The beer trade is crediting Department of Finance policy with promoting microbreweries, but says the industry overall remains unfairly taxed compared to winemakers. The analysis followed new data showing the value of beer sales has declined from a 50 percent market share to 44 percent in the past decade.
Three Border Guards Walk Into A Bar…
A federal labour board has exonerated three Canada Border Services guards who carried loaded handguns into a tavern. The guards were docked a week’s pay for wearing holstered weapons while enjoying 2-for-1 wings night at a saloon called the Rock Bottom Bar & Grill.
Rail ‘”Duopoly” Bill Okayed
A reform bill that provoked hot debate over a rail "duopoly" has cleared the Commons’ transport committee without amendments sought by industry critics. It followed 10 weeks of study, and testimony from one railway executive who lamented: "We just can't service everybody at once."
A Tragedy
Suicides in Canada's military are most likely to occur in two specific months of the calendar, according to five-year data from the defence department. Analysts noted the figures did not include returning reservists who have retired from their units: "We need to determine if there are patterns."
Senate Bill Would “Bury” Unions, Says Legislator
Legislation before the Senate will “bury” unions and cost Canadians their privacy, says the Leader of the Opposition in the Upper House. Bill C-377 requires that 14,557 union locals publish confidential data under threat of $1,000-a day fines. The labour minister would not comment.
“Life Is Not Fair,” MPs Told
Parliamentarians have opened new hearings on income inequality amid references on tax tables, Scripture and life choices. “The rich are always making it, it seems, and the poor are getting poorer,” said Conservative Senator Don Meredith, a Pentecostal minister: “I’m worried about the marginalized people.”
Tax Agents Cut 8 Percent
The Canada Revenue Agency has imposed 8 percent staff cuts in federal offices assigned to tracking overseas tax dodgers, new records show. The reductions affect scores of staff in two divisions responsible for complex audits: "It's a mystery."
An Unusual Index Confirms The Economy’s Slowdown
In a little-noticed sign of a weakening economy, the federal agency that navigates cargo ships through East Coast ports forecasts a year-long slowdown. The Atlantic Pilotage Authority notified shippers it will raise fees this year by up to 9 percent to cover operating deficits amid declining traffic.
Food Safety Plan In 8th Year
Health Canada says it still plans to expand a nationwide string of food safety surveillance offices. The project has been eight years in the works, and completion of the network is unclear: "Everyone needs to get information communicated more quickly."
“The way the system works”
Two lobby groups that successfully pressed the Department of Fisheries for a favourable policy change say they never met directly with Fisheries Minister Keith Ashfield. The two groups, named in a federal lawsuit, told Blacklock’s they used legitimate means to seek a “political” decision on fishing quotas: “That’s the way the system works.”
Not So Green After All
Canada is “punching below our weight” in energy efficiency in buildings, with Public Works Canada and other federal agencies trailing the private sector, says an industry group. The Canada Green Building Council calculates average efficiency of existing commercial buildings is three times below European Union standards. Public Works Minister Rona Ambrose didn't comment.
Household Poison Probe
Chemicals used to prevent the spread of fires in the home are under safety review, including a substance linked to kidney damage in pets and humans: "This is a catch-up exercise from the last sixty years of our chemical lifestyle."
Lobbyists Have Cabinet Pull: Memos
Confidential memos cite widespread influence of “political lobbying” in the Department of Fisheries. The secret reports, cited in Court documents, show senior staff and a Conservative MP warned of lobbyists' pull to the point that "political pressure can achieve desired outcomes" at the cabinet level.
Feds Drop Safety Rule By Mistake
Transport Canada mistakenly repealed a safety regulation affecting millions of vehicles sold in Canada. Officials admit they "inadvertently" dropped a requirement that all new light vehicles be equipped with what one auto executive called "the single most effective safety technology since the seatbelt."
MPs To Kill Travel Tax Credit Plan
Parliament will kill a proposal to offer Canadians $2,000 tax credits for touring the country on the 150th anniversary of Confederation. Conservative and New Democrat MPs signaled they will vote against the private bill offering tax credits for vacation expenses.



