adplus-dvertising
Connect with us

News

DFO ordered to improve officer gear to counter threat from ‘criminals’ with firearms

Published

 on

 

HALIFAX – A labour investigator has agreed with federal fishery officers that heavily armed criminals pose a threat to their lives and has ordered managers to take steps immediately to reduce the danger.

In a report issued Friday to the fisheries department, the federal labour program’s compliance unit concludes “protective equipment and tactical protocols” currently used during fisheries investigations are inadequate.

The finding by the senior investigator — obtained by The Canadian Press — comes in response to fisheries department enforcement officers filing refusal to work applications under provisions of the Canada Labour Code.

The investigator concludes fishery officers in the Maritime region are having to confront people with weapons, including cases where intelligence indicates the fisher “keeps an assault rifle on board.”

The report also says there are cases where “outlaw motorcycle gangs are armed with firearms.” It concurs with fishery officers that “a number of the illegal fishers that officers deal with regularly are convicted violent criminals and have threatened officers directly and on social media.”

In addition, the report quotes officers stating there has been aggressive behaviour on the sea, including during enforcement of Canadian sovereignty on the border with the United States, along with occasions where officers have “come under fire” while inspecting fishing gear.

The document doesn’t indicate what steps the labour investigator took to confirm the reports the officers made about the dangers they face. Employment and Social Development Canada — which is responsible for the federal labour program — declined to confirm the details of the report or to comment further on it, citing “confidentiality reasons” that limits the sharing of information to employers and employees during an investigation.

“While the investigation is underway, the labour program is working closely with the employer to ensure workers’ health and safety, maintaining oversight until the matter is fully addressed,” spokeswoman Samuelle Carbonneau said in an emailed response.

The labour program is responsible for protecting the rights and well-being of workers and employers in federally regulated workplaces.

The investigator’s directive to the federal fisheries department concludes current protective equipment and tactical protocols are inadequate and therefore the officers’ enforcement duties “could reasonably be expected to present a serious threat to their life and health.”

“Therefore, you are hereby directed … to take measures to correct the condition that constitutes the danger immediately,” the document said.

Doug Wentzell, the federal fisheries department’s regional manager for the Maritimes, said in an interview last week that a number of officers have refused field work, but he declined to say how many. Despite the refusals, he said, “the majority of our officers are in the field in the region and we’re also supplementing those resources with officers from other DFO regions.” He estimated there are about 100 field officers in the Maritimes.

Shimen Fayad, president of the Union of Health and Environment Workers, told The Canadian Press last week that members in the fisheries department were “exposed to firearms such as automatic weapons (against) which their current body armour does not protect them.”

According to the labour program’s website, if a labour investigator finds that “danger exists” and directives are issued, “an employee may continue to refuse to work while the directions are complied with.”

However, Debbie Buott-Matheson, a spokeswoman for the fisheries department, said in an email that “our officers are returning to full duties.”

“We have taken action to address the (labour program) direction received,” she wrote.

“The health and safety of our fishery officers remains our top concern. Fishery officers are dedicated, well-trained professionals, and acts of violence and threats towards them will not be tolerated.”

Véronique Chadillon-Farinacci, a professor of criminology at the University of Moncton, said in an interview Tuesday that more data is needed from the federal fisheries department to indicate whether levels of violence and threats have been growing.

The professor, who is currently carrying out studies on conflicts within the fishing industry, said “there are some signs, anecdotal signs, of a very serious situation” in parts of the Maritimes.

“Maybe fisheries officers’ jobs are changing and … they are being exposed to situations that are closer to what police officers are exposed to,” she said.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Oct. 9, 2024.

Source link

Continue Reading

News

Bryan Adams decries elements of Ottawa’s online streaming rules

Published

 on

Global hitmaker Bryan Adams is adding his voice to opposition over new federal regulations on streaming.

The “Cuts Like a Knife” and “All For Love” singer released a video on social media saying elements of the Online Streaming Act would make it harder for Canadian musicians to break through globally.

The video echoes points raised by a national campaign by the Digital Media Association, which represents the world’s leading music streaming companies including Amazon, Apple Music, Feed.FM, Pandora, Spotify and YouTube.

The group says Ottawa’s requirement that big foreign streamers financially contribute to Canadian content could result in them raising subscription prices, and thereby make those services less affordable.

Federal Heritage Minister Pascale St-Onge says she’s glad Adams jumped into the debate but disputes his description of the rule as “a streaming tax.”

She says the changes are meant to help emerging Canadian artists, many of whom complain about the difficulty of finding an audience on global digital platforms.

“If you talk to them, they’re going to tell you that online streaming platforms don’t pay them enough and also that it’s hard for them to be discovered on these streaming platforms,” St-Onge said Wednesday in Ottawa.

“This is what the legislation that we passed is intended for — it’s to help local Canadian artists both get better pay and also get discovered on these streaming platforms.”

The Online Streaming Act is currently in the hands of the CRTC, which said in June that foreign streamers must contribute five per cent of their annual Canadian revenues to funds devoted to producing Canadian content, including local TV and radio news, as well as Indigenous and French-language content.

The CRTC said the rule would apply to companies that make at least $25 million in Canadian revenue and are unaffiliated with a Canadian broadcaster. The contributions are expected to bring in about $200 million per year.

Adams has been a longtime critic of Ottawa’s approach to the Canadian music industry. The singer spoke out earlier this year about how Canadian content is defined, and in the early ‘90s complained about CanCon.

St-Onge described the call for streamers to help fund Canada’s creative ecosystem “a base contribution” that homegrown companies have been making for years.

“It was the right thing to do a few decades ago and it’s still the right thing to do today.”

– With files from Alessia Passafiume in Ottawa

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Oct. 9, 2024.

The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.



Source link

Continue Reading

News

Fourteen-year-old girl pleads guilty to manslaughter in Halifax teen’s stabbing death

Published

 on

HALIFAX – A 14-year-old girl has pleaded guilty to a reduced charge of manslaughter in the stabbing death of a 16-year-old boy near a Halifax mall earlier this year.

A spokeswoman for the provincial Public Prosecution Service confirms the girl appeared in Halifax Youth Court on Monday, when she also pleaded guilty to a charge of violating the release conditions of her bail.

Melissa Foshay says the Crown is no longer seeking an adult sentence for the girl, who was initially charged with second-degree murder.

The teen is scheduled to return to court Oct. 30 when facts will be entered and a publication ban will also be considered to protect the right to a fair trial for the others accused in the case.

Two boys now aged 17 and another boy who is 15 were also charged with second-degree murder.

The victim was found badly injured in April in a parking garage next to the Halifax Shopping Centre and he died later in hospital.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Oct. 9, 2024.

The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.



Source link

Continue Reading

News

Feds move ahead with sustainable investing guidelines, but details still scarce

Published

 on

TORONTO – Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland says the federal government is moving ahead with guidelines around sustainable investing and corporate climate disclosures, but details on the plans are scarce.

A wide range of investors, asset managers and environmental groups have been pushing the government to roll out such guidelines, also known as green taxonomies, to attract more investment for emissions-reducing projects.

Frustration has been mounting as efforts to create such guidelines have been in the works for years in Canada, with multiple groups tasked with creating recommendations but still nothing in place.

Those looking for answers will, however, have to wait longer, as the government says it plans to have a third-party organization develop the taxonomy, with the first guidelines issued within a year of the organization beginning its work.

On the potential inclusion of fossil fuels — a key area of contention — the government says it doesn’t anticipate new natural gas production would qualify, but that drafters could consider existing natural gas for its potential to displace more polluting fuels internationally.

For company disclosures, the government says it will launch a regulatory process to figure out what information, and what size of private federal corporations, will be included.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Oct. 9, 2024.

The Canadian Press. All rights reserved.



Source link

Continue Reading

Trending