A bankrupt shipyard awarded millions in federal contracts and subsidies, including the refit of the destroyer HMCS Athabaskan, is seeking new buyers. The sale by trustees comes seven months after the Department of Finance pledged $5 million to upgrade the yard: "We have had considerable interest."
One Of The 19.9%
The number of Canadian households relying on landline phones is below 20 percent for the first time in postwar history. The CRTC reported 19.9% of homes have only landlines compared to 45% a decade ago: "The most comprehensive view to date."
‘Disneyland Of Litigation’
The Supreme Court has put a halt to a P.E.I. woman’s campaign for free drivers’ licenses. The vexatious litigant has been to the Court five times with failed appeals on various complaints: "It's like having a job as a crash-test dummy."
“Reality Exceeded Expectations”
Shortages of skilled workers remain chronic in the biotech sector despite a five-year plan to hire more talent, a national study shows. Fully 33% of Canadian companies say they can't get the workers they need despite foreign recruitment: "It is clear reality exceeded expectations."
Debt Not Sustainable: Study
Canadian debt is “not sustainable” and threatens to sink provincial programs for future generations, says the Parliamentary Budget Office. The dire forecast came in an "illustrative scenario" that projected spectacular growth in borrowing or dire cuts in services.
Adult Fitness Credit Costly
Expanding a federal fitness tax credit to benefit older adults would cost taxpayers as much as a quarter-billion dollars, according to the Parliamentary Budget Office. The calculation came at the request of a Conservative MP: "I don't think it's a good idea."
Commissioner Sued Again
The RCMP face another federal lawsuit over alleged workplace dysfunction, this time in a case detailing what one judge called the force’s “dim” grievance procedure. The lawsuit is the first of its kind since Parliament passed a bill granting new powers to fire or demote members.
‘Get Financing Elsewhere’
Canada Revenue stands to gain hundreds of millions of dollars with an increase in penalties on delinquent taxpayers. Yet an analyst tells Blacklock’s that interest rates on late accounts remain so low they're a mere cost of business for scofflaws: "Why don't we just delay?"
20 Carp Can Kill A Fishery?
Federal regulators are being warned Great Lakes habitat faces “significant risk” from as few as twenty Asian carp. Research suggests existing measures to prevent the invasive species underestimate the threat: "There really is a big risk."
A Seaway Slowdown
In a further sign of a slowing economy, traffic through one of the world’s busiest shipping routes has tumbled nearly a tenth so far this year. The St. Lawrence Seaway confirms it is operating below half-capacity and so far is not on pace to meet its cargo targets: "We will have a strong push."
Bees. More Trouble.
Health Canada faces formal notice that it violated federal law by re-registering an insecticide it acknowledges is “highly toxic” to bees. Advocates are requesting a review of the impact of more than a decade of the chemical's use: "You don't register products when you don't know the environmental effects."
Repeal Of “Rightful Access”?
A bill to alter 172 years of practice in plainly publishing federal regulations is expected to be resurrected when Parliament resumes Oct. 16, says the opposition. Government authorities have refused all interview requests on the little-noticed Bill S-12: "The public has the right to know."
‘The recorder was erased…’
The Transportation Safety Board reports “very troubling” safety practices involving the transfer of oil rig workers off the Newfoundland coast. In one incident, a charter helicopter company erased its cockpit recorder: "This is protected information."
Big Wind, No Rain
Consumers are “heading towards the status quo” on telecom service and pricing following the registration of bidders for new wireless spectrum, analysts tell Blacklock’s. Fifteen firms registered to bid for new bandwidth.
Once More, With Feeling
A call for mandatory compensation for air travellers with a grievance is back before Parliament seven months after MPs voted it down. The bill would provide up to $1,000 for flight cancellations and disruptions: "We are getting thousands of emails."



