Bill Targets Growth In Co-ops

Cabinet would be compelled to promote co-operatives and allow existing boards to qualify for federal grants under a private Liberal bill in the Commons. The legislation follows data that 25 percent of legacy co-operatives see no annual growth: 'Very few business schools educate Canadians about co-ops'.

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City Sues Over Right To Hire

A federal judge is being asked to settle a human rights dispute over municipalities' right to hire and fire. Lawyers sued to block a Canadian Human Rights Tribunal investigation of a claim of workplace discrimination: "We can't create a position".

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Red Memorial Shrinks Again

A national monument to Cold War victims is again being scaled back with completion delayed till 2019. The Department of Canadian Heritage yesterday launched a design competition for a more modest memorial with reduced budget. Original plans called for 9/11-style beacon lighting and an 800-seat amphitheatre: 'It is dignified'.

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Reform Vote Feared Divisive

A national referendum on electoral reform could divide the country, says former New Democrat leader Ed Broadbent. The 80-year old Broadbent yesterday told a Commons committee Canada’s current Elections Act “totally distorts the democratic will”.

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Lobbying On Migrant Hires

MPs should enact a migrant workers’ bill of rights and permit farm workers to unionize, says Unifor. A Commons committee report on temporary foreign workers is due once MPs return from summer recess September 19: "We could not sit by".

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Headlines Not Discriminatory

Media coverage of unproven criminal charges is not grounds for a human rights claim, a tribunal has ruled. The judgment came over news clipping naming a police officer charged but never convicted of 26 offences: "Media leaked information".

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Retroactive Cuts Were Legal

Retroactive cuts to federal union wage settlements are lawful. The Supreme Court declined to hear a challenge of a 2009 austerity law that capped increases for government employees: "It is acceptable legislation".

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Post Office Profits Up Again

Canada Post reports a pre-tax profit of $45 million for the first half of the year. Management said a threatened lockout of workers appeared to have “minimal impact” on revenues.

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Sunday Poem — “Perfumed”

Poet Shai Ben-Shalom, an Israeli-born biologist, examines current events in the Blacklock’s tradition each and every Sunday: “You, who haven’t used a lavender, vanilla, or coconut shampoo in months, let alone jasmine, citrus, or Hawaiian-fresh bathing soap…”

Terror Report Omits Key Data

Canada has seen fewer terrorist incidents since 9/11 than in the fifteen years prior to the World Trade Centre bombings, says federal research. The number has declined steadily since 1969. Public Safety Canada yesterday omitted all mention of the Access To Information data in a terrorist threat report: "Since 2001 the vast majority of incidents have involved eco-terrorism".

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Labour Seeks Expanded CPP

Labour delegates have voted to lobby cabinet for a broader increase in Canada Pension Plan benefits than proposed by the Department of Finance. Unifor members meeting in convention in Ottawa called for higher CPP payouts: "That's critical to the whole approach".

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Bank’s A Loser In Foreclosure

A judge has faulted one of Canada’s largest banks over its foreclosure practices. The Supreme Court of Nova Scotia threw out a $16,697 claim from the Toronto Dominion Bank on a $10,877 loan: "Justice is restored".

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Court Avoids RCMP Feud

The Supreme Court will not hear a legal challenge of RCMP management’s right to promote and demote members. A longtime corporal sued for a promotion given to a more junior colleague: 'They tout the RCMP as a national icon but they don't treat it like one'.

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Cabinet Silent On Pay Equity

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in a major address on labour yesterday made no mention of legislating pay equity as recommended by a Commons committee. The president of Unifor noted the omission: “Pay equity has to become a reality”.

CPP Plan Rated ‘Confusing’

A 2015 cabinet proposal for voluntary Canada Pension Plan top-ups was considered unworkable and confusing, say Access To Information records. The finance department subsequently proposed a mandatory expansion of CPP benefits to retirees: "Some noted voluntary schemes would not work".

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