No Shoes, No Service

Ottawa's municipal bus system has won a federal appeal on the right to refuse service to a shoeless rider. The Canadian Transportation Agency ruled OC Transpo was within its rights to forbid an Ottawa woman from riding barefoot on city buses.

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Unfair, Unnecessary, Costly: Pension Managers Protest Bill

Managers of Canadian pension plans have warned a House committee that beneficiaries will face higher costs and lower benefits under a bill to force disclosure of even minor transactions in any plan with a union component. "This seems very unfair to us," one manager told MPs.

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Parolees In The Workplace: “How Does Anyone Get Their Life Back?”

The Federal Court has dismissed an appeal from a convicted con man who argued he was unjustly jailed for parole violations after landing an honest job. “How does anyone get their life back?” said Shaun Rootenberg, jailed for defrauding family and acquaintances. “What employer will take a chance on an employee in a management position if they can be re-incarcerated on suspicion?”

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Cities Caution It Will Be Spring In No Time

Canadian cities and towns are appealing for public support in pressing for renewal next spring of federal subsidies to rebuild municipal works. Advocates launched a “Great Canadian Infrastructure Challenge” to raise awareness of often-hidden public works.

Shhhh: Senate Quietly Ends 171 Years Of Scrutiny With Bill

An obscure Senate bill will end a tradition, dating from 1841, that grants Canadians "their rightful access to the laws and regulations that govern their daily lives," critics warn. Conservative senators declined interviews on the little-known measure that would permit unseen rules from unknown sources.

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Labour Code Changes Whip Thru Committee In Minutes

Significant changes to Canada's labour law whipped through a House committee in mere minutes amid concerns MPs had no time to summon expert testimony on the bill's impact. The measures rewrite ten sections of the Canada Labour Code, granting new powers to federal inspectors to dismiss employee complaints deemed "frivolous."

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CP Rail Says Public “At Risk” From Incompetent Employees

Canadian Pacific Railways claims incompetent employees have put the public "at risk," threatening to fire anyone who fails to put in "a fair day's work," according to a blistering management letter obtained by Blacklock's. Disclosure of the letter prompted a demand that Parliament investigate the allegations public safety has been jeopardized by CP workers.

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“Shocking”: Federal Safety Inspectors Get More, Do Less

Federal consumer product safety inspections have dropped 60 percent since Parliament enacted a new safety law, even though the government hired more inspectors. The Consumers' Association of Canada called the decline "absolutely astounding."

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Poison Alert: MPs Ponder Tobacco-Like Warnings On Hi-Sodium Foods

Parliament is reviving debate over targeted sodium reductions in packaged foods, complete with tobacco-like warning labels on salty processed foods. Bill C-460 would force manufacturers of high-sodium foods to warn buyers they run the risk of hypertension, heart attack and stroke.

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Trade Department To Face Inquiry On Alleged Unfair Trade Practice

Canada’s trade department faces allegations of unfair trade practices by a small Ottawa company that has successfully petitioned for an inquiry into the case. The Canadian International Trade Tribunal will investigate whether the department ran unfair bids on a staffing contract.

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Local Man Trademarks Ubiquitous Phrase

An Ontario man is applying to the Department of Industry to trademark a phrase popularized by sidewalk musicians and talent-night impersonators nationwide.

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Patent Office Invents Method Of Eating $10,000 At A Time

One of Canada's most successful start-ups says patent fees for first-time applicants are too high and should be reviewed. "When our company was five or 10 people," a Desire2Learn executive told MPs, "there would not have been the $8,000 or $10,000 or $12,000 sitting around to file a patent."

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Digital Literacy So-So, But A+ On Paranoia: Research

A media think-tank is undertaking a national study of “digital citizenship” in the largest survey of its kind in eight years, after warning MPs a “culture of fear” now blankets internet policy.

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Telemarketer Won’t Take Call

Federal agents face a “Herculean challenge” in enforcing Do Not Call regulations on offshore companies charged with multiple violations, a legal analyst says. Two South Asian companies face more than half a million dollars in telemarketing fines, uncollected so far by the CRTC.

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Not Artful: National Gallery Faces Inquiry On Contracting

The National Gallery of Canada is being summoned to a trade tribunal over complaints of bungled terms in an $8.7 million contract to repair leaks in the art museum's iconic Great Hall skylight. The gallery "is taking this complaint seriously," it told Blacklock's.

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