A federal agency has ruled a U.S. railway violated Canadian regulations following noise and nuisance complaints from neighbours in a small Quebec town. CSX Corp. was cited for blaring whistles and idling locomotives for hours at a time in a residential neighbourhood: "It's like living in a war zone."
More Knocks In Trade War
Trade experts and farm groups warn of an escalation in a cross-border dispute that has cost Canada $5 billion to date, by industry estimate. Ottawa is threatening to slap billion-dollar retaliatory tariffs on U.S. goods if Washington does not comply with a fair trade ruling by a May 23 deadline.
“This Is A Crime Issue”
Canadian companies are questioning a new federal bill that would force them to pay the cost of enforcing copyright law against counterfeiters. The legislation would oblige copyright owners to pay for tracking, seizing, storing and destroying bootleg imports. The industry minister declined an interview.
“Practically speaking, what rights do we have now?”
Canadian industry requires more regulation of railways if shippers and exporters are to grow, warns an executive. The nation's fertilizer producers said they are at a loss to hold railways to service agreements without federal oversight: "Practically speaking, what rights do we have now?"
A Shark Warning In Ottawa
Shark populations are declining around the world and it should be a concern for policymakers in Canada, researchers warn. A Commons vote is pending on whether to outlaw the sale of shark fins.
An All-Canadian Diet
Government-funded researchers in Manitoba have applied for a trademark to promote a “climate advantage” diet of all-Canadian foods from Saskatoon berries to bison meat: "There is a Scandinavian diet; we want to promote a healthy Canadian diet."
Not A Usual Health Alert
U.S. health care reforms could have unexpected implications for Canada and may place added burdens on the public system, an academic warns. A Western Washington University professor predicts declining American investment in research and development will affect Canada in time.
38% Cut To Lobster Aid
Funding for a support program for Atlantic Canada’s lobster fishery will be reduced 38 percent this year, according to budget estimates: “We are in a phasing out of the program.” The fisheries department says it has bought back some 500 lobster licenses from fishers in a bid to rationalize the industry.
Drink More: Winemakers
Every bottle of domestic wine contributes $31 to the nation’s GDP, say producers. The Canadian Vintners Association published industry research that calculated wine production is worth $6.8 billion a year to the economy.
“Disturbing”: Feds Sued Over Freedom Of Info Law
A federal agency is suing its own Department of Justice over excessive fees charged for information Canadians are entitled by law to see at minimal cost. The information commissioner accuses Ottawa of demanding improper fees to divulge records: "This is enormously disturbing."
Try, Try Again On Telecom
Federal regulators propose new rules to promote "choice" of wireless service providers amid customer complaints. Industry Canada said firms must provide roaming capacity to competitors and share cellphone towers; and at least four "players" in every region can acquire rights in an upcoming Nov. 19 spectrum auction.
Review — The Town Without Pity
The animal kingdom enforces a hierarchy in which members deemed inferior are put in their place. Chickens literally peck their inferiors into submission; thus the phrase, “pecking order.” Stigma Revisited is an arresting account of this same sort of thing in contemporary Ottawa
Tea Fiasco: Feds Confirm No Pesticide Product Recalled
Federal inspectors confirm they did not recall a single one of scores of dried teas found to contain detectable levels of pesticides in violation of national standards. One quarter of dried teas sampled had pesticide residue. Regulators refuse to say if the tea was sold anyway.
A Railway Slowdown?
A Western trade group alleges railways have slowed service since the introduction of a new rail reform bill. "It may be worse than you folks realize," an advocate told MPs. The Railway Association of Canada dismissed service complaints as a "myth," saying most customers are satisfied.
Cabinet Repeals 48-Year Rule, Refuses Comment
Cabinet has quietly repealed a 1965 regulation forbidding new mining exploration in a two-mile strip of land on Baffin Island. Neither the Minister of Northern Development nor his department would explain who requested the change, or why: "This is extraordinary."



