SCC heard more cases in 2025 but still fewer than pre-pandemic; number expected to rise in 2026
Supreme Court of Canada, 2025
The nine justices of the Supreme Court of Canada in 2025: Front row, l to r: Malcolm Rowe, Andromache Karakatsanis, Richard Wagner (chief justice), Suzanne Côté, Sheilah Martin. Back row, l to r: Michelle O’Bonsawin, Nicholas Kasirer, Mahmud Jamal, Mary Moreau.

Tuesday, March 17, 2026 @ 4:55 PM

The Supreme Court of Canada heard more appeals last year than in 2024 and delivered its reserved judgments more quickly, but its hearings and output in 2025 were not yet up to pre-pandemic levels, according to the top court, which states it “expects to hear even more cases in 2026.” ... [read more]

B.C. legislation sparks debate over protest access zones at schools, places of worship

Thursday, March 19, 2026 @ 2:34 PM

As the B.C. government doubles down on bubble zones that limit protest around schools and places of worship, civil libertarians are saying they not only violate Charter rights but are also largely unnecessary. ... [read more]

Employees must use full process in lodging safety concerns before alleging reprisal: lawyer

Thursday, March 19, 2026 @ 9:58 AM

Those who accuse their employer of reprisal for raising safety concerns must exhaust all necessary steps in the process before lodging such a complaint, says a lawyer of a case involving a Nova Scotia teacher alleging her school punished her for complaining about the air quality in her classroom.   ... [read more]

Ontario appellate court ruling reinforces importance of accused’s right to cross-examination

Thursday, March 19, 2026 @ 9:45 AM

In a case centred on cross-examination, the Ontario Court of Appeal has ruled in favour of appellant Rimzan Lye that the test was met to advance a Charter s. 8 claim that his rights were violated when police conducted surveillance of him without warrant. ... [read more]

SCC asked to review FCA ruling that Ottawa wrongly declared nat'l emergency during trucker blockades

Wednesday, March 18, 2026 @ 4:55 PM

Ottawa’s request to appeal to the Supreme Court of Canada court rulings below which held that the federal government wrongly declared a national “public order” emergency in 2022 argues that there are three issues “of public importance” that warrant the top court’s determination. ... [read more]