Insurer Great-West Life has been handed a victory by the Supreme Court in the case of a policyholder denied a claim for incorrectly filling out a questionnaire. The Court decided not to hear further testimony in the case of the Manitoba woman who told Great-West she had never been to counseling, though she'd seen a psychiatrist 23 times.
Nice With Teriyaki Sauce
Canada Geese face a bigger bird hunt after being tagged as a nuisance by federal regulators. Environment Canada, mandated to protect the geese by law, says it will ease hunting limits on the iconic birds it blames for causing “a variety of conflicts with humans” -- like killing lawns.
“We can’t rely on results…”
Municipalities say they are having difficulty calculating critical figures following changes to the way Statistics Canada collects information. Local authorities said new methods leave officials with little data on Small Town Canada: “More than 1,000 communities do not have results."
Typo Trips Stats Agency
A computer glitch that saw Statistics Canada publish garbled data sent staff scrambling to correct the typo, according to Access to Information records. The federal agency mistakenly published the wrong numbers for 20 minutes on its website as the nation’s stock markets prepared to open.
File Search On 150,000 Kids
Six months after Ontario Superior Court ordered the government to turn over all relevant records on the Residential School System, the process is still hobbled by disagreements over definitions of ‘and,’ ‘all’ and ‘relevant,’ officials say: “It’s in our interest to know who knew what, when,”
“Retail Sales” Is Top Job
Malls have eclipsed manufacturing as the nation’s leading job creator with more than 1 in 10 working Canadians now employed in retail sales. New figures show the country also has more carpenters than accountants; and welders outnumber security guards.
36% Of Broadcasts To Bell
Canada’s top telecom regulatory has approved the takeover of Astral Media Inc. by Bell Canada Enterprises, giving the corporation control of more than a third of English broadcasting in Canada: "It is going to hit Canadians in the pocketbook."
Senate “Stood Up” Says Labour
The Canadian Labour Congress is crediting the Senate with blocking quick passage of a contentious labour bill now deferred for months. Sixteen Conservative dissenters – most of them appointed by Prime Minister Stephen Harper – voted with Liberals to prevent passage of Bill C-377. Another six Conservatives abstained from supporting their own Senate leadership: "This was a bad bill."
Judge Tells Cabinet: Get Your Facts Straight
A federal judge has faulted the Department of Aboriginal Affairs for misunderstanding its own policies and broadcasting “incorrect” information in a centuries-old land dispute. The rebuke came over inflammatory remarks regarding a claim affecting prime property deeded to Mohawks and “their heirs forever” in 1793.
Cocaine Capital Gets High Marks For “Agriculture”
Trade Minister Ed Fast is declining comment after releasing a report that praised cocaine-producing Colombia for its impressive "agriculture". The lapse came in a 27-page report in which Fast's department was to account for human rights conditions in the republic under a 2011 commercial treaty.
Now Hiring
Canada faces a “chronic” shortage of young tradespeople nationwide, according to new research. Shortfalls in qualified trades include a looming shortage of 37,000 mechanics and technicians: “It’s a chronic situation; it’s simple math,” said Michael Atkinson, president of the Canadian Construction Association.
Senate “Guts” Labour Bill
A revolt by Conservative senators has blocked passage of a contentious labour bill, handing the government its heaviest legislative defeat of the year. Twenty-two Conservatives today bolted from their own leadership on Bill C-377, effectively stripping provisions that would compel unions to publish confidential data on a government website: "The bill is gutted."
Deadline Missed By 32 Years
Cabinet will miss its target of making the nation PCB-free -- by 32 years. Environment Canada confirmed it is again extending its deadline for removal of industrial electrical equipment with high levels of toxic polychlorinated biphenyls: "By 2025 you can bet there will be people who still won't meet that deadline."
Tax Fraud Exposed In Court
Tax Court testimony has revealed new details of a fraud ring that falsified millions of dollars in claims. The revelations came in the case of a Toronto-area payroll clerk who unsuccessfully sued Canada Revenue Agency over credits a judge dismissed as unreliable: "Her testimony has no credibility at all."
Hello — Operator?
Canada’s telecom regulator is raising rates on 1-800 calls from payphones for people who still do that. The charge is the so-called default rate, a toll paid to a payphone provider for toll-free calls that access a long-distance network. There are still 167,000 payphones in service nationwide.



