Federal agents allowed thousands of inadmissible foreigners into the country under a program that failed four previous audits, says a new Canada Border Services Agency report. Fewer than half of permits issued under a Temporary Resident Permit program followed the rules: 'They may potentially gain access to health and social services.'
Feds Promise Registry In 2024
Cabinet in 2024 will launch a public registry naming beneficial owners of all federal corporations, says Industry Minister François-Philippe Champagne. The Senate banking committee approved a registry bill without amendment, ensuring its passage into law by Christmas: "We are serious about doing something."
Panama Papers Worth $78M
Federal auditors have recovered about $78 million in unpaid taxes to date as a result of the Panama Papers leak. The Canada Revenue Agency said numerous audits and two criminal investigations are ongoing: "It is very important for the Agency to be perceived as aggressively pursuing tax evaders to maintain the trust in the tax system."
Poem: “When In New York”
Poet Shai Ben-Shalom writes: “Visiting the restroom in a New York restaurant. A sign above the sink says….”
Book Review: “Jesus Calls”
In 1918 the Imperial War Graves Commission enacted two notable regulations. All dead were to be buried with their units, regardless of rank, near the spot where they fell. And all families of the dead could submit personal messages, to 66 characters, to be carved into kin’s headstones.
The effect was profound: mammoth, manicured battlefield cemeteries with indelible inscriptions. Wilfrid Laurier University Press asks, what did they write? Epitaphs were thoughtful, angry, ironic. They are collected in Canada’s Dream Shall Be Of Them. It is a beautiful, elegant book that will bring a reader to tears.
The epitaphs “were contributed not by the poets or artists we tend to associate with the Great War and modern memory, but by ordinary men and women,” writes Toronto historian Eric McGeer; “They are a window into another world, not a mirror to our own.”
Drug Policy A Killer Says MP
Cabinet must suspend its “safe supply” drug policy as a killer, says a member of the Commons health committee. Conservative MP Todd Doherty (Cariboo-Prince George, B.C.), choking back tears, told the committee he’d lost a brother-in-law to an accidental fentanyl overdose and was unable to save another brother “who lives on the street.”
Agency Lost 29,248 Fugitives
More than 29,000 foreign fugitives are at large nationwide, says the Canada Border Services Agency. Management in a report to MPs called it their “wanted inventory” including foreigners convicted of crimes: "I don’t quite understand why we would tolerate this."
Committee Drops Nazi Probe
The House affairs committee yesterday dropped further public discussion into how a Waffen SS member was given a hero’s welcome on Parliament Hill. “Cover-up,” said one MP who pressed for public hearings: "What we have is the cover-up coalition at work yet again."
Protecting MPs “Not My Job”
A former deputy minister of public safety yesterday testified it was “not my job” to warn a Conservative MP he was targeted by Chinese agents. Rob Stewart told the House affairs committee that foreign agents target “many people in Canada" that he never warned: "It was not my job to inform them."
Calls Gov’t Hiring Worrisome
The size of the federal government’s payroll is worrisome, Budget Officer Yves Giroux said yesterday. The number of employees has increased 26 percent since 2015, by official estimate: "But we haven’t seen similar improvements when it comes to service."
Feds Face Green-Wash Probe
The Commons ethics committee last night voted to summon Industry Minister François-Philippe Champagne for questioning in an investigation of suspected “green-washing” involving federal subsidies. However the committee by a 7 to 4 vote rejected a Conservative request for all records concerning Sustainable Development Technology Canada: "There is a basic question of trust here."
Admit 2B Trees Plan Is Short
Cabinet’s two billion trees program will not plant two billion trees, says the Department of Natural Resources “So why is it called the two billion trees program?” asked Conservative MP Michael Kram (Regina-Wascana): "Why not rename it the billion-and-a-half tree program?"
Fuel Cost Forecast Is Average
The Department of Environment acknowledges it did not count Canadians’ different rates of fuel use in calculating average costs of new climate change regulations. Conservative MP Dan Mazier (Dauphin-Swan River, Man.) said estimates ignored distinctions like urban versus rural fuel consumption: "There was no disputing they were advised these regulations would increase the cost of fuel."
Gov’t Disputes Alberta Math
Cabinet will fight Alberta’s claim to more than half the Canada Pension Plan, ministers said yesterday. Warning of a drawn out pension fight followed a protest letter from the Prime Minister to Alberta Premier Danielle Smith: "I don’t buy the math."
Will Take Muslim Vax Claim
A federal labour board will hear the case of a Muslim employee denied a religious exemption from 2021 vaccine mandates. The Department of Indigenous Services denied the waiver after noting vaccines “do not contain any gelatin, pork derivatives or human particles.”



