Gov’t Contractor Angers MPs

MPs yesterday expressed outrage and anger after an ArriveCan supplier testified he couldn’t recall how many millions he’d made from federal contracts. “The damage has already been done,” said Darren Anthony, vice president of GC Strategies Inc. of Woodlawn, Ont.

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Eye Negative Option Scheme

Cabinet is researching a negative option insurance scheme to charge homeowners an extra $900 a year or more for overland flood coverage, according to records. The point was to reduce federal disaster aid payments, said a Department of Public Safety report: "Mandating that insurance companies include flood insurance in basic coverage with an option to opt out is a powerful mechanism."

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They Gave Sixfold: StatsCan

Federal statisticians yesterday named Steinbach, Man., population 18,000, the most generous city in Canada. Tax filers’ annual donations to charity were six times the national average: "Manitoba remained Canada’s most charitable province."

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PM Omits Deadline On C-58

Banning replacement workers in the federally-regulated private sector will “build a stronger middle class,” Prime Minister Justin Trudeau yesterday told Unifor Local 444 in Windsor, Ont. Trudeau gave no deadline for passing a Commons bill introduced last November 9: "It’s not over until it’s over."

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“Decreasing” Trust In RCMP

Trust in the Mounties has fallen almost 20 points since the pandemic, says in-house RCMP research. The national police force’s most favourable ratings are among older Canadians who were “taught growing up to show respect for RCMP officers,” said a report.

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ArriveCan Made Millionaires

A lead ArriveCan supplier yesterday acknowledged he and a business partner became millionaires under lucrative federal contracts one MP calculated at $2,600 an hour. Kristian Firth, partner in GC Strategies Inc. of Woodlawn, Ont., justified fees by explaining he occasionally worked weekends and evenings: "The government obviously values what myself and my firm and what firms like us do."

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Name Names Or Else: Motion

The Commons government operations committee yesterday by unanimous vote censured an ArriveCan supplier for refusing to name secret contacts. MPs repeatedly asked for names of federal managers who cut sweetheart contracts worth millions: "Refusal to answer questions or failure to reply truthfully may give rise to a charge of contempt in the House."

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Summon Blair On Contractor

MPs yesterday summoned Defence Minister Bill Blair for questioning on how an employee became a millionaire while moonlighting as an Indigenous contractor. Members of the Commons government operations committee gave Blair until month’s end to appear for cross-examination: "It is wrong."

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Visa Rule Will Save $660M/yr

Reinstating visas for air passengers from Mexico will save Canadian taxpayers $660 million a year, the Department of Immigration said yesterday. Millions would have been spent investigating bogus refugee claimants, it said: "Claiming asylum, not visiting, was the true purpose of travel."

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Blamed Drinking For Wreck

Federal inspectors yesterday recommended Railway Safety Act regulations ban workplace drinking after blaming an impaired traffic controller for a 2021 train wreck. The Transportation Safety Board earlier went to Federal Court to compel Canadian National Railway Co. to cooperate with its investigation in the case: 'He was either drinking at the beginning of his shift or before work.'

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Memo Downplays ArriveCan

The Department of Public Works in a briefing note claims ArriveCan charges were “fair and reasonable” despite irregularities and multi-million dollar cost overruns. Anita Anand, the public works minister at the time of ArriveCan spending, earlier told reporters she was not to blame: "Did you know about any of this?"

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Bill $44,516 For Roman Junket

A Roman junket last July by the Senate agriculture committee cost taxpayers nearly $45,000, records show. Senator Robert Black (Ont.), chair of the committee, said the trip was no holiday: "That won’t be a good look."

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“Vital” But Didn’t Pay Taxes

The insolvent SaltWire Network newspaper chain, largest in Atlantic Canada, pocketed taxpayer subsidies while failing to pay its taxes, court records show. The CEO earlier testified the chain was “vital to our democracy.”

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Flood Mandate A Fed Priority

Cabinet is “committed” to mandating insurance for property owners on flood plains, says the Department of Public Safety. Flood damage should not be charged to taxpayers through disaster aid, said a briefing note: "Canada is taking steps to prioritize flood risk."

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Judge Rejects Head Tax Claim

The Federal Court of Appeal has dismissed claims immigration fees breach Charter rights. Lawyers had sought to certify a class action lawsuit claiming mandatory fees were akin to the 19th century Chinese head tax: "That is not what we are dealing with here."

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