Random Breath Tests Legal?

The Opposition says it’s consulted with constitutional lawyers in drafting a bill allowing random Breathalyzer tests of motorists. New Democrats introduced the measure previously endorsed by a Commons committee. However even supporters acknowledge the proposal is open to legal challenge: 'This area of law is complex.'

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Investment At 30-Year Low

Capital spending in the vehicle industry has fallen to 1980 levels, according to corporate research. However the Canadian Auto Partnership Council said adoption of U.S.-style right-to-work legislation is no solution: "We still think it is possible to compete with Mexico and the right-to-work states."

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Headlines Garble Tax Story?

Canada’s accountants say media coverage of tax avoidance unfairly maligns tax-paying corporations. The Chartered Professional Accountants of Canada criticized media accounts equating legal tax avoidance with criminal misconduct: "It's the headlines that are confusing."

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I’m Feeling Restful, Airy

Government of Canada websites must feature blue not because it’s the colour of the Conservative Party but due to its restful qualities, according to documents. Records show federal agencies conducted extensive studies and focus groups in settling on blue as a predominant website colour: "It's airy."

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The Mortgage “Experience”

Canada Mortgage & Housing Corporation is investigating the “experiences of first-time buyers” amid the biggest run-up in mortgage debt in the country’s history. Home loans have grown ten-fold since 1982 to more than a trillion dollars. "We're keeping a close eye on what they're up to," said Finance Minister James Flaherty.

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Corporate Data Grabbing “Disturbing” Says Senator

Regulators must restrict a Bell Canada “data grab” of customers' online activities, says a Conservative senator. The deputy chair of the communications committee questioned the practice of monitoring, compiling and marketing customers' internet profiles: "I find what they're doing disturbing."

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More Wheeling ‘N Dealing

The Department of Foreign Affairs is attempting to buy or lease a new embassy in Brussels, where taxpayers have been billed for five official residences at the same time – two of them vacant. The Belgian realty hunt is the latest by the department, which has made and lost money since being ordered to reduce its $208 million-a year property bill: "I recall some bad publicity."

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Industry Canada Warns ‘Persistent’ Labour Shortages

Industry Canada is commissioning a survey on factory labour shortages. It follows a Canadian Manufacturers and Exporters’ poll that identified a chronic lack of skilled workers from engineers to welders: 'It's the most common barrier to growth.'

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Another Happy Customer

The Canadian Transportation Agency is accused of complex, legalistic proceedings “unfriendly” to travellers. A lawyer who pressed a successful claim against Air Canada said proceedings are too time-consuming and adversarial: "Passengers put up with it."

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More Lac-Mégantic Legacies

Railways are endorsing a Transport Safety Board proposal to upgrade thousands of obsolete tanks prone to puncture as in the fiery Lac-Mégantic wreck. An industry group requested new safety standards affecting two-thirds of the 92,000 tank cars used to ship flammable liquids: "The tank cars' weaknesses have been acknowledged."

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Feds Go Facebook Creeping

Canadians’ Facebook pages, Twitter exchanges and YouTube videos are to be watched ‘round the clock by a surveillance division of the Department of Public Works. Authorities propose to keep an eye of “top influencers” at blogs and chatrooms. No targeted individuals or groups were named. Documents obtained by Blacklock's show agencies already spend millions monitoring newsrooms.

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Certain Death At 33.5¢/Mile

VIA Rail passenger service faces certain death outside Québec and Ontario without a new management plan, says the nation’s largest private sector union, Unifor. VIA's operating deficit is at 33.5 cents per mile: "We shouldn't fool ourselves."

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20 Million Transactions

The federal agency responsible for watching out for money laundering and terror financing is touting a banner year of 919 disclosures of “actionable” financial deals sent to investigation, and nearly 20 million transactions reported nationwide.

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Canada Revenue Agency Trips Over Date Stamp

Canada Revenue faces the loss of a mammoth tax judgment against an oil company because it couldn’t prove it mailed a letter. The agency was cited by a federal judge after the Calgary Tax Office could not produce a simple date stamp as evidence it mailed a $4.6 million assessment notice: “Does this strike you as an example of a competent organization?”

MP Says Union Staff “Lazy” & “Dead Weight”

10% of federal employees are “lazy”, “dead weight” staff, the Commons finance committee has been told. Conservative MP Brian Jean, a former Alberta Crown prosecutor, claimed public servants make themselves scarce at work to evade assignments: "'Hide and seek for a grand a week', that's what they called it."

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