The Department of Fisheries is detailing first-ever regulations sanctioning the use of pesticides and other chemicals in fish habitat. The proposal follows appeals from the aquaculture industry for exemptions from a chemical ban in the Fisheries Act: "We have to be able to manage pests".
Few Piracy Cases — Again
The Public Prosecution Service will not say how much time and money it's spent pursuing Canada's multi-billion dollar trade in counterfeit goods. Prosecutors noted unspecified "economic crimes" took up 10% of the budget last year: "Counterfeiting is huge but I don't think people are actually seeing it as a problem".
Federal Standard Wanted
Armoured car guards are again appealing for standard, federalized regulations following the latest spectacular holdup, the second in ten weeks. Unifor, representing some security employees, said the thefts underscored the lack of regulation: "Here we go again".
Agency Orders Credit Check On All Employees: ‘Security’
Canada Border Services Agency in a mammoth security sweep is ordering credit checks on all employees. A confidential management bulletin says reviews of workers' debts, credit cards and mortgages are to determine the “trustworthiness” of staff. Blacklock’s could find no similar policy in any police department in Canada: "This is atrocious".
Farm Chemicals, Road Salt Worse Than Fracking: Feds
Natural Resources Canada says in a confidential report that farm fertilizers, road salt and other everyday chemicals pose a greater environmental risk than shale gas fracking. The department did not cite any data supporting its claim, and the author declined an interview: "We'll get back to you".
Spy Agency Faces Questions
Advocates say pressing questions remain unanswered over federal disclosures a domestic spy agency improperly intercepted private communications by scores of Canadians. Communications Security Establishment Canada acknowledged it kept files on the private electronic conversations of 66 unidentified people: 'Are we getting all the information?'
Privacy Complaints Up 17%
Data grabs by Bell Canada prompted more than third of all public complaints to the Office of the Privacy Commissioner last year, according to a new report. Overall complaints were up 17 percent: "Why do you want the information? What are you going to do with it?"
Documents Cite Another Security Threat: Farmland
Warning of “food security” in a hungry world, the Department of Agriculture in confidential memos is urging first-ever federal scrutiny of farmland sales to foreigners. Authorities note Canada has no national ownership restrictions, registry or even statistics on buy-ups by Chinese and other offshore investors: "Where are things going?"
Feds Eye Bitcoin: ‘It Could Attract Terrorist Financiers’
Police have no evidence Canada’s bitcoin exchanges are being used by organized crime, according to confidential documents. However the Department of Finance says many exchanges “do not conduct customer due diligence”, and caution the business is beyond the scope of Canadian money-laundering monitors: "There are no rules".
Follow U.K. On Tax Fraud
Canada Revenue should follow a U.K. lead in imposing new fines and criminal penalties on taxpayers who hide income offshore, says a Senate critic. The U.K. has ordered all tax evaders to declare offshore income or face sanctions including jail and 200% fines: 'Canada goes for the low-hanging fruit'.
A New Trade Pact With Ten Provinces Proposed By Feds
The latest proposal to reform interprovincial trade is drawing a cautious response amid complaints the scheme sets out few details, and hinges on universal agreement from ten provincial cabinets: "They always have excuses".
Don’t Mention The V-Word
Cabinet is urged to avoid all mention of “values” in planning for Canada 150th anniversary in 2017, according to a confidential report. The research appeared to undermine a Heritage Canada proposal to stress military exploits in the sesquicentennial year: "Talking about shared values may do more harm than good".
No Tax Audit Blacklist: MPs
The Commons finance committee has vetoed a proposed review of Canada Revenue Agency audits of registered charities. New Democrat MPs accused the agency of targeting specific groups for aggressive audits: "It may be that they're taking political direction".
Big Oil Eco-Claims Disputed
A scientific panel is questioning industry claims of the environmental safety of chemicals used to treat oil spills. The finding follows federal warnings that agencies must improve planning in case of ecological disasters: 'Many assumptions have been challenged as invalid or untrue'.
Anatomy Of A Train Wreck
Lax regulatory enforcement by Transport Canada and low safety standards at the former Montreal, Maine & Atlantic Railway created conditions that led to fiery Lac-Mégantic train derailment that left 47 dead, say federal investigators: "Why didn't you just shut them down?"



