Another Fisheries Lawsuit

Fisheries Minister Keith Ashfield is being sued over a license his department issued to a British Columbia salmon farm. The Federal Court case is the latest point of conflict in the aquaculture industry.

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A $14 Federal Newspaper

The Department of National Defence is charging taxpayers the equivalent of nearly $14 a copy to publish an official government newspaper most Canadians have never read. The Canadian Military Journal costs almost half a million dollars a year to serve 8,500 subscribers, according to accounts.

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590,000 Tax Filers Will Be Nicer This Year: Forecast

More than half a million Canadians will become first-time donors to charity this year under a “super” tax credit, according to new Department of Finance forecasts. Officials projected 590,000 tax-filers, including 220,000 couples, will make a charitable contribution under the signature credit detailed in the 2013 budget.

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Feds Search For ‘Quakes,’ ‘Gangs,’ ‘Letters to Santa’

Keyword searches used by government departments to see what Canadians are saying about them reveal an odd assortment of themes. The Prime Minister’s Privy Council Office monitored articles on children’s letters to the North Pole, while the Department of Finance expressed an interest in media mentions of “too big to fail.”

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Cutting, Not Talking

Agriculture Minister Gerry Ritz is refusing comment on cuts to scientific research and other services amid protests from national farm groups. Ritz declined Blacklock's repeated interview requests as layoff notices were sent to 350 senior staff, including biologists, engineers and research managers.

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It’s Good Enough For Malta

After eleven years of review and five national conferences, Health Canada is following the lead of Malta in regulating consumer protection of drug ingredients. "Canada is not particularly good at this," said Dr. Sholom Glouberman, president of the Patients' Association of Canada.

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A Label For Everything

One of the biggest landlords in the country, Public Works Canada, should require its buildings to carry efficiency labels to “set standards for energy use,” says a national consultant. A Commons committee has been told Canada "is no longer the leader" in efficiency, with buildings that consume three times as much energy as those in Europe.

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An Arctic Balancing Act

Canada assumes the chairmanship of the Arctic Council amid little-noticed passage of a federal bill that “tips the balance” in favour of mining and energy companies in the North, says an Inuit group. More than $38 billion in new mining projects are awaiting federal approval in the north, by official estimate.

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“Red Tape” Campaign Kills More Regulations

More regulations are being repealed in the name of cutting red tape. Agriculture Canada is eliminating requirements that fertilizer manufacturers seek federal approval on safety, effectiveness and labeling before selling their products. "Nefarious," said one MP. The agriculture minister declined comment.

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“Sophisticated” Surveillance

Oil tankers can have a better than 9 in 10 chance of evading federal surveillance of spills under Transport Canada’s “sophisticated” air monitoring program, records show. In one month, aircraft assigned to spy spills made eight flights over more than 65,000 sq.km.: "What they're doing is minimal."

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A Pizza Treaty

In a complex agreement that skirted a regulatory minefield, cheese-makers have reached agreement with restaurateurs to provide low-cost mozzarella for fresh pizzas. The deal followed months of negotiations. It takes effect June 1, but only on a trial basis.

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Migrants Popular With Employers: Labour Study

Fully three-quarters of new jobs created nationwide in a four-year period were filled by temporary foreign workers, according to the Canadian Labour Congress. Economists documented the popular hiring of migrants as New Brunswick fish plant workers, Ontario nannies and Tim Hortons staff in Alberta.

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They’re Still Out There

A long-anticipated parliamentary report on invasive species in the Great Lakes is being panned as a compilation of recycled recommendations to stem the spread of Asian Carp. Experts fear the species could devastate the lakes ecosystem. "The U.S. does a lot more domestically than Canada," said one analyst

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Pipelines Not Understood, MPs Told

Citing “misinformation” and “misunderstanding” on climate change, pipeline operators have appealed to Parliament for recognition of the “backbone of transport of energy." One Alberta executive told MPs, "There is no hidden agenda." The hearing followed testimony by a labour group that questioned the "army of lobbyists" pressing for the Keystone XL project.

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“It Was Just A…Mistake”

Telecom giant Cogeco has lost a bid to skip payments on its contributions to Canadian programming. “It was just a procedural mistake,” said a Cogeco executive. Under federal regulations, companies are required to devote five percent of annual gross revenues to made-in-Canada shows.

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