Now Hiring: No Benefits.

Cabinet is being pressed to amend rules that charge migrant farm workers for Canadian benefits they can never claim. The United Food and Commercial Workers said minimum-wage fruit pickers and other migrants are paying more than $20 million a year in EI premiums though they’re disqualified from benefits: "It is outrageous".

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Nobody Touches My Files

The Supreme Court has agreed to hear a key case of an attorney who claims client privilege in withholding financial data from Canada Revenue. The Alberta lawyer argued tax authorities had no right to identify his clients or know how much they were billed: "It's potentially a really important case".

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About Those Fenian Raids

The Senate will debate a proposal to strip Heritage Canada of its multi-million dollar plans for the nation’s 150th anniversary. The initiative follows department proposals to emphasize wartime exploits, including the obscure 1866 Fenian Raids and lost battles of WWI: "That is not the function of a government institution'.

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No Talking — Just Saying

Cabinet has decreed a permanent secrecy oath for thousands of government employees, including retirees who worked for now-disbanded organizations: 'It puts pressure on whistleblowers'.

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Fish Farm Pesticides Closer

A federal law deemed a “critical impediment” to aquaculture by the Department of Fisheries has been assigned to Environment Canada. The transfer is seen as a step to legalizing fish farmers' use of pesticides under controls similar to crop sprays: "We're taking pragmatic steps".

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Language Report False: MPs

The Official Language Commissioner has been cited by MPs for embellishing a report to Parliament. Legislators said Commissioner Graham Fraser had “no evidence” to substantiate his claim job cuts affected francophone language rights: "He admits it is a hypothesis only".

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Seven Years Of Consultation

The Transport Safety Board after seven years has finalized regulations to simplify accident investigations, including confidentiality of witness statements. The rules were first proposed in 2007: "There are a lot of steps involved".

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Insurers Eye Pot Rules

Insurers are monitoring Health Canada’s planned privatization of medical marijuana production following a court judgment on stolen cannabis.
Judges dismissed a homeowner's claim for full replacement costs of stolen marijuana plants as too peculiar to qualify as personal property: 'This is a new business'.

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Drug Co. Pays $248K Fine

A federal panel has cited a drug manufacturer for overcharging on medicine for multiple sclerosis patients. The Patented Medicine Prices Review Board complained of a 20% price hike over seven years: "What do you know?".

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South Korea Calling

Cabinet is being pressed to release the text of a South Korean trade pact that industry groups say holds promise and peril for Canadians. The treaty lowers tariffs on forestry, farm and fish products, but gives Korean manufacturers greater market access on autos and appliances, and allows Korean bids on federal contracts over $100,000: "The devil's in the details".

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When life gives you lemons..

Natural Resources Canada is attempting to find some industrial use for tens of thousands of ash trees devastated by an Asian beetle. Researchers will run tests to determine if dead trees can be converted into fertilizer, or fuel for thermal power plants: "There is a potential market".

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Fishery Vow ‘Fundamental’

Fishermen are closely watching an April deadline for permanent adoption of a policy on owner-operators that promotes independent harvesters. It follows a 2012 scare that the Department of Fisheries would permit processors to buy up licenses: 'That is extremely worrisome'.

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Salmon Fresh From The Lab

A company that won Environment Canada approval to grow made-in-the-lab salmon is now applying to have its engineered fish certified as good enough to eat -- a Canadian first: 'This is happening in total secrecy'.

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Mutual Funds Rated A Bust

Mutual funds are “failures” for RRSP savers, says an advocacy group. Economists calculated many individuals cannot hope to match the returns of the $201 billion Canada Pension Plan: 'It isn't working'.

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April Surprise On Subsidies

Cabinet faces complaints over the rollout of new public works subsidies that’s left municipalities and contractors with few details only days before the program’s launch. The New Building Canada Fund pledges details will follow April 1: "How can they plan?"

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