Thousands of municipal landfills nationwide are being studied by Environment Canada to ensure they’re safely capped. The department said its concerned material used to cover current and decommissioned dumps is safe and effective: "Historically we don't know".
Puzzling Data Show Rate Of Women At Work Has Peaked
Women’s rate of participation in the workforce is stagnating after strong postwar gains, according to new federal research. Statistics Canada said the rate of women at work has slowed markedly since the 1990s: "Further analysis is warranted".
No Court Date For Sad Client
The Supreme Court is declining to hear an appeal from a British Columbia man who alleged he got bad advice from a lawyer in purported conflict of interest. The barrister had taken the case without charge: "Clients frequently complain".
MP Fired From Consular Job; Claimed “Toxic” Workplace
Liberals’ newly-appointed parliamentary secretary for international development was fired as a consular adviser a year ago, and unsuccessfully filed a human rights complaint against her Mexican hosts. The Embassy of Mexico yesterday declined an interview on the appointment of MP Karina Gould. “We have no comment on Ms. Gould,” an official said.
Cabinet Vetoes 5¢ Stamp Hike
Cabinet is revoking a 5¢ increase in stamp rates scheduled to take effect January 11. Canada Post had proposed the increase, the sixth in five years: "Those price increases have been substantial".
Old-Time Retailing Still Tops
Despite decades of internet retailing Canadians still shop with their feet, says new federal research. Statistics Canada reported the vast majority of retail sales occur at the old-fashioned checkout counter: "You go to the mall, you eat, you talk with friends".
B.C. Oil Spill Station Reopens
The reopening of a British Columbia Coast Guard station cited in a 2015 oil spill should signal restoration of cuts to the marine service, says an MP. Vancouver’s Kitsilano station will be reopened “as soon as possible”, the fisheries department said: "Coast Guard neglect has hurt".
Gov’t Takes Beating On Land Sales; Most Sold Under Value
A fire sale of Crown real estate has seen overseas properties dumped at millions below value, according to Access To Information records. The foreign affairs department in one memo expressed relief that few media or legislators took notice: "There may be a perception the government is not obtaining fair value or managing such properties prudently".
$64K Loan On $50K Collateral
A Crown agency, Farm Credit Canada, loaned $64,000 on depreciating farm equipment worth about $50,000 according to documents in a Regina lawsuit. The details follow a warning from the Parliamentary Budget Office over lack of oversight on lending practices by Crown corporations: "We emphasize risk management".
Worries On Climate Change Fishery: ‘This Area’s Fragile’
Greenpeace is expressing alarm over Canada’s participation in a forum to develop a regulated commercial fishery in the Arctic. The “exploratory” initiative by the U.S. State Department saw endorsements from Russia, China and other states: 'All industrial extraction should be prevented'.
Seek Probe Of Fed Payments
Auditor General Michael Ferguson is being petitioned to probe undisclosed payments to losing bidders on federal contracts. The New Democratic caucus in a letter to Ferguson alleged payments worth millions have been made as “compensation” since 2005: "Why some bidders and not others?"
Lobbyist Pays $16K For Copy Act Breach: “They Knew..”
An Ottawa lobbyist has paid $16,281 by Court order for copying Blacklock’s news content in breach of the Copyright Act. Dan Paszkowski, president and CEO of the Canadian Vintners Association, had declined a pre-litigation settlement of $314. “I don’t have a lot of time to spend in court,” he said at trial.
Senate Revives Obesity Probe
The Senate is expected to complete a landmark study of obesity rates amid a cabinet pledge to ban marketing of processed foods to children. Senators are due to continue a committee investigation begun in 2014 that also heard demands for a sugar tax: "The sooner we deal with it the better".
Taxpayer Wins Over Snafu
Canada Revenue Agency for the third time in two years has lost a tax appeal after being unable to prove it mailed a letter. Records show the Agency repeatedly sent assessment notices to an incorrect address even after the mail was returned as undeliverable: "What is the point?"
Bill Curbs Spending Powers
Senators propose to strip cabinet of unchecked powers to run up the national debt without consulting Parliament. Liberals reintroduced a Senate bill to repeal amendments to the Financial Administration Act passed in 2007: "This goes to the whole idea of accountability".



