The Canadian Food Inspection Agency, implicated in the sale of tainted meat to consumers, is inviting the public to comment on food safety. The agency said it welcomes input on new measures to prevent food poisonings. Federal investigators earlier cited the agency as slow in protecting Canadians in the XL Foods incident.
For Sale: A Relic Of The Cod Wars
The Coast Guard is auctioning a relic of the cod wars, an aging Coast Guard patrol boat once used to lob tear gas at fishermen in the Gulf of St. Lawrence. The vessel is up for bids with a reserve of $90,000 by the same federal agency that sells all surplus government property, from desk lamps to shell casings.
Review: Syria?
“We are being inundated with horrific media scenes from Syria,” writes anthropologist Ed Hedican; “But are we, in Canada, any different when dealing with internal dissent?” To suggest Canada’s aboriginal policy is the equivalent of Syrian atrocities is an extraordinary claim that requires extraordinary evidence. The author does not meet the bar. Occasionally he does not even bother with footnotes.
Chinese Are “Inscrutable”, Drink A Lot: Cabinet Notes
Chinese are “inscrutable”, enjoy drinking, and don’t like being touched, according to Department of Foreign Affairs protocol notes obtained by Blacklock’s. In advice to cabinet and staff, the foreign ministry also warns visitors to China must never wrap gifts in blue paper or reveal the soles of their shoes: "I didn't know about the shoes."
Feud Goes To The Lawyers
Canadians have joined a U.S. court action to block a cross-border practice that threatens to escalate into a trade war. A U.S. rule on meat labeling is blamed for $5 billion in lost exports, and has prompted Ottawa to warn of retaliatory tariffs on everything from Washington apples to Florida orange juice.
Payphone Probe Ends
Canada’s telecom regulator says it has no evidence Bell Canada payphone customers are being overcharged on long-distance calls. But the CRTC says it will conduct additional study on consumer protection for users of Canada's 167,000 payphones.
Air Employee Checks OK
A federal judge has upheld Transport Canada’s right to deny security clearance to employees suspected of associating with former criminals. The court ruled officials had a right to revoke clearance for a longtime staffer at Halifax’s Stanfield International Airport, though the employee was never charged with any crime.
Chicken Quotas In Court
Chicken farmers have been granted limited status in a court battle targeting Canada’s multi-billion dollar poultry quota system. A Welland, Ont. processor is suing suppliers and the government after it was denied the right to buy specialty chicken for the Chinese-Canadian market: "They are not set up to meet this demand."
Complaints & Grievances Up
Defence Minister Peter MacKay says he wishes all Canadians emulated the military, but did not comment on rising rates of grievances and harassment complaints within the army, navy and air force. Newly-released documents compiled by MacKay’s department show increasing complaints by military personnel over workplace conditions.
Contract’s A Contract
Employees are on notice to stick to contracts after the Supreme Court dismissed one executive’s claims for compensation over a job gone awry. Judges would not hear further testimony in the case: "If we're working with an employee, we want to make sure they understand what they're signing."
MP, Activists Oppose Federal Development
A proposal by a federal authority to develop one of Canada’s southernmost natural habitats is raising parliamentary protests. The Windsor, Ont. Port Authority says it intends to dump fill from new road construction into a 32-acre forested area near the Detroit River: "Is a dock more important than some fish or bird-nesting habitat?"
Fishermen Vs. Fishermen
Ailing Fisheries Minister Keith Ashfield, in his last major cabinet decision, sided with Prince Edward Island fishermen in an inter-provincial dispute in the $1 billion lobster industry. Fishermen in Ashfield's home province of New Brunswick expressed "extreme and absolute disappointment" in the regulatory ruling.
Spaceman Had Ghostwriters
Astronaut Chris Hadfield’s seemingly spontaneous performances in space were the product of a three-year marketing campaign complete with CBC collaboration and occasional tweets ghostwritten by government employees, Blacklock’s has learned. “It was a multi-faceted media campaign – yes, of course it was,” said a former Liberal cabinet aide who directed Hadfield's stunts.
Groceries Up 19 Percent
Grocery price spikes are the highest in a generation, rising 19 percent in the past five years, officials confirmed. Analysts attributed the rise to higher fuel costs, droughts and profit-taking: "Costs have stabilized somewhat but they never go down."
Going, Going…
Trade Minister Ed Fast is refusing comment on the apparent lapse of a China investment agreement. The pact was signed ten months ago but still awaits ratification by cabinet. Fast declined Blacklock’s interview request on the deal, which would fix investment rules for decades: "This is unusual."



