Wednesday, December 31, 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

B.C. plans to clear surgery backlog in 15 months

B.C. plans to clear surgery backlog in 15 months
British Columbia's health minister says the province has hired more staff and increased operating-room hours to catch up on cancelled surgeries but a significant surge in COVID-19 cases could impact recovery.

B.C. plans to clear surgery backlog in 15 months

Walmart to close its stores on Thanksgiving Day

Walmart to close its stores on Thanksgiving Day
Walmart Inc. said that it will be closing its namesake stores and Sam's Clubs on Thanksgiving Day this year, saying that it wants to have its employees spend time with their families during the coronavirus.

Walmart to close its stores on Thanksgiving Day

Closing arguments continue in cop's manslaughter trial

Closing arguments continue in cop's manslaughter trial
The injuries suffered by a Somali-Canadian man during an arrest in Ottawa four years ago did not cause or directly contribute to his death, defence lawyers told a police officer's manslaughter trial Tuesday.

Closing arguments continue in cop's manslaughter trial

Poll suggests parents want masks at schools

Poll suggests parents want masks at schools
Almost two-third of parents in a new poll say they believe that children returning to school in the fall should wear masks at least part of the time.

Poll suggests parents want masks at schools

No evidence of Trudeau contact with WE Charity before deal awarded: PCO Clerk

No evidence of Trudeau contact with WE Charity before deal awarded: PCO Clerk
The federal government's top public servant says there is no evidence to suggest Prime Minister Justin Trudeau spoke with WE Charity before the organization was awarded a deal to run a student-volunteer program.

No evidence of Trudeau contact with WE Charity before deal awarded: PCO Clerk

Safety board to examine helicopter crash site

Safety board to examine helicopter crash site
Members of the Transportation Safety Board of Canada are expected to arrive in Newfoundland later today to investigate a fatal helicopter crash near Thorburn Lake.

Safety board to examine helicopter crash site