A Health Canada proposal to legalize the sale of radiation-treated hamburger to kill bacteria and parasites should go to public hearings, says a cattle industry critic. The department served notice it’s prepared to approve irradiated beef by request of the Canadian Cattlemen’s Association: "Cattle live in their own excrement in feedlots".
Fed Inertia Angers Legislators
Senators and MPs complain even a parliamentary committee can’t get straight answers from the Canadian Food Inspection Agency over regulations. Lawmakers counted 9 unanswered letters and 38 unresolved issues dating over decades: "Do you ever pick up the phone?"
Disputed Rail Study Delayed
Transport Canada is delaying a contentious report on mandating recording equipment in all railway locomotives. Union executives have opposed the measure as a company tool for round-the-clock surveillance of train crews: "We’re dealing with companies that fire people for not having their boot laces correctly tied".
Drug Bill Rules Being Drafted
The health department is beginning to draft regulations under a drug recall bill feared to put a “chill” on industry. Parliament in 2014 passed the bill dubbed Vanessa’s Law for the teenage daughter of an MP who died after taking Johnson & Johnson medication for a digestive disorder: "No Big Pharma executive has ever gone to jail".
A Sunday Poem: “Anthem”
Poet Shai Ben-Shalom, an Israeli-born biologist, examines current events in the Blacklock’s tradition each and every Sunday: “A change towards gender equality may be coming to O Canada…”
Review: A Trip To The Twilight Zone
Few authors possess the skill to take an everyday image and turn it just slightly, in Twilight Zone fashion, to reveal a startling and intriguing truth. Professor Joan Sangster of Trent University does just that in The Iconic North. To read Sangster’s account is to question every common media depiction of the Arctic.
“The North has been rendered exotic, romantic, terrifying, sublime, enigmatic, otherworldly and intrinsically Canadian, and some of these adjectives are equated not just with the landscape but with the original inhabitants of the North,” Sangster writes.
This is not ancient history. Parks Canada’s fetishism with English exploration in the Arctic has cost taxpayers more than $21.5 million to date. “Recent politically orchestrated announcements and attendant media hoopla concerning the discovery of Sir John Franklin’s shipwreck in the Arctic are a salient reminder that we need an ongoing critical analysis of a romanticized North ‘discovered’ by white explorers,” says Sangster.
Do Or Die Says VIA Rail CEO
Canada faces the death of commercial passenger rail service or mammoth deficits without structural reforms at VIA Rail, says the Crown corporation’s CEO: "A future government will have to make the decision to eliminate VIA Rail or do something else".
Sports Betting Bill Gets KO’d
MPs last night rejected a Criminal Code amendment to legalize single sports betting. Provincial gaming regulators had petitioned for the bill, forecasting millions in revenues. A senior Liberal MP said governments are no match for black market bookies: "Illegal bookmakers have lower overhead costs".
Gov’t Eyes Cash For Surveys
Statistics Canada for the first time in its 99-year history is proposing to pay people to fill out surveys. The agency said it’s considering use of incentives like cheques or debit cards, typically worth $20 to $100 according to practices by other national statistics bureaus: "People will think if they do a government survey they should get paid for it".
Millions Spent On U.S. Media
Federal agencies have spent millions of tax dollars advertising on U.S.-owned social media, records show. Newspaper publishers described the Facebook, Google and Twitter campaigns as a Canadian media job killer: "They think that’s where the cool kids are".
Seeks Passenger Rights Bill
Cabinet should enact an air passenger bill of rights similar to international codes that guarantee travelers thousands of dollars in compensation for poor service, says a former Transport Canada advisor: "They do not know what their rights are".
Air Canada Bill Hits Protests
Another cabinet bill is in jeopardy as senators yesterday voted to send an Air Canada concession to committee for amendment. The bill shields the airline from liability for illegal job cuts: "Call it like it is".
Mint Silent On $2 Coin Snafu
The Royal Canadian Mint in a production error misidentified a WWII aircraft on a commemorative coin as “Canadian-made”. It wasn’t. The Mint yesterday declined comment. The coin, complete with the inscription REMEMBER, is intended to educate Canadians about their wartime history: "No aircraft of that type served in Canada".
Mass Credit Checks Appealed
The union representing federal prison employees is appealing to the Canada Industrial Relations Board after management proposed credit checks on 12,000 staff. The scope of credit checks, beyond any found in municipal police departments, includes credit card balances and mortgage payments: "We have to draw the line somewhere".
Penny ‘Savings’ Cost Millions
The finance department misrepresented claimed “savings” when it ended production of the penny, newly-obtained Access To Information records show. Files indicate the department withheld details of millions in costs associated with eliminating the one-cent coin in 2012: "There have been some changes to the planned savings".



