Business

  • December 04, 2024

    Ottawa splits off controversial anti-hate provisions from online harms bill

    The federal government is hiving off controversial anti-hate provisions from its proposed online harms legislation, in the hopes of being able to enact more speedily other provisions in Bill C-63 that aim to protect children online.

  • December 04, 2024

    Ontario private member's bill aimed at regulating captive wildlife and zoos

    An Ottawa-area MPP has introduced a new private member's bill aimed at addressing the lack of provincial oversight for captive wildlife. The Captive Wildlife Protection Act, 2024 was said to be brought for the purpose of improving animal welfare and public safety, citing dangers posed by “roadside zoos.”

  • December 04, 2024

    Ontario government appointee to conduct review of OMERS pension fund governance

    Former Toronto Port Authority chair Robert Poirier has been hired by the Ontario government to conduct a governance review of the sometimes-challenged Ontario Municipal Employees’ Retirement System (OMERS) — but the largest union with OMERS members is expressing reservations about the pick.

  • December 04, 2024

    Alberta court rejects three injunctions, grants one in restrictive covenants dispute

    The Alberta Court of King’s Bench has denied injunction applications brought by a group benefits provider against a former executive, finding that there was no serious issue to be tried with the employee’s alleged breach of certain restrictive covenants.

  • December 04, 2024

    New partner joins Bennett Jones in Toronto

    A recent news release from Bennett Jones announced that Allyson Marta joined the firm as a partner in its Toronto office.

  • December 04, 2024

    B.C. appeal court upholds largest defamation award for a corporation

    While defamation claims are often made to compensate individuals for personal distress caused by harm to their personal reputations, corporations may also seek damages for defamation when harmed by a business competitor. Such claims generally focus on the corporation’s economic losses. In Valley Traffic Systems Inc. v. Malak, 2024 BCCA 370, the Court of Appeal for British Columbia upheld the largest sum ever awarded to a corporation in B.C. for a defamation claim.

  • December 04, 2024

    Our land for the future: What NWT PFP means for Indigenous-led conservation

    On Nov. 14, 2024, 22 Indigenous partners, alongside the federal and territorial governments and private philanthropists led by Pew Charitable Trusts, gathered in Behchokǫ̀ to celebrate a landmark achievement in conservation and reconciliation: the signing of the Northwest Territories (NWT) Project Finance for Permanence Agreement (NWT: Our Land for the Future Agreement). This agreement represents a transformative step toward long-term, Indigenous-led stewardship of Canada’s northern ecosystems.

  • December 04, 2024

    Immigration forecast: Mainly gloomy with rising pressure systems

    Canada has progressively become one of the most desired destinations for newcomers. According to the results of the 2021 Census of Population (the latest population census data), the number of immigrants in Canada reached over eight million people, which represents 23 per cent of total Canadian population.

  • December 04, 2024

    Copyright developments in the fall of 2024: Site-blocking orders

    The decision in Rogers Media Inc., v. John Doe 1​​​​​​, (No. 2) 2024 FC 1082, builds on recent decisions where the court has issued site-blocking orders to interrupt the infringement of copyright in the broadcast of live sports. In the previous cases, applicants obtained interlocutory injunctions, for a stated period, for live sports events of a single professional league, in proceedings begun as actions, against John Doe defendants. The orders included mandatory terms against ISPs named as third-party defendants who had committed no wrongdoing.

  • December 03, 2024

    Privacy Commissioner: New Ontario law regulating AI in public sector has significant shortcomings

    Ontario’s privacy commission Patricia Kosseim has said that a lack of transparency and explicit independent oversight in a recently passed bill addressing the use of artificial intelligence (AI) systems at public sector entities should be a “cause of concern of Ontarians.”

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