Census Jailing To Be Repealed

Repealing a threat of jail time for Canadians who submit false information to statisticians appears likely with speedy passage of a Conservative bill. The penalty under the Statistics Act has never been used: "Let's just get rid of it".

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Tax Court Sees Charity Fraud

Another multi-million fraud has unravelled in Tax Court with disclosures on two former registered charities cited as receipt mills. Earlier charity scams prompted Canada Revenue Agency to propose a registry of every paid tax preparer in the country: "Those bank statements were fabricated".

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Arctic Shipping Boon A Myth

Claims of a “cold rush” in Arctic shipping are unfounded with climate change unlikely to attract commercial traffic, experts have told an Ottawa conference. Authorities said insurance costs remain so prohibitive the North will remain largely untraveled despite forecasts of ice-free passage in summer: "All we have done is talk about it".

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A Warning On Canadian Film

Canadian producers are challenged by “overcrowded” media markets due to the impact of Netflix and YouTube, says an industry report. The Canadian Media Production Association warned of increased cost pressures from unregulated media: "We don't have a homegrown juggernaut like Netflix".

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National Historic Site For Sale

Public Works Canada is privatizing a national historic site opened by John A. Macdonald in 1890. Local authorities warn of a difficult sale: 'It's hard to put a total dollar value on that'.

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Say Tax Credit’s No Remedy

There are no figures on whether a multi-million dollar Children’s Fitness Tax Credit has had any impact on youth obesity, a Senate panel has been told. The YMCA said Canadians are “fooling ourselves” in thinking credits will slow obesity-relate disease: "On its own I don't think it is going to make the difference".

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Bitcoin Regs Not Easy: ‘Say That My Computer Burns…’

Federal regulation of bitcoin will have to be complex and far-reaching to delve into the minutiae of the pseudo-currency, attorneys have warned the Senate banking committee. Lawyers said bitcoin could not be easily regulated as money, a barter product or financial derivative: "You would have no idea".

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Abolish Seniors’ Perks: Study

Government seniors’ discounts should be abolished as a needless subsidy, says a think tank. The Institute for Research on Public Policy said property tax rebates, cut-rate bus passes and discounted recreational fees for seniors are a 20th century relic: "This is unfair".

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50% Benefit On Eco-Spending

Investment in clean-air technology can see a 50 percent spinoff on investment, according to the Conference Board of Canada. The board analysed Alberta’s clean energy fund, the Climate Change & Emissions Management Corp., in concluding spending generated net economic benefits: "There is no silver bullet".

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Review: Us, Them

Québec is cast as xenophobic, a caricature some Québecers have done little to dispel. Only the Québec Soccer Federation banned Sikh children from league matches; “They can play in their backyard,” the director-general said. Only a Québec lunch monitor humiliated a Filipino-Canadian boy who wanted to eat with a spoon. Yet in both instances, many Québecers were as outraged as anybody. The soccer league apologized; the school board was hit with $17,000 in damages from a provincial human rights tribunal.
Sociologist Gérard Bouchard acts as an unofficial translator, attempting a reasoned explanation of why Québec does what it does. Interculturalism is thoughtful and eloquent. The inexplicable has a very simple explanation, Bouchard writes: “multiculturalism” tunes to a different frequency in Québec than it does anywhere else.

Gov’t Stung With Credit Fees

Federal agencies paid more in $17 million in credit card transaction fees last year, according to the Department of Public Works. A bill currently before the Senate would drastically reduce Visa and MasterCard fees payable by public institutions and other vendors: "We pay".

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Few Jobs, Low Pay For Young

Young Canada faces more “precarious” job prospects than a generation ago with a university degree offering no guarantee of meaningful work, a Liberal Senate caucus forum has been told. Analysts said the outlook for young job-seekers appeared bleak: 'Degrees don't qualify them to do very much'.

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Feds OK Police Cell Jamming

The RCMP are gaining new powers to jam cellphone service. Industry Canada proposed to exempt the Mounties from the Radiocommunications Act that forbids use of jammers under threat of $25,000 fines: "If it was too powerful..."

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Food Execs: Do Not Blame Us

Food processors say they are not to blame for the nation’s obesity rate, but note they’ve commissioned no independent scientific research on the impact of sugar and salt on the Canadian diet: "Individuals paint our industry as a villain".

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Warning On Lobbyists’ Gifts

Government employees are being cautioned on ethics after a cabinet aide was cited for accepting perks from two trade associations and a mining company. Ethics Commissioner Mary Dawson said public officials must beware of gifts from lobbyists: 'It's all part of the Ottawa scene'.

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