Cities are pressing Transport Canada for mandatory disclosure of all dangerous goods moved by rail. The Federation of Canadian Municipalities said, three months after the fatal Lac-Mégantic wreck, they have no assurances of regulatory changes: "This simply cannot continue."
A #1 Realtor
The Tax Court trial of a realtor who claimed a McDonald’s Happy Meal and his daughter’s cellphone fees as business expenses has provided a glimpse into the trade. The self-described "number one" condo salesman pleaded guilty to falsifying his tax return following two Canada Revenue audits: "I do not find him to be credible."
$1,000 A Job
MPs will debate a proposed $50 million tax credit for employers who hire young workers, especially in depressed areas. New federal data show the youth jobless rate has dropped below 11% only once in the past thirty-five years: "This is about hiring."
Canada In 20 Years: Older, Greyer & Still On The Job
Canadians will work longer than ever for decades to come amid anticipated labour shortages, predicts a confidential 20-year forecast by the Department of Human Resources. The report, never published, cautions of sweeping change: "There are grim prospects for our children."
Court Reveals Tax Scheme
Details of a scheme involving millions of dollars in dubious tax receipts issued by a strip mall “church” have been divulged in federal court. Auditors confirmed the "church" issued $3.27 million in charitable tax receipts though it had only $18,000 in the bank.
‘Economy lacks an engine…’
The nation's economy this spring and summer created exactly half the jobs it did in the same period last year, according to new Statistics Canada data. Retail spending was the main boost for job creation: "Canada's economy lacks an engine."
Victory — Then Defeat
Only six months after claiming a “milestone” victory over the Asian long-horned beetle, the Canadian Food Inspection Agency confirmed the pest is back. Agency staff discovered the tree-killing bugs near an airport, where it's believed they arrive in shipping crates.
Too Steep At $160?
Fewer Canadians than expected are buying new 10-year passports despite federal research that the $160 documents would be a hit with travellers. Passport Canada confirmed one-third of new applicants declined the 10-year documents since it introduced them last July: 'Some Canadians are sensitive to an increase in fees.'
A Bid To Regulate $5B Fees
Retailers’ credit card fees must be capped by Parliament following a federal competition ruling upholding Visa and MasterCard practices, say MPs. Visa and MasterCard collect an estimated $5 billion a year in unregulated fees from retailers: "The costs have to go somewhere."
After 84 Years, Privatization
A federal farm agency is privatizing pedigreed seed production for the first time since 1929. It follows privatization of national regulations on meat and fish inspection, egg processing and fertilizer labeling: 'A public service is about to be transformed...'
RCMP Union Case Delayed
Organizers attempting to unionize the RCMP must wait till 2014 to see their case in the Supreme Court. A century-old ban on a federal police union will be heard with a second landmark case on RCMP pay hikes: "It will affect workplaces throughout the nation."
It’s Worse Than Botswana
Manitoba's First Nations high school graduation rate ranks below Botswana's, according to Department of Aboriginal Affairs data. The drop-out rates were detailed as Parliament prepares to debate a First Nation Education Act: "The rates are appalling."
“It is like free money…”
Canada Revenue Agency has lost a fortune in “free money” by mismanaging a program of voluntary disclosure of IOUs, an analyst tells Blacklock’s. The agency did not comment on claims it makes eager taxpayers wait 18 months to write a cheque: "It's insane."
One Poll They Missed: 9 In 10 Don’t Talk To Pollsters
Pollsters must now phone more than nine households for every single Canadian willing to answer their questions, according to a Department of Finance study. One pollster dialed 29,552 phone numbers over two weeks to find enough respondents: 'It may seem counterintuitive.'
Wireless Complaints Are #1
Complaints over wireless service now outnumber grievances with telemarketers as the number one consumer protest to telecom regulators, according to data compiled by the CRTC: "I've never heard justification for that sort of thing."



