Railways Versus Pipelines

Shipment of oil and gas by train rather than pipelines could be a “niche opportunity” for railways, says a Canadian National executive. Railways already transport most of Canada's propane exports, chemical products, fertilizer and grains.

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“Cause & Effect”: a Poem by Shai Ben-Shalom

The author, an Israeli-born biologist, examines current events in the Blacklock's tradition: "Canada introduces Tough on Crime agenda at a time when crime rate is dropping..."

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Bay Of Fundy Fracking

A Nova Scotia veto on dumping of waste water from hydraulic fracturing into the Bay of Fundy is leading calls for federal regulation. The dispute is the "tip of the iceberg" in the treatment of fracking waste, says the Federation of Canadian Municipalities.

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Candy Probe Continues

A former Canadian candymaker under investigation for alleged price-fixing has lost a court bid to avoid questioning in a U.S. probe. The Competition Bureau claims a chocolate cartel attempted to fix the price of candy bars. The investigation is now entering its sixth year.

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Fight On Bill C-377: “Who said this is constitutional?”

A Conservative MP, ending months of silence, named Attorney General Rob Nicholson as his legal advisor on a contentious labour bill. MP Russ Hiebert said the attorney general okayed C-377 that compels unions to publish confidential data. The MP earlier told Blacklock's he could not identify his legal counsel because "I'm not sure they want to be named."

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In Like A Lion, Then Out Like –

Cabinet is ignoring its own ultimatum in a threatened U.S. trade war. Agriculture Canada had sworn retaliation if Washington did not repeal a $5 billion unfair trade practice by a Thursday deadline, which passed without incident: "It's extremely frustrating."

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Data Privacy Weak?

Canada’s privacy laws lack balance and require overdue reform, says a federal commissioner. A new report on weak compliance tools came as MPs opened Second Reading debate on a bill that would require mandatory reporting of data breaches.

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Suing, Not Talking

Health Minister Leona Aglukkaq is silent after being sued by one of the country’s largest pharmaceutical companies. Bayer Inc. filed the claim in Federal Court over confidential data. Neither the minister nor her department would explain their conduct: "It's the most bizarre thing."

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CBC ‘Elite’ Face Hearings

The Senate is reviewing the CBC for the second time in eight years amid complaints of elitism and inadequate news coverage. Quebec Liberal Senator Dennis Dawson, sponsor of the probe, complained of an "intellectual class" in Toronto and Montreal that monopolizes public broadcasting, he said.

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“Don’t be shocked…”

Industry groups are protesting an Alberta MP's claim that Canadian business is uncompetitive and marks up prices 100 percent. The complaints came as witnesses appeared to testify at the Commons finance committee on budget provisions: "I was shocked."

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Cabinet Broke Law: Ruling

Cabinet broke the law in its drive to cut costs at the Canadian Border Services Agency, says a federal panel. The Treasury Board was found to have violated labour legislation as it searched for ways to save $58 million: "This is very, very troubling."

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No Place For Vegans

Federal meat inspectors are enforcing new rules on burger safety. It comes as a Department of Agriculture panel continues a closed-door probe of the biggest beef recall in Canadian history. Inspectors urge prompt reporting of "unusual" patterns of E.coli contamination.

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MPs Face Taxpayer Protest

The Canadian Taxpayers Federation is urging its 84,000 members to lobby MPs over amendments to legislation that will bar disclosure of senior public employees’ salaries. Cabinet amendments would conceal large six-figure payments: "We are just getting scandal after scandal."

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100,000 Litres Of Waste A Day

Cruise ships can dump more than 100,000 litres of waste water every day under new Transport Canada regulations intended to curb pollution at sea. The department acknowledged its regulations were "minimal." The transport minister would not take Blacklock's questions.

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First Fines Under Fare Law

The Canadian Transportation Agency has issued its first fines under a fare disclosure law. The regulations were introduced five months ago. One travel agency was fined $40,000 for repeated violations despite a formal warning: "I'd say this gets their attention."

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