Wanted: A Fish Policy

Fish farmers are appealing for an aquaculture policy amid claims their industry breaches federal law. Cabinet faces allegations it's permitted "harmful alteration" of habitat under the Fisheries Act: "We don't have aquaculture legislation."

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Rates Up Soon: Forecast

Canadians will see a return to “normal” interest rates by 2017 and should anticipate numerous tax increases by the provinces, says a Conference Board of Canada analyst. The board projected a 4% Bank of Canada rate by 2017: "How are we going to react?"

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A Landmark Court Case

A landmark case on RCMP pay, the right to association, and Parliament's authority to break its word is now headed to the Supreme Court. The dispute involves a 2008 rollback of $30 million in pay hikes for the Mounties: 'This is substantial interference.'

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$597 A Month

Canadians will “pay down the road” for a failed bid to expand public pension benefits for retirees, a labour conference has been told. The appeal came a year after Parliament opted for voluntary private plans for the majority of workers without benefits: "It's insufficient."

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A Close Call On Beer Labels

A regulatory dispute that threatened microbreweries nationwide has been settled by the Canadian Food Inspection Agency. The ruling turned on a narrow definition of whether ale and lager spiked with additives could still be called "beer".

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Fish Farming Verboten?

Environment Canada faces allegations B.C. salmon farming violates the Fisheries Act. A cabinet-level commission is requesting a response to claims that fish farms pose a "harmful alteration" of habitat.

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“Alfie” – A Poem

Poet Shai Ben-Shalom examines current events in the Blacklock's tradition: "After years at the helm, the beloved captain of Ottawa's NHL team leaves to play for another, citing his desire to win the Cup. It seems he doesn't believe..."

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Union Bill Orphaned?

Labour Minister Kellie Leitch is expressing indifference over a contentious labour bill before the Senate. Twenty-two Conservative senators and 5 provinces have protested the measure: "We will watch that."

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A Freighter Makes History

A non-descript freighter has made shipping and climate-change history. The Yong Sheng has become the first Asian vessel to complete the passage from China to Europe through the Russian Northeast Passage. It took 13 days off the Suez Canal route: "There's a gap."

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Saving A $2 Billion Asset

Farm supply and equipment manufacturers are pledging compliance with proposed Health Canada regulations to save bees. Proposed rules for 2014 are to contain the spread of insecticides known to kill bees that are credited with pollinating $2 billion worth of crops annually.

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“Hell with it; let’s not care”

The Automobile Protection Association has lost a final bid to lead a class action lawsuit over faulty gas pumps that overcharged consumers. It follows a Measurements Canada study that discovered 4.9% of pumps had faulty gauges, pumping less gas than shown on the meter: "Why should we let them get away with it?"

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In Ottawa, 8 Empty Chairs

Proposed federal securities oversight that has no jurisdiction in 8 of 10 provinces is a test of “laissez-faire” regulation, says an advocate for a national securities commission. Only Ontario and B.C. agreed to replace local securities commissions with a national chief regulator: "We need to do better than that."

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“We need to understand…”

Canada has a growing trade deficit in food processing despite being one of the biggest food exporters on earth, according to new national data. Analysts contacted by Blacklock's blamed the trend in part on the closure of scores of factories since 2007: "We need to understand what is occurring."

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Civil Servants No Sicker Than The Rest Of Us?

Public servants do not take significantly more sick days than workers in the private sector, according to research. The data appeared to contradict Treasury Board complaints of goldbricking by employees: "That does absolutely nothing in the workplace for morale."

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No Money, “No Problem”

Parks Canada had "no problem" paying $20,000 to fly CBC anchorman Peter Mansbridge and TV staff to Nunavut for "fantastic coverage" of its work, even as the agency cut parks funding 11%, documents show. CBC News took a total $94,734 in secret payments. Network managers refused comment.

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