A New Poison Warning

Homeowners face new warnings on indoor exposure to naphthalene under proposed Health Canada guidelines. Regulators noted the chemical most commonly associated with mothballs is used in scores of products: "Indoor air is one area where people may have higher exposures than they expect."

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Rail Bill Becomes Law: “What Was The Point?”

Railways and shippers await new regulations under first-ever legislation on freight service. Bill C-52 will be signed into law this week, though both railways and shippers fault the legislation: “What is the point?”

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Youth Crime Down Again

Criminologists say they are unsurprised by a ten percent decline in delinquency last year, with youth court caseloads hitting their lowest level since record-keeping began in 1991. The caseload fell in every province and territory, and in almost every category of youth crime: “It is not getting worse."

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74 Percent Won’t Be Back

Recidivism rates in federal prisons have remained unchanged for more than a decade despite evolving crime legislation, records show. Correctional Service documents indicate 26 percent of new inmates already served time, unchanged from 2000: "The rate is not as high as we've been led to believe."

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Funds Under Scrutiny

Parliament is reviewing legislation to tighten scrutiny of funds used to restore and maintain the nation’s forts, canals and other historic sites. Bill C-528 requires that Parks Canada and registered charities keep careful accounting of restoration budgets and donations they receive: "There is no way of defining where your donation is going to go."

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Fees Up & How

Advocates are protesting a multi-million dollar increase in fees by a federal grain agency. The Canadian Grain Commission has doubled and tripled inspection fees that were frozen since 1991, as MPs broke for summer recess: "What we want to know is why."

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Credit Cheques Blacklisted

Canada’s banks are now forbidden from mailing unsolicited credit card cheques to customers. It comes more than two years after the Department of Finance said it would ban the practice: "These cheques were ubiquitous."

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The Land Time Forgot?

A senator says he has now waited two years for a reply to a routine question on government policy, setting a new standard for inertia and "lack of disclosure” in Parliament. "Canadians have a right to know what the government is doing," said Sen. Percy Downe, who asked June 23, 2011 for details of decentralization -- and is still waiting.

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Feds Test Wine

Canada is introducing first-ever federal regulations on icewine in a bid to curb counterfeiting. Winemakers praised the initiative though it calls for federal-provincial consensus, and one province -- Quebec -- is improperly freezing grapes: "Establishing these standards is critical."

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Less Crime On Waterfront

Port officials say coordinated policies, not more federal regulations, have reduced crime. Authorities speaking at a Port Secure conference said they curbed contraband with common-sense precautions. The remarks came as the Canada Border Services Agency proposed new regulations creating cordoned “controlled areas” at ports and airfields.

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More Breath Machines Banned

The Department of Justice has banned six more obsolete models of breathalyzer machines on the advice of forensic scientists. Authorities did not comment on the order, the second in six months. The department earlier cited “human error” as cause for banning certain blood-alcohol instruments.

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Jobs Data Are Skewed: Senator

Official job figures are skewed by counting 300,000 unpaid interns as members of the workforce, says a Liberal senator. “It is almost incomprehensible,” said Senator Grant Mitchell of Edmonton. Statistics Canada confirmed it does not remove free volunteers from its monthly job calculations.

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More Security For Travellers

Canadian travellers face new security cordons at major airports and marine ports. The Department of Public Safety said anti-smuggling regulations will bring more restricted areas beginning at Toronto’s Pearson International Airport, Trudeau International at Montreal, and Vancouver International Airport.

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A Federal Lobster Quota?

One of the nation’s largest fisheries should not expect taxpayers to “bail them out” without concessions, says the parliamentary secretary for fisheries. MP Randy Kamp said he questions aid for the $1 billion lobster fishery without new measures: “We’ve been sort of nibbling around the edges of this individual quota..."

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Cabinet Extends Family Freeze

Cabinet is extending a freeze on new immigration sponsorships for families. A freeze in place since November 2011 will continue till year's end, with a quota of 5,000 applicants annually after that: "It doesn't take too long for a backlog to build up."

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