A Truce In Tower Wars

A ceasefire in neighbourhood wars over cellphone towers is being touted by wireless providers and the Federation of Canadian Municipalities. Cities complain of taking flak over 15-metre towers that are actually regulated by the federal Department of Industry.

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Blind Traveller Who Missed Flight Wins A Federal Case

Regulators have told Canada’s largest airline to immediately comply with federal law that forbids discrimination against blind passengers. The ruling came in favour of an Ottawa woman who missed a flight after being issued unreadable documents.

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House Motion On Public Works “Useless”: Minister

MPs last night rejected a motion for long-term public works funding as critics invoked a range of complications from the federal deficit to elections in Italy. “This motion is completely useless,” said Transport Minister Denis Lebel; “Our record speaks for itself.”

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Literacy Bill No “Panacea”

New federal legislation on financial literacy is no remedy for weak regulation, says a national advocacy group. The Senate passed a bill to appoint a "Financial Literacy Leader," though Ottawa already has a Financial Consumer Agency commissioner.

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Take A Left At The I-96

A federal agency charged taxpayers $11,000 to fund a study program called "Understanding Canada" at the University of Michigan, a 40 kilometre drive from Canada. The program was intended to "develop greater knowledge and understanding of Canada," located a short drive down Interstate 96.

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“That’s A Lot Of Money”

Federal regulators are being petitioned against giving Air Canada another break on funding of its multi-billion dollar pension deficit. Competitors oppose any ad hoc regulation to favour the carrier that's been struggling with pension liabilities since its 2003 bankruptcy.

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Rail Co’s To Spend $3B

The nation’s twin national railways propose a combined $3 billion in spending this year on new equipment and upgrades. Canadian National is allocating $1.9 billion in spending; Canadian Pacific $1.1 billion, figures show.

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March Madness: A $2M Contract In Just 9 Days

A defence agency raced through a multi-million dollar computer contract evaluation in 9 business days in an apparent outbreak of "March Madness." It is the annual springtime burn of unspent funds before the expiry of the federal fiscal year at midnight on March 31.

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Exec Loses $10,520 Claim

One of Atlantic Canada’s top executives has lost a court challenge against Canada Revenue after trying to write-off cellphone charges and the costs of a trip to Vancouver as a business expense. "With all due respect," ruled a federal judge, "being a lawyer is not in and of itself a business."

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Pros Putt For ‘Patriot Day’

Canada’s 3,700 golf pros have applied to the Department of Industry to trademark a fundraiser for the nation’s army, air force and navy veterans: "They are ecstatic."

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Pesticides On The Menu

At least a fifth of dried teas sold nationwide fail to meet Canadian standards on pesticide contamination, according to federal inspectors. Fully 75 percent of oolong tea samples contained detectable levels of chemicals. The Canadian Tea Association declined an interview.

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$100,000 Fines “Peanuts”?

A federal board proposes $100,000-a day penalties for safety violations by oil and gas pipeline operators, a fraction of the penalties levied in the United States. Regulators are also rewording Canadian rules to avoid mention of “very serious” spills.

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An Unloved Landmark

Canada’s cities and wireless telecom providers are making peace in a long dispute over aerial towers. The Federation of Canadian Municipalities and an industry group, the Canadian Wireless Telecom Association will detail “a tool to help municipalities in their planning." Neighbours complain of four-storey eyesores regulated by Industry Canada.

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Get Ready For Cancer

Regulators propose gruesome new federal warnings on sunbeds amid protests from the $1 billion-a year tanning industry. The measure comes four years after the World Health Organization categorized tanning devices as a known carcinogen.

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A Pretty Good Investment

Productivity on the country's 200,000 farms has defied national trends by rising nearly one-third in the past fifteen years, according to a sector report. Analysts noted fewer farmers now produce 30 percent more, with less help: "Remarkable."

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