“Promising” Crime Program Fizzles; Cost Taxpayers $574K

A “promising” federal anti-crime program for Canadian youth did not in fact reduce crime, new data show. The Department of Public Safety admitted “mixed findings” in a venture that saw delinquents taken camping and zip-lining at a cost of more than $7,000 for each participant: 'It's an unconfirmed crime prevention model'.

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A Sign Of Slowing Economy

In a sign of a slowing economy, a federal agency proposes a new user fee on marine shippers to cover a growing deficit. The Pacific Pilotage Authority said its shortfall is due in part to a downturn in coal and forestry: "We burnt up almost all our surplus".

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White Collar PTSD Dismissed

A federal manager who claimed post-traumatic stress disorder from working in the Department of Human Resources has lost a claim for $100,000 in damages. The Federal Court of Appeal upheld a lower ruling that the woman’s tears were “short of proof” of mental suffering: "She became very stressed".

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Claim Fails In Traffic Court

Indigenous rights do not include driving without insurance or auto registration, a Court has ruled. The judgment came in a lawsuit by a member of Ontario’s Mohawks of Grand River fined $6,170 for motoring outside the Highway Traffic Act: 'It is a fool's errand'.

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Fracking Case In High Court

The Supreme Court tomorrow hears a landmark challenge on fracking. An Alberta rancher claimed Encana Corp. poisoned her well with toxic groundwater chemicals, then refused to answer complaints unless she stopped talking to reporters: "It is incredibly problematic".

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Facebook Creeping Expanded

The defence department is assigning up to 40 employees to monitor social media in a bid to “identify trends” deemed a threat to national security. The program follows expansion of Facebook creeping by domestic media monitors in the Department of Public Works: "Insidious".

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Feds Quiet On Project Delays

The public works department is refusing comment on delays in its multi-billion-dollar renovations to Parliament Hill. Completion of one project ran six months late, and contractors have been told all scaffolding and other work must be off the grounds for 2017 celebrations of Canada’s 150th birthday: 'It's just a few weeks'.

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Warning On Home Chemicals

Chemical flame retardants cited for possible health risks are more commonly used in Canada than the U.S. or Mexico, says new research. The Commission for Environmental Cooperation also warned of limited data on chemical use in imported products: 'Should we be using them in the first place?'

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Review: Just People

What happens when you put a group of artists and historians in a room and ask them to write about science? The result is Sustaining The West, a fresh and eclectic collection of essays on the environment. “If we are going to be honest about the environmental crises we face, the problems before us lie with people,” note editors Liza Piper and Lisa Szabo-Jones of the University of Alberta.

The people behind Sustaining The West are poets and naturalists, authors and filmmakers. “The role of humans in twenty-first century environmental change is clear,” editors write. “Framed as such, who better to grapple with the cultural issues at the core of our environmental crises than artists, writers and scholars in the humanities?”

Cabinet points to climate change as one of the nation’s foremost worries, though the impact is uneven. If farm production is at historic levels, Regina naturalist Trevor Harriot notes 80 percent of prairie grasslands have been ploughed up as cropland – a loss rate four times greater than the vanishing Amazonian rainforest: “What this means, of course, is that native biodiversity of the prairies is in rapid retreat.”

Sport Betting Bill’s In Trouble

Another bill to sanction Vegas-style sports betting appears dead on arrival in Parliament. The measure earlier lapsed in the Senate on protests from the Toronto Blue Jays. One Liberal senator said the new bill preys on problem gamblers: 'It makes no sense whatsoever'.

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Frugal Hermit Leaves Fortune

In an estate settlement legal analysts describe as unusual, a frugal hermit who spent his life in a tumble-down Prairie cabin without indoor plumbing left $2 million at his death. Details of the Dickensian case emerged in Court of Queen’s Bench documents: "It's kind of sad".

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20-Month Delay In TV Code

Millions of cable and satellite TV customers will see little first-hand impact from a new federal consumer code to take effect in 20 months, say telecom firms. Rogers Communications and Bell said they already meet most requirements of the code to mandate plain-language contracts and greater fee disclosure: "This was a key area of frustration".

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Seventy Years A Fishery Pest

Regulators claim a breakthrough in combating the sea lamprey, bane of the Great Lakes for 70 years. Health Canada’s Pest Management Regulatory Agency is expected to sanction use of chemical pheromones to kill the invasive species blamed for destroying an entire trout fishery: "The sky is the limit".

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MP Keeps Post Despite Rights Complaint: “Set An Example”

A 28-year old Liberal MP remains parliamentary secretary for international development despite filing a human rights complaint against Mexican diplomats, says the Prime Minister’s Office. Cabinet yesterday issued a new Guide For Parliamentary Secretaries urging appointees to show “appropriate judgment”.

We Won’t Pay For Emissions

Canadians will not pay for climate change programs and remain sceptical of any scheme that relies on corporations to voluntarily cut emissions, says government research. An in-house study by Natural Resources Canada also cited public worries any carbon tax would punish Canadians as they confront job losses and a feared housing collapse: 'The economy is not doing very well'.

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