Parliament must enact tougher laws to shield the nation’s telecom networks from copper thieves, say business groups. Boards of trade in three cities petitioned the Senate transport and communications committee to rewrite the Criminal Code: "Copper theft is a growing problem."
Many Happy Returns In 2025
Happy New Year! Blacklock's pauses this week for our annual holiday break. We're back January 2 -- The Editor
Could Not Do It Without You
Merry Christmas and warmest regards to friends and subscribers. Blacklock's wishes you a safe and happy holiday -- The Editor
Third Borrow For Food, Rent
A third of Canadians borrow from friends or run up credit card debt to buy food, pay the rent or cover other monthly expenses, says in-house federal research. Figures show nearly 4 in 10 people surveyed now carry credit card balances typically charged at 19 percent: 'There are difficult economic conditions.'
Feds Enforcing Law That Isn’t
The Canada Revenue Agency yesterday would not comment on warnings it will enforce a $17.4 billion increase in capital gains taxes though the measure never passed Parliament. An Agency manager publicly stated auditors will “continue to administer the proposed legislation” as if it was law: "This makes no sense at all."
Feds Admit Olympian Gaffe
Parks Canada admits it got its facts wrong in a historical commemoration. The agency called Saskatchewan high jumper Ethel Catherwood the first Canadian woman to win a gold medal in Olympic track and field. Catherwood was neither Canadian nor the first gold medalist: 'We ask those who covered the story to issue a correction.'
Just 4% Use ArriveCan: Data
Four percent of cross-border travelers are using the federal ArriveCan app, new data show. Voluntary use of the costly application plummeted once cabinet stopped mandating its use in 2022: "How many?"
Nearly Half Using Marijuana
Almost half of young adults are marijuana users, says a Department of Health report. The rate is 40.5 percent for high schoolers: "Cannabis use among young adults has increased."
Report Spikes Pension Claim
Alberta’s share of the Canada Pension Plan is only worth a third the amount claimed by the province, says a federal report. The analysis by Canada’s Chief Actuary was commissioned after Premier Danielle Smith released data stating Alberta was owed more than half the fund: 'It is of particular significance.'
44th Parliament Unraveling
Parliament must cut short its five-week Christmas recess to end “total mayhem” in the federal cabinet, says Opposition Leader Pierre Poilievre. The appeal followed the loss of more Commons votes that left the two-member Green Party as the only opposition caucus to support Prime Minister Justin Trudeau: "I have never seen anything like it. It is hallucinogenic."
Four Ministers In Three Years
Cabinet has a new housing minister, the fourth in three years, with updated figures showing construction starts are not close to federal targets. “I understand there’s a short runway,” Minister Nathaniel Erskine-Smith told reporters.
Wants Spanking Criminalized
Spanking harms children and should be criminalized, says the Federal Ombudsman for Victims of Crime. Benjamin Roebuck in a letter to senators said Parliament must repeal an 1892 clause of the Criminal Code that allows parents to use reasonable force to correct misbehaving children: "I remain deeply concerned about violence experienced by children."
54% OK’d In Single Province
Homeowners in one province, Prince Edward Island, accounted for more than half of successful federal applications for the subsidized purchase of heat pumps, records show. Islanders’ claims numbered in the thousands while only a handful of Prairie homeowners qualified for grants: "How many?"
Sunday Poem: “135-58”
Poet W.N. Branson writes: “Ancient verdant seats, filled in absentia and used to breathtaking effect; bewildered subjects of His Majesty, flash with a piercing light…”
Review: It Was 38° With Many Snakes
It was Canada’s longest military deployment. On Sunday March 15, 1964 peacekeepers landed in Cyprus and stayed 29 years. The mission cost some $700 million and saw deployment of the nation’s last aircraft carrier, HMCS Bonaventure.
There is no library of literature on the Cyprus mission. The island itself was a beach resort for English tourists. No Victoria Crosses were awarded, no wounded veterans came home to parades. For all that, Under the Blue Beret should be required reading for anyone who is thinking of joining the military.
In crisp prose author Terry Burke captures the minutiae of army life. It is neither heroic nor desperate. It is nothing like the military caricatured by non-combatants. It is what it is.



