Trucking Firm Loses Appeal

One of Canada’s largest moving companies has lost a federal appeal over a five-figure settlement owed a truck driver fired without severance pay. Tippet-Richardson Ltd. pursued the case alleging a federal adjudicator showed bias at a Canada Labour Code hearing: "He is not a quitter".

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19 Prosecutions On Fish Kills

Environment Canada in the past year has seen 19 prosecutions under a section of the Fisheries Act now being amended for aquaculture operators. The department collected $2.2 million in fines and penalties to date: "We are very, very concerned".

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Sees Modest Insurance Rules

A long-awaited Commons investigation on rail safety may see “more stringent” insurance requirements but no radical changes, says the transport committee chair. Insurance rules have been under review since the 2013 Lac-Mégantic disaster: "We can't expect CN and CP to do it for nothing".

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Mountie Veteran Wins Ruling On Discrimination Allegation

A Mountie has won the right to take a discrimination claim to the Canadian Human Rights Commission, bypassing an RCMP grievance system deemed dysfunctional. A federal judge agreed there was no reason the police veteran could not seek help outside the force: “The system we have doesn’t work”.

Claims Senators Sped Up Bill

A Senate committee is accused of speeding passage of a private Conservative bill over objections of critics including the Government of Vietnam. The Senate’s human rights committee acknowledged it refused to hear from opponents of the measure to honour victims of Communism: "What was the rush?"

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A Warning Over Drug Costs

Canada’s patchwork of private drug plans will leave Canadians with less coverage and more regional disparities, cautions a new study. A report by the Institute for Research On Public Policy said provincial drug plans are inconsistent and vary widely by cost: 'These may not be the improvements people are looking for'.

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Deputy Gov’t House Leader Questions Migrant Program

A senior Conservative MP says federal management of the Temporary Foreign Worker Program has been questionable, and lamented the “abysmal history” of authorities in picking “business winners”. The deputy government House leader wrote his complaints in a letter to cabinet, released through Access To Information: 'I question how bureaucrats determine a business need'.

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MPs Okay Alexander Day Act

Parliament last evening agreed to proclaim a national commemoration day for an individual for only the third time in Canadian history. MPs voted to declare Lincoln Alexander Day to honour a former labour minister. The two previous honourees were John A. Macdonald and Wilfrid Laurier: 'He was mystical, magical'.

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Judge Slams RCMP “Gossip”

A federal judge has cited RCMP Commissioner Bob Paulson for pandering to “gossip” in disciplining a longtime member of the force. The ruling comes as cabinet enacts new legislation granting the commissioner greater powers to discipline members: 'The RCMP does not like to be challenged'.

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Can’t Recall 1980s Spying On Unions, Says Former Minister

A Mulroney-era solicitor general says he can’t remember ordering a federal spy agency to put political opponents under surveillance. Secret files indicate cabinet had agents spy on unions, peace groups and critics including the Council of Canadians in the 1980s: "What business is it of the state?"

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Gov’t Reviews Weather Data

Environment Canada is hiring consultants to standardize weather data under a long-term plan to compile more accurate measures of snow and rainfall dating back nearly two centuries. The department noted the “high impact” of even tiny variables due to climate change: "Snowfall is ludicrous; we still use a ruler to measure the snowpack".

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MPs See Bill To Ban Tankers

The Commons is to take up debate on a private bill to ban oil tanker traffic off the northern coast of British Columbia. The proposal follows disclosures that Environment Canada is quietly conducting “legally defensible” research on the impact of an oil spill in the region: 'The process is dysfunctional'.

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Urge Tax Credits On Radon

Canada lacks clear regulations on radioactive radon gas and fails to take the health threat as seriously as other nations, says the Canadian Environmental Law Association. Researchers urged that cabinet promote a $3,000 tax credit to refit homes subject to poisoning: "We don't need to be arguing on the science".

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Court Sees Falling Stock Case

The Supreme Court yesterday heard appeals in a case of misleading media reports blamed for a dramatic plunge in a drug company’s stock values. Canada remains the only G8 country without federal securities regulation: "It's pretty new".

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’86 Cabinet Put Trade Critics Under Surveillance: ‘Creepy’

Cabinet secretly ordered spy surveillance of political opponents in 1985 on suspicions that Communists infiltrated an anti-free trade group, newly-released records show. The Council of Canadians, founded by publisher Mel Hurtig, was placed under subversion watch. Council members included MPs and author Pierre Berton. Other groups blacklisted included CUPE, the United Food & Commercial Workers, and labour federations in two provinces: "It's unbelievable".

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