Management of a crack military Cyber War unit assigned to counter Chinese and Russian threats is so haphazard it “lacks direction” despite half a billion in spending, says a Department of National Defence audit. Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan had boasted his department was on the cutting edge of technology. Auditors instead found cyber analysts had to take cabs to access computer networks scattered across Ottawa: “This can result in up to $200 in taxi fares a week for one person.”
Monthly Archives: August 2021
Party Rolls Out Election Plan
The Liberal Party has summoned reporters to a confidential meeting Monday to discuss campaign logistics. New Democrats said it appeared Prime Minister Justin Trudeau was “plunging the country into an election.”
Mandatory Shots ‘An Option’
Six million Canadians eligible for Covid shots who’ve declined to get vaccinated to date may lose “certain privileges,” the Public Health Agency said yesterday. The remarks followed the Prime Minister’s suggestion that government employees and those in the federally-regulated private sector be forced to vaccinate: “That’s also a live issue.”
Feds Eye China Carbon Tariff
Cabinet yesterday endorsed in principle new carbon tariffs on coal-powered imports from China, but set no deadline for “leveling the playing field.” Opposition Conservatives earlier endorsed the plan targeting goods from Chinese polluters: “Additional measures may be needed.”
Marijuana Firing Overturned
A federal arbitrator has ordered Canadian Pacific Railway Company to rehire an employee fired for using marijuana while on call. Employers had sought random workplace drug testing when Parliament legalized cannabis three years ago: “An accident, by itself, is usually not enough to justify testing.”
Ottawa Is Stay-Home Capital
Ottawa is the nation’s stay-home capital of the pandemic, Statistics Canada said yesterday. Nearly half the city’s workforce stayed home with pay after Prime Minister Justin Trudeau advised the public to “figure out how to stay home from work and work from home” as a Covid precaution: “This is what we all need to be doing.”
Don’t Trust China, Feds Told
Most Canadians don’t trust China says in-house research by the Privy Council Office. Data were released as the Chinese Embassy accused Canada of torturing Indigenous people: “The Canadian government must address by concrete actions, not just words, its historic and ongoing systemic racism.”
Over The Top Even In Québec
A national regulator yesterday cited a Montréal TV station for broadcasting pornography to 13-year olds. The National Broadcast Standards Council said while Québecers have different viewing habits than the rest of the country, depicting sex acts as suitable viewing for Grade Six students went too far: “A Francophone market might tolerate more explicit sexual content than would an Anglophone market.”
Won’t Testify On Tax Cut Act
Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland yesterday ignored a committee summons to explain her opposition to a tax cut for farmers, small business and fishing corporations. The Commons finance committee two weeks ago summoned Freeland for questioning: “The Minister made her decision.”
‘Open Banking’ Needs Regs
A proposal for “open banking” to allow electronic shopping by consumers for the best rates on loans and deposits will require numerous rewrites to federal laws, a cabinet advisory panel said yesterday. Bankers and insurance lobbyists have opposed the measure: ‘Consumers must have confidence they are protected if something goes wrong.’
CBC Ad Sales Down Again
CBC advertising revenues fell again last year by 18 percent. The Crown broadcaster said it will require more federal grants to offset commercial losses, and acknowledged forecasts of a sales boon from the Tokyo Olympics was speculative: “We will be a beacon for truth.”
59% Fear Threat To Freedoms
Most Canadians rate the pandemic a threat to rights and freedoms with a large minority wary of the vaccine rollout, says in-house Privy Council Office research. Forty percent said they believed Covid “is part of a global effort to enforce mandatory vaccination.” The rate was highest, 45 percent, in Saskatchewan and Manitoba: “True or false: The world’s largest pharmaceutical companies have been deliberately delaying or hiding the development of a vaccine that could end the Covid-19 pandemic in order to drive up the price.”
Can’t Force Vaccines: Report
Mandating vaccination spells “a loss of fundamental rights,” says a federal agency. Health Minister Patricia Hajdu yesterday acknowledged millions of Canadians are “still questioning whether it’s right for them,” but stopped short of advocating coercion: “Government surveillance diminishes the level of freedom one expects in a democracy.”
Censure ‘Butt Cover’ Memo
The Royal Bank has been cited by a judge for refusing to pay a life insurance claim based on a “cover your butt memo.” Ontario Superior Court ordered bankers to pay the $250,000 death benefit and 100 percent of a widow’s legal costs: “RBC’s conduct has been heavy handed.”
Will Revive Indigenous Law
Attorney General David Lametti yesterday endorsed adoption of ancient legal practices on First Nations territory. “We are here to celebrate your efforts to revitalize your legal traditions,” said Lametti: “This brings me hope as a Minister and as a jurist.”