Monday, December 29, 2025
ADVT 
National

Shugart offers to explain WE redactions

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 27 Oct, 2020 08:55 PM
  • Shugart offers to explain WE redactions

The country's top public servant is offering to testify about controversial redactions to some 5,000 pages of documents the government released on the WE Charity affair.

Ian Shugart, clerk of the Privy Council, makes the offer in a letter to the House of Commons finance committee.

The committee has been stalled for several weeks over a Conservative motion denouncing the redactions as a breach of committee members' privileges as MPs.

Liberal members of the committee have been filibustering the motion, arguing that public servants should be given a chance to explain why they blacked out portions of the documents.

Shugart says he and his colleagues would be pleased to appear at the committee to explain their decisions.

The committee had demanded that the documents be turned over without redactions and that it be left to the legal counsel for the committee to decide whether anything needed to be blacked out to maintain personal privacy or cabinet confidences.

MORE National ARTICLES

Expansion of coal mine will need federal review

Expansion of coal mine will need federal review
The federal environment minister is backtracking on a previous decision to keep Ottawa out of the approval process for a major coal mine expansion in Alberta.

Expansion of coal mine will need federal review

'Ice jacking' caused CN Rail derailment: report

'Ice jacking' caused CN Rail derailment: report
A freight-train derailment in northwestern Ontario that led to a significant oil spill this winter was caused by a phenomenon known as "ice jacking," federal investigators reported on Thursday.

'Ice jacking' caused CN Rail derailment: report

Companies highlight jobs, economic spinoffs as fighter-jet competition closes

Companies highlight jobs, economic spinoffs as fighter-jet competition closes
Fighter-jet makers are leading with promises of jobs and other economic spinoffs as they make their final pitches for why Canada should buy their planes to replace the military's aging CF-18 fleet.

Companies highlight jobs, economic spinoffs as fighter-jet competition closes

Quebec coroner faults slow ambulance response

Quebec coroner faults slow ambulance response
A Quebec coroner says the death of a young man who waited 21 minutes for an ambulance could have possibly been avoided had help arrived sooner.

Quebec coroner faults slow ambulance response

B.C. First Nation closes territory over COVID

B.C. First Nation closes territory over COVID
The Tahltan Nation has issued a notice that the public should avoid its territory in northwest British Columbia until the there's a vaccine or community immunity for COVID-19.

B.C. First Nation closes territory over COVID

Vancouver approves locations for outdoor drinking

Vancouver approves locations for outdoor drinking
Residents will soon have four new outdoor locations in Vancouver to enjoy a beer or glass of wine.

Vancouver approves locations for outdoor drinking