ Lawsuit At CBSA
A schoolteacher has filed a federal lawsuit against the Canada Border Services Agency after officers impounded his car and revoked his Nexus card for failing to declare $120 in gifts. The Federal Court in a separate 2017 case ruled a travelers' honest mistake is no excuse for breaching the Customs Act: "What they did was cowboy stuff."



