Three Accidents, One Cause

Federal crash investigators are warning Transport Canada and flyers of an error now linked to three fatal mid-air collisions, including a Saskatchewan accident that killed five people. The Transportation Safety Board emphasized the limits of "visual flight rules" to avoid collisions: "We don't have a magic solution."

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Feds Eye Road Tolls: ‘Study Is Underway — ‘

A Crown corporation is studying the feasibility of toll roads and bridges. PPP Canada, an agency mandated to promote private investment in public works, announced it will examine tolls in its bid to “help shape” the country. "The public always winds up holding the bag."

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Polygamists Lose Tax Bid

Canada Revenue Agency has won a landmark court judgment that narrowly defines religious congregations under federal tax law. The $1.8 million ruling came in a case that exposed the finances of a polygamist group in B.C., where children as young as 12 were put to work and families held "famine calls" to pay taxes: "This is an unusual tax case."

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Waiting On Layoff Notice

The Department of Aboriginal Affairs is struggling to determine what to do with employees who became redundant under a pact with the Northwest Territories. Notices are expected in October following a Devolution Agreement that made hundreds of staff "surplus", according to confidential documents.

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They Left The Building

Conservative MPs quashed a bid for public hearings on wireless policy. The Commons industry committee yesterday took less than 20 minutes to reject an Opposition proposal for public consultations on an upcoming bandwidth auction for mobile service providers. MPs travelled to Ottawa for the short meeting, then promptly left the city.

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A Bunch O’ Commies

A top Department of Defence analyst characterized Occupy Ottawa protestors as lawless, drug-addled Marxists, according to documents. Details of the confidential correspondence over a 2011 protest near Parliament Hill are divulged in more than 1,000 pages of newly-released emails, memos, reports and files kept by the National Capital Commission: "It is a disgrace to this city."

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“They Goofed”

The Department of Finance is at a loss to explain how a bill that mistakenly doubled taxes on credit unions passed into law without anyone noticing. Finance Minister Jim Flaherty and his officials refused interviews after confirming the bill was vetted by staff, the House, Senate and parliamentary committees without a single person detecting the blunder: "They goofed."

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No Cause To Fear China Pact, Says Federal Judge

A China investment pact signed by the Department of International Trade should have no chilling effect on local governments, says a federal judge. The court concluded no local authorities should "fear" Chinese claims for compensation: "I have not been persuaded..."

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Federal Agency Had Secret File On “Occupy” Protestors

Documents reveal a federal agency, the National Capital Commission, spied on peaceful protesters in the Occupy movement. The parks commission amassed more than 1,000 pages of staff memos, emails, surveillance reports and photos after 25 demonstrators camped near Parliament in 2011. “We want to start pushing back,” managers remarked in one closed-door meeting, according to minutes released under the Access to Information Act.

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See Telecom Trust-Busters?

MPs preparing for an urgent hearing on wireless policy are being pressed to leave telecom regulation to anti-trust investigators. Members of the Commons industry committee meet in special session this evening to consider an Opposition motion for a policy review: "There is no reason to treat the wireless sector differently from any other industry."

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A Case Of All Or Nothing

An unhappy Air Canada customer who filed an all-or-nothing lawsuit despite a sympathetic hearing from the Canadian Transportation Agency “took the wrong route,” a legal analyst tells Blacklock’s. The agency is mandated to investigate complaints against federally-regulated firms: "Most of the time it works quite well."

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Unions A “Disadvantage”: Report

Unions are a “disadvantage” for investment according to a confidential report commissioned by the Federal Economic Development Agency for Southern Ontario. The report said unions are "most frequently identified by key informants" as a problem. Gary Goodyear, minister responsible for the agency, refused comment.

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‘It Fails, They’re Stunned’

Industry has a misplaced faith in purportedly fool-proof technology to avoid disastrous oil and gas spills, says a senator who investigated safety measures amid the Lac-Mégantic catastrophe. A Senate committee has recommended mandatory safety audits and greater use of improved rail cars that transport dangerous goods: "When it does fail, they're stunned."

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A Painful Disagreement

Rival denture clinic operators are headed to Federal Court in a dispute over the Copyright Act. The Denturist Association of Ontario is accused of blocking the use of insurance billing codes and even the professional designation DD (“Diploma in Denturism”) by members of a rival Denturist Group of Ontario: "They are hell bent on blocking us."

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Bank Is Safe — For Now

A 99-year old Toronto millionaire has lost a Federal Court claim that the Bank of Canada has waged a “conspiracy” to deny Canadians interest-free loans. William Krehm, a retired developer, brought the action citing an obscure provision of a 1934 law. He sought $1 in damages for every citizen: "The Bank of Canada is defending itself."

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