Red Tape Reduction At Work

Transport Canada says it has a “surplus” of deleted regulations and is in full compliance with a 2015 law mandating reduction of red tape. Department math includes a new rule on railway fires: 'We have a surplus of five'.

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Would Cut Canadian Content

Cabinet should deregulate media corporations under the Broadcasting Act to spur more competition, says a Calgary think tank. The Fraser Institute said rules mandating Canadian content must be repealed: "We are going to be left with nothing".

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Home Visit To Every Veteran

The Department of Veterans Affairs should arrange home visits to every individual veteran claiming disability benefits, says an advocate. The proposal follows a 2014 audit that found veterans wait months, even years for applications to be processed: "How long are we going to talk about this?"

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Feds Lose Migrant Challenge

The employment department is using poor data in unfairly refusing to issue migrant labour permits, a federal judge has ruled. The case followed a court challenge by the largest shellfish processor in New Brunswick: "We are aware of the decision".

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Bleak Gov’t Memo On Autos

Cabinet should “manage expectations” in an auto market that’s seen Canada lose manufacturing jobs to the U.S. and Mexico, says an industry department memo. The document obtained through Access To Information warned Canada should not get its hopes up in competing with low-wage rivals: "Success is not guaranteed".

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Tonnes Of E-Waste Landfilled

Regulators should offer cash rebates to promote recycling of throw-away electronics, says the Municipal Waste Management Association. A federal survey yesterday said tonnes of electronic items are landfilled each year: "That's definitely creating an issue".

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Execs Oppose Air Safety Rule

A federal proposal that all seaplane passengers wear lifejackets – the first regulation of its kind – faces widespread opposition, says Transport Canada. The recommendation follows a fatal 2009 British Columbia accident in which six people drowned: "It's a tough one".

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Transport Review For Invitees Only: ‘Can’t Meet Everybody’

Transport Canada will not hold any public hearings on a far-reaching policy review, an official says. The department is considering recommendations to privatize airports; allow more foreign ownership of airlines; cut VIA Rail subsidies and eliminate the last regulated freight rates for railways: "I’m disappointed it won’t be open to Canadians because that’s what I understand it was".

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Aqua Co’s Seek Fish Hearing

Mandatory labeling of engineered fish licensed for sale by Health Canada should be reviewed, say aquaculture operators. Regulators have declined to explain why they did not impose the requirement on the first genetically-modified species sold for human consumption: 'It's an important issue'.

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CBC Website A Money Loser

The CBC draws only 1% of its revenues from website content though it has 1,150 staff in electronic programming, says the editor in chief. The disclosure follows a 2015 Senate report that CBC consider charging for free web content that competes with local newspapers: "We re-imagined everything".

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Feds Quiet On $25 TV Pitch

Telecom regulators have not released updated figures on how many Canadians subscribed to low-cost basic cable and satellite TV mandated by the CRTC. The Commission continues to cite data that only 66,000 of some 7 million cable customers signed up in the first weeks of the program: 'They argued changes would lead to big savings'.

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A Safe And Happy May Long

Blacklock’s pauses today for the federal holiday, with best regards to friends and subscribers for a safe and happy weekend — The Editor

A Poem — “Canadian, Eh?”

Poet Shai Ben-Shalom, an Israeli-born biologist, examines current events in the Blacklock’s tradition each and every Sunday: “On TV and in full-page, full-colour newspaper ads, Tim Hortons presents their Maple Iced Capp and Creamy Maple Chill…”

Lab-Made Salmon Okayed By Feds; First Engineered Species

Health Canada is licensing the first-ever commercial sale of an engineered species, made-in-the-lab salmon. Approval came despite a federal lawsuit and fisheries department warnings of high environmental risks. “I would certainly eat it,” said Health Minister Dr. Jane Philpott.

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Clash Over Eco-Plastic Curbs

Attempts to regulate micro-plastic pollution have failed, says a Liberal MP. The Commons in 2015 unanimously voted to list microbeads as toxic under the Canadian Environmental Protection Act: "Risk-based assessment has failed on so many levels".

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