Privacy “Subjective” In Law

A new federal privacy bill gives corporations “subjective” leeway in deciding when and where to divulge breaches of clients’ information, analysts say. Bill S-4 is the largest rewrite of federal privacy law since 2001: "This has been a long, long time coming".

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Half Will See 90

A 90-year lifespan will soon be commonplace for Canadians, says the Office of the Chief Actuary. Authorities said projections will see Canadians grow to be among the oldest people on earth: 'How is the government planning to cover the costs?'

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Consumers Get A ‘Leader’

Cabinet has named a $127,000-a year “financial literacy leader” in an initiative critics described as pointless. The posting falls under the government's Financial Consumer Agency that draws 85% of funding from banks and other financial institutions: "It is not obvious why this is necessary".

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6.7 Jobless For One Vacancy

There are 6.7 unemployed Canadians for every vacant job, according to a new Statistics Canada report. The federal agency identified a steady rise in the proportion of job-seekers to positions.

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Budget Cuts ‘Like Climbing Everest’ Says Agency Memo

The impact of budget cuts at Canada Border Services Agency is “like climbing Everest”, authorities admit in staff documents. Files released through Access to Information confirm the agency cut programs including detection of counterfeiters, and dog teams assigned to track drugs and guns: “Tough times are looming".

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A 4,700,000-Name Database

Citizenship & Immigration Canada confirms it will spend millions compiling an electronic database of records dating from 1950, amid fears of privacy advocates. The department is to digitize 4.7 million files including names, photos and key dates: "Everything about this raises red flags".

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MP Makes Noise Complaint

The Canadian Transportation Agency has rejected noise complaints from an MP and 17 constituents over round-the-clock construction on a rail line. New Democrat Mike Sullivan appealed to regulators for relief from the 80-decibel ruckus: “Children can’t sleep; people can’t work.”

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Feds “Unconscionable”: MP

Health Canada must step-up consumer warnings on the risks of common acid-reducing prescription medications amid “unconscionable” delays, says a Conservative MP. The warnings concern one of the most popularly-prescribed class of drugs: "There is no question of the danger".

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Tax Accounts Were Hacked

Canada’s privacy commissioner is monitoring a breach of tax accounts hacked at Canada Revenue. Authorities confirmed 900 tax-filers had their Social Insurance Numbers stolen off an electronic database. Business accounts may also have been breached: "Any bug that comes along is going to get lots of data".

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Bankers Boycott Bitcoiners

Bitcoiners are appealing to the Senate for regulation of the pseudo-currency after complaining they are being boycotted by Canadian banks. The country's main bitcoin exchange said every major bank in the country has declined its business: “Banks will not deal with us".

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MPs Press Border Security

MPs have given the Canada Border Services Agency a June 30 deadline to comply with a critical audit. The Commons public accounts committee says it wants answers on management deficiencies including an obsolete computer system: "We're actually going to check".

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Bill Targets Extreme Drunks

Extreme drunk drivers would face more severe penalties under a Conservative bill introduced in the Commons. It is the second private bill on impaired driving introduced in the past five months: "These people need to be taken off the road".

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Questions On Foreign Hires

Employers are pressing for details of a proposed hire-an-immigrant system intended to match skilled foreign employees with unfilled Canadian jobs. The Expression of Interest program is to launch next winter though questions remain: "There's a sense of urgency".

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Feds Eye Fishery Opening

The Department of Fisheries is monitoring the reopening of an Atlantic fishery amid concerns for the salmon population: "Those species have been living together for centuries".

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Lone Tory Backs Graft Curb

A lone Conservative MP joined Opposition members in supporting a failed anti-corruption bill affecting mining and energy companies. MP Stephen Woodworth said the bill was worthwhile even if the rest of his Conservative colleagues opposed it: "I don't see any reason to wait on a government bill".

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