Mercury Landfill Ban Hailed

The Commons is signalling support for a private bill mandating first-ever national standards on disposal of mercury light bulbs. Regulators in 2014 promoted the sale of mercury-laden fluorescent bulbs without accounting for safe disposal: "“I asked what the regulations are for end-of-life mercury bulbs. I was shocked to hear there were none".

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Telemarketing Scofflaws 26%

More than a quarter of telemarketers nationwide have not registered with regulators, says CRTC research. And 90 percent have not subscribed to a Do Not Call List though the program is in its eighth year: 'It's a clear picture of the scope of telemarketing in Canada'.

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Ask Court To Lower Barriers

Conservative MPs are appealing to cabinet to apply for a Supreme Court judgment on interprovincial trade barriers. It follows a New Brunswick court ruling that struck down a ban on the cross-border transport of beer: "This started in the 1920s".

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Millions Of Painkillers Vanish

Nearly two million painkillers were stolen or disappeared from pharmacies and distributors over a fifteen-year period, new Health Canada records show. The chair of a Senate committee that examined prescription drug abuse proposed an immediate freeze on sales of Oxycodone: "It's tragic".

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Condos On Ancestral Lands Prompts High Court Appeal

One of the nation’s leading architects says he will appeal to the Supreme Court if necessary to block a condo development on Indigenous lands near Parliament Hill. Douglas Cardinal called the Ottawa River development the product of 150 years of Canadian apartheid: "The lower courts don’t want to hear my voice as an Indigenous person".

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69% Skipped Remembrance

Most Canadians -- including veterans – ignored a costly “call to action” ad campaign and skipped 2015 Remembrance Day ceremonies, new data show. The Department of Veterans Affairs outspent nearly every other federal agency’s ad budget in encouraging Canadians to observe Veterans’ Week; 'This will assist in adjusting future media strategies'.

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Maternity Case Fails At Court

A railway employee who cited discriminatory benefits under the Canada Labour Code has lost a bid for a Supreme Court appeal. Justices declined to hear the woman who complained she would have received more generous benefits under Québec law: "We need a legislative amendment".

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Can’t Swap Tenants Blacklist

Landlords are forbidden by federal law from swapping blacklists on problem tenants, says the Privacy Commissioner. The order followed a two-year investigation involving a 2,000-name “bad tenant” list shared by members of an unidentified landlord association: "These operators went too far".

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A Poem: “The Controversy”

Poet Shai Ben-Shalom, an Israeli-born biologist, examines current events in the Blacklock’s tradition each and every Sunday: “A watershed moment in Canada’s history: Justin Trudeau approaches a group of MPs on the House floor…”

Most People “Illiterate” Says Minister: Need Simple Forms

The tax department must simplify paperwork for the majority of Canadians who are functionally illiterate, says Revenue Minister Diane Lebouthillier. The Canada Revenue Agency did not substantiate the Minister’s claim, contradicted by 30 years of federal literacy research: "When these people receive documents they are not able to understand what is written".

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Aging Shipwreck Cost $1.4M

Fresh oil leaks from a shipwreck that changed maritime law cost the Canadian Coast Guard more than $1.4 million dollars last winter, newly-released records show. Authorities said they could not recoup the taxpayers' charge from a shipping fund prompted by the 1970 sinking of the tanker Arrow: "The company that owned the ship no longer exists".

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Agency Vows 100% Review

Federal regulators propose a top-to-bottom review of rules under the Transportation Act. The pledge comes two months after the Canadian Transportation Agency reversed itself on regulations governing licensed airlines: "Keep a close eye on these people".

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Oil Sands A Leading Polluter

Alberta’s oil sands produce levels of air pollution comparable to a large city, says new Environment Canada research. Scientists said open-pit mining in northern Alberta emits up to 84 tonnes a day of secondary organic aerosols: "It stands to reason these particles may be a health issue".

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Strike Curb Will Be Repealed

Cabinet will repeal another Conservative labour bill following a landmark Supreme Court ruling on the right to strike. The Treasury Board last evening said a 2013 Act of Parliament limiting public employees’ rights will be withdrawn: "They wanted to ratchet it up".

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Health Canada Misses Target

Health Canada will not meet a targeted 30% cut in sodium consumption forecast to save billions in medicare costs. The department yesterday declined comment on the end of a nine-year program to have food processors voluntarily reduce their use of salt: "The voluntary approach does not work".

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