A bill to end a 172-year tradition of notifying Canadians of changes to federal regulations will perish with expected prorogation of Parliament this summer. No government member would take Blacklock’s questions on S-12, the bill to alter a disclosure practice that pre-dates Confederation. "S-12, what's that?" said the bill's sponsor in the Commons.
Lawyers Mark “Human” Slogan
One of the largest lawyers’ groups in the country has trademarked a motivational slogan to counter a “negative picture” of barristers and solicitors. "It shows lawyers are people," said a Hamilton, Ont. litigator who promoted the campaign to "humanize" the profession.
Anti-Trust Agency OKs Interac Fees
Small business advocates are endorsing a Competition Bureau ruling on changes at Interac though higher fees will result. Interac won approval to raise penny and nickel fees charged retailers: “If Interac succeeds, small businesses will continue to have some competition."
Sorry Wrong Number
Telecom commissioners have denied a bid to double payphone charges from 50¢ to a dollar. Advocacy groups cheered the decision by the Canadian Radio-Television and Telecom Commission on behalf of users of the nation’s 167,000 payphones: "Denying the rate increase was a good thing."
A Long Road To Recovery
A cross-boundary dispute over a fish dubbed a nuisance species is ending after nearly two decades. Advocates question whether the resolution comes too late for one of Canada’s heritage waterways, the St. Croix: "It is a river that has so many challenges."
No “Electronic Tool” To Flag Border Danger: Judge
Front-line guards with the Canada Border Services Agency have no electronic method of instantaneously flagging “armed and dangerous” travellers at U.S. crossings, according to court testimony. A federal judge noted computerized background checks would slow cross-border traffic to a crawl.
Mail Inspectors Seize Drugs
Canada Post inspectors have seized loads of contraband from drugs to guns, including hundreds of kilograms of marijuana, cocaine, hashish and khat, and 356 bottles of vodka: "It's unfortunately a reality."
Looking For More Cuts?
Newly-appointed Environment Minister Leona Aglukkaq took office as an advocacy group warned federal policies imperil the national parks system. It follows enactment of a bill to permit oil and gas exploration in one national park, and a proposal to drill within metres of another.
PM Sacks One-Fifth Of Cabinet
Prime Minister Stephen Harper has sacked one-fifth of his cabinet, in the largest shakeup of its kind since the 2011 election. The Prime Minister today dismissed eight ministers, including fisheries minister Keith Ashfield who is undergoing cancer treatments. Harper in appointing new advisers also expanded the total size of cabinet from 36 to 38 ministers.
Court Passes On Tax Bully Allegation
A businessman who was once the king of grey market TV has lost a bid to take Canada Revenue Agency to the Supreme Court for purported bullying. The former Saskatchewan TV dealer alleged he was threatened with prosecution if he didn't plead guilty to tax offences dating back 15 years -- yet was never charged.
Health Canada Records Confirm Internet Myth
Newly-released Health Canada records document incidents of what’s become an urban legend: exploding cookware. The Department of Health documented at least 21 complaints over a ten-year period from Canadians who reported they were injured by flying glass from cookware, including consumers so badly hurt they required medical attention.
Farmers Vs. Pipelines
The National Energy Board has been hit with protests after proposing regulations that would prohibit farmers from wheeling grain carts over buried pipelines. Among the board's suggestions -- that landowners call each time they wanted to cross the right of way: "The whole purpose was to solicit feedback."
No Signal On TV Policy
Federal intentions on TV policy remain vague despite a new ruling upholding Canadian programming, says one of the nation’s largest media unions. Regulators rejected a bid by The Comedy Network to run more American-made films and cartoons: "What they were asking for was shocking."
Bees. Trouble.
Mounting losses in the honey industry are prompting renewed investigation on links between pesticides and bee deaths. Agriculture Canada credits bees with contributing more than $2 billion to the nation's economy: "Everybody is working on finding out what solutions are required."
Marijuana Plan Ripe For Fraud, Crime?
Police have privately warned Health Canada its planned privatization of marijuana production for medical use may lure organized crime. Details of confidential meetings indicate police told the health department they were wary of the plan: "Public safety is an enormous concern."



