Passport Canada has been rebuked for acting as police, prosecutor and judge in the case of a citizen stripped of his travel documents without cause. Federal Court sharply criticized the Crown agency for imposing a five-year passport ban on a Toronto man never charged with any crime: "The director did not have the authority".
CRTC To Spend $362,000 Watching What You Watch
The CRTC will spend at least $362,000 a year monitoring which TV and radio programs Canadians follow, or just happen to overhear. The regulator is contracting BBM Canada for research using meters that monitor every broadcast: 'They want to know how Canadians are consuming media'.
Tax Garble Causes Confusion
The nation’s largest commercial parking company is expressing frustration with on-off Finance Canada charges at hospital lots. The department repealed the GST on parking only months after introducing it: "The intent is to relieve basic health services".
Feds To Weigh Security Regs
Public Safety Canada is reviewing calls by Unifor, the union representing armoured car guards, for standard oversight of the multi-million dollar industry: "There is nothing about training, types of weapons, size of the crew – nothing, zero".
No Business For A Pessimist
The billion-dollar Atlantic lobster industry is reaching out to U.S. counterparts for joint action in plotting recovery from disastrous prices: "We all depend on each other or we will all be out of business".
“Busybody” Rabbit Lawsuit Ends After 2-Year Odyssey
A two-year lawsuit by a “busybody” litigant over rabbits confirms court injunctions must remain an extraordinary remedy in only serious cases, a legal analyst tells Blacklock’s. The complaint saw an Edmonton sue over a peculiar bylaw in another town.
VIA Forecasts Record Loss
VIA Rail will run its operating deficit this year to a record $321 million in what the rail workers’ union Unifor called an attempt to “manufacture a crisis”. The Crown-owned passenger rail service also warned of more cutbacks: "The goal here is to privatize the profitable parts".
Ag Canada Monitors Protests On Made-In-The-Lab Salmon
Senior employees at Agriculture Canada monitored an advocacy group the Canadian Biotechnology Action Network over its opposition to genetically-engineered salmon, according to memos released through Access to Information: "They seem to be overly worried about protest".
Shippers Wait — And Wait
An Agriculture Canada-subsidized review of grain transport must lead to improvements if railways are to keep pace with exports, say farm groups. Complaints follow passage of a bill that was supposed to improve rail service: "What we've seen isn't good enough".
23 Chemicals Under Review
A Health Canada agency is conducting special re-evaluation of 23 weed and insect-killing chemicals following a lawsuit by environmental groups: "If these are banned in Europe then they should be banned in Canada".
78,000 Rail Cars “A Danger To The Public”: Safety Board
Canada and the U.S. should quickly impose tougher standards for tank cars carrying flammable liquids, as well as adopt safer routing and better emergency response plans, warns the Transportation Safety Board: "Canadians have many reasons to be worried".
Foreigners ‘Displace’ Jobless, Says Ex-Official
Ottawa should cap the hiring of migrants, says a former senior Human Resources & Skills Development official. The ex-director general of policy research said it "should have been much harder" to hire temporary foreign workers in the last recession: "When the next recession occurs, Canada should be more careful".
Most Stressful Job In Gov’t?
Meat inspectors and staff are seeking psychological counselling at a rate up to three times the federal average, according to new data. The Canadian Food Inspection Agency reported thousands of employees and their families sought counselling last year over job stress: "It's a very dysfunctional organization".
Smoking Rates Plateau: “We Used To Be A World Leader”
Smoking rates plateaued as Health Canada suspended anti-tobacco advertising, according to new research. The number of smokers in Canada is unchanged from 2011 and has seen no serious decline in years, according to a University of Waterloo study: "Canada used to be a world leader".
Government Hires Beaver Trapper: “Can We Co-Exist?”
National symbol or not, the National Capital Commission is hiring a government-paid trapper to control beaver near Parliament Hill. The Crown agency counts more than 1100 tree-gnawing mammals in nearby Gatineau Park, blamed for washed-out roads and damaged property: "You'll never get rid of them".



