Talk of a home equity tax is merely a “rumor” though the Prime Minister met privately for an hour with equity tax lobbyists, says Liberal MP Karina Gould (Burlington, Ont.). Political aides in Gould's office in a note to homeowners dismissed the meeting as routine and unimportant: "I can assure you."
$42M In 14 Days Or Else: Feds
The Canada Revenue Agency demanded Saskatchewan pay $42.4 million worth of carbon taxes within 14 days or else, according to Federal Court records. Saskatchewan Attorney General Bronwyn Eyre called the unprecedented order an obvious threat at political direction: "They started with the threats."
Housing For The 21st Century
Canadians will live in townhouses and walk-up apartments under a Housing Design Catalogue for builders and buyers. No designs for detached single family homes are welcome: "I want to solve the housing crisis."
Anti-Crime Rules For Realtors
Risks of money laundering in real estate have worsened despite attempts to curb black marketeers, the Department of Finance said Saturday. The department in a regulatory notice said it will mandate that all realtors identify anyone involved in the purchase or sale of property in Canada: "Realtors do not want to see a single dollar of dirty money."
Poem: ‘Eyewitness To An Era’
Poet Shai Ben-Shalom writes: “Followed a floater in my eyeball. Saw it disappearing before I could reach to a pen…”
Book Review: Good Eating
At a plain beige Parliamentary cafeteria where Canada’s leaders took lunch there was a salad bar with fresh greens, chickpeas, beets and whole broccoli, sometimes artichoke hearts. It was the most colourful table in the place. Further down was a grey deep fryer that sold salted, fat-laden potatoes and meats. Can you guess which had the line-up every day at noon?
In examining the national diet, Professor Anthony Winson of the University of Guelph laments the “nutritional degradation of food.” It is not food at all, Winson writes, but “edible commodities that too often subvert our well-being and promote disease instead of nourishing us.”
Soft-drink consumption in Canada increased 50 percent in a generation. The incidence of diabetes in Ontario alone rose from 6.6 percent of the population to 10.5 percent in a decade. Nationwide Canadians spent $2 billion a year on confectionery where profit margins average 35 percent. Industrial Diet notes this is neither new nor unique. Consumption of sugar in the U.K. first spiked in 1844 and has risen almost annually ever since except for periods of wartime rationing.
Feds Made Up Daycare Claim
There is no evidence a $30 billion national daycare program saw more mothers join the workforce, says a federal document. The Department of Social Development briefing note directly contradicted claims by Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland: "That is feminist economic policy."
Eight Couldn’t Read The Map
Eight Canadian diplomats couldn’t spot the error on a large map of Canada displayed at our Embassy in Washington, Access To Information records show. Staff at the Embassy yesterday would not comment on the banner that mistakenly identified Greenland as Canadian territory: "Great, thank you."
Libs Admit Caucus Rumbling
An undisclosed number of Liberal MPs want the Prime Minister out, Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland said yesterday. Freeland told reporters the “vast majority” but not all members of the Liberal caucus support Justin Trudeau: 'The people did send us a message.'
Finds $201M Censors’ Squad
Taxpayers should expect “mind blowing” costs from cabinet’s program to censor legal internet content, Conservative MP Michelle Rempel Garner (Calgary Nose Hill) said yesterday. Budget Office figures requested by the MP said internet surveillance will take an entire bureaucracy with at least 330 federal employees and a five-year budget of $201 million: "The mind-blowing cost of the bill could grow."
Amazon Gets Prison Contract
Federal prisons are contracting Amazon.com to run a delivery service for inmates. The Correctional Service promised there was no cost to taxpayers: "All items are purchased using inmate funds and are at zero cost to Canada."
MPs Seek Audio Of Tax Talk
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau must release complete recordings of his remarks to a home equity tax lobby, the Opposition said yesterday. Trudeau has not commented on his appearance at an invitation-only meeting with a lobbyist who complained homeowners “reaped substantial gains in wealth.”
Feds Fear Railway Saboteurs
Fears of saboteurs yesterday prompted cabinet to grant federal rail inspectors new powers to combat “security incidents.” The Department of Transport said incidents of sabotage were growing but would not disclose numbers: "There has been a disturbing trend."
Nexus Permit Fees Rise 140%
Cabinet yesterday without notice said it will more than double Nexus permit fees at a $23 million annual cost for frequent cross-border travelers. New rates take effect October 1: "No consultations."
Review Funds On Allegations
Cabinet is reviewing millions in funding for a Black charity whose directors are accused of inside dealing, says a Department of Social Development memo. Grants for the Black Business and Professional Association totaled $5,217,345 in the past three years: 'Should the government determine funds were used inappropriately it will respond.'



