Labour & Employment

  • March 10, 2026

    Manitoba to require employers to provide menstrual products

    Manitoba will soon be the first province in Canada requiring employers to provide free menstrual products to their employees.

  • March 10, 2026

    Canadian cabotage and immigration rules for foreign trucking operations

    Foreign motor carriers delivering freight into Canada operate within a tightly regulated framework that governs both the use of their equipment and the activities of their drivers while in Canada. Canadian cabotage and immigration rules are designed to protect the domestic transportation market while allowing international trade to function efficiently.

  • March 10, 2026

    Keegstra in Bill C-9: An Act to Amend the Criminal Code: Hate propaganda, hate crime access

    More than three decades after the Supreme Court of Canada decided R. v. Keegstra, [1990] 3 S.C.R. 697, the case continues to shape how Canadians think about hate speech, free expression and the limits of the Charter. Yet, while legal analysis has focused intensely on constitutional doctrine, far less attention has been paid to the place that gave rise to the case: Eckville, a small rural community in central Alberta. Revisiting Keegstra today, particularly in light of renewed legislative debates surrounding Bill C-9, requires not only revisiting the court’s reasoning, but also reconsidering how Eckville and central Alberta itself has been constructed in media, academic and greater legal narratives.

  • March 09, 2026

    Ontario appoints first military defence representative

    The Ontario government has appointed its first military defence representative to promote the province’s defence industry in global markets and attract new defence investment while helping companies find opportunities to grow their export.

  • March 09, 2026

    Federal government commits $94.5M over five years to labour market data initiative

    The federal government is set to invest up to $94.5 million over five years to produce consistent, foundational labour market information across key sectors, according to a release issued on March 9.

  • March 09, 2026

    RCMP privacy breach class action stayed for pension review

    The Federal Court has stayed a proposed class action in which members of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) alleged their right to privacy was violated by the RCMP and other agents of Canada during an organized crime investigation.

  • March 09, 2026

    Courtroom to community: Reconciliation means amplifying access to justice, Indigenous voices

    “Canada’s adoption of the UNDRIP into Canadian law via the UNDA must mean more than a status quo application of the section 35 framework,” wrote Justice Julie Blackhawk in the seminal Kebaowek First Nation v. CNL federal court case (Kebaowek First Nation v. Canadian Nuclear Laboratories, [2025] F.C.J. No. 300). For the Indigenous grassroot leaders and youth seeking to intervene in the constitutional challenge to the provincial government’s Bill 5 that was passed in June 2025, this revisioning of the status quo remains a live issue.

  • March 09, 2026

    Dead men talking, 2026 style

    The Mafia instructed their wannabe associates that dead men don’t talk, so once they make their bones and whack a rat — never leave a witness.

  • March 06, 2026

    Exclusion of refugee claimants from subsidized childcare violates women’s Charter s. 15 rights: SCC

    In a Charter s. 15(1) equality rights milestone, the Supreme Court of Canada has ruled that Quebec’s exclusion of refugee claimants from eligibility for subsidized childcare in the province unconstitutionally discriminates against women based on their sex.

  • March 06, 2026

    Canada, Japan announce new partnerships in trade, critical minerals, technology

    Canada and Japan are introducing a new strategic partnership across the areas of critical minerals, defence, energy, trade and technology.

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