Constitutional
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December 19, 2024
‘Lessons to be learned’ from report on University of Alberta campus protest, legal expert says
An independent review by a retired judge is calling the University of Alberta’s decision to call in police to remove pro-Palestinian protesters from its campus earlier this year reasonable, while also noting the school did an “about-face” after it promised earlier not to dismantle the protest encampment as long as it was peaceful.
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December 18, 2024
Alberta threatens to sue over ‘unconstitutional’ clean energy regulations
Alberta is threatening to take the federal government to court over its recently announced clean energy regulations, saying they are an unconstitutional intrusion on federal jurisdiction.
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December 18, 2024
Bill to form new Miscarriage of Justice Review Commission enacted into law
A bill replacing the ministerial review process for miscarriages of justice with an independent review commission has been enacted into law, the Department of Justice Canada announced in a news release.
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December 16, 2024
Section 15 Charter argument in drug consumption site lawsuit a ‘no-brainer,’ legal expert says
Ontario has been hit with a lawsuit challenging controversial legislation that will lead to the shuttering of several supervised drug consumption sites in the province which says the province's moves are unconstitutional and will lead to more people dying.
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December 13, 2024
Meta agrees to pay $9M to settle Quebec class action over unauthorized sharing of user data
Tech giant Meta has agreed to pay $9 million to settle a Quebec class action concerning allegations that Facebook shared the personal and private information of its users with third parties without their consent.
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December 13, 2024
Federal government intervenes to end postal strike as early as next week
In what one labour lawyer calls a significant challenge to legal norms, the federal government has announced that the Canada Industrial Relations Board (CIRB) will intervene to potentially bring an end to a strike by 55,000 members of the Canadian Union of Postal Workers (CUPW) as early as next week.
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December 13, 2024
Nova Scotia education minister moves to justice file
Nova Scotia has a new justice minister. Lawyer and former education minister Becky Druhan has been given the job of justice minister and attorney general following the Progressive Conservatives’ recent re-election as a majority government.
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December 13, 2024
Challenge launched against Alberta’s ‘unprecedented’ transgender health care law
A constitutional challenge has been launched against Alberta’s controversial legislation restricting health care for transgender youth, with advocacy organizations characterizing what the province has done as “unprecedented” in Canada.
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December 12, 2024
Yukon, Ottawa failed to consult Indigenous group on ‘economic feasibility’ of mine project
Yukon’s top court has found that both the territory’s government and that of the country failed to properly consult a First Nations group on the “economic feasibility” of a mine planned to be built on Indigenous land. The Court of Appeal of Yukon case of Ross River Dena Council v. Yukon (Government of), 2024 YKCA 18, released Dec. 6, pits the governments of Canada and Yukon (known as the “Decision Bodies”) against the Ross River Dena Council (RRDC), which brought the court the legal action on behalf of the Kaska Nation.
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December 10, 2024
Ontario appeal court sides with First Nation over beachfront land excluded from reserve
Ontario’s top court has ruled in favour of a First Nation that said that a stretch of beachfront property on Lake Huron had been unfairly excluded from its reserve lands.