Labour & Employment

  • March 05, 2026

    Canada’s defence industrial strategy: Building domestic capacity, unlocking business opportunities

    A rapidly shifting geopolitical landscape marked by, as Mark Carney argues, the erosion of the international rules‑based order and intensifying technological competition has driven a fundamental reassessment of national security and defence policy in Canada. The federal government recently released Canada’s Defence Industrial Strategy (DIS), a potentially transformative economic framework designed to strengthen national sovereignty and catalyze industrial growth.

  • March 04, 2026

    Publicly linked subcontractors of federal contractor not exempt from disclosure under AITA: court

    The Federal Court has ordered the disclosure of the identities of certain subcontractors recruited by a consulting firm to perform work under a federal contract, holding that the information was not exempt under the Access to Information Act (AITA) because their connection to the work was publicly discernible.

  • March 04, 2026

    Crawley MacKewn Brush adds Mitchell Fournie as partner

    Crawley MacKewn Brush LLP has admitted Mitchell Fournie to the firm’s partnership.

  • March 04, 2026

    How to show legal U.S. immigration status and avoid problems with ICE

    The news is full of stories about foreign nationals running into problems with the agencies that are tasked with immigration enforcement, issuing immigration benefits and border concerns. While there have been some changes to the priorities and the policies utilized by these agencies, the recommendations about how to maintain status, avoid apprehension and demonstrate legal status if apprehended have largely not changed.

  • March 04, 2026

    Efficiency or privacy? AI scribes in Canadian health care explained

    Artificial intelligence (AI) scribes are increasingly being explored as a tool to ease administrative burdens during Canada’s primary health care crisis. These tools use generative AI to transcribe and summarize clinical conversations, producing notes, referrals, prescriptions and other documentation that are integrated with electronic medical records. In Ontario and across Canada, interest in AI scribes is accelerating, supported by programs such as those led by OntarioMD (with the Ministry of Health and Supply Ontario) and Canada Health Infoway (supported by Women’s College Hospital Institute for Health System Solutions and Virtual Care).

  • March 03, 2026

    B.C. amends Workers Compensation Act to expand benefits for firefighters

    The Government of British Columbia is amending the Firefighters’ Occupational Disease Regulation under the Workers Compensation Act to add “eight more cancers to the workers’ compensation cancer presumptions for firefighters.”

  • March 03, 2026

    Emily Conte joins McCague Borlack in Ottawa

    Emily Conte has joined McCague Borlack LLP as an associate in the firm’s Ottawa office.

  • March 03, 2026

    OECD updates permanent establishment guidance for remote and hybrid work

    On Nov. 19, 2025, the Organization for Economic Co‑operation and Development (OECD) released updates to the Model Tax Convention and its commentary, introducing an express analytical framework for assessing when a remote employee’s home office may constitute a “permanent establishment” (PE) of their employer in another jurisdiction. These changes are particularly relevant for organizations with cross-border remote or hybrid work arrangements.

  • March 03, 2026

    BINDING ARBITRATION - Jurisdiction of the court to review - Standard of review - Reasonableness

    Appeal by Purolator Canada Inc. from reviewing judge’s decision that the labour arbitrator’s award was reasonable. The issue on this appeal arose out of a judicial review of a labour arbitration grievance award. The arbitrator found that a COVID-19 mandatory vaccination policy imposed on a unionized workforce by its employer, Purolator, which remained in place between Jan. 1, 2022, and May 1, 2023, was unreasonable as of June 2022.

  • March 03, 2026

    OpenAI and the Tumbler Ridge tragedy

    Tumbler Ridge is a district municipality located in northeastern British Columbia, established in 1981 as a planned community to support coal mining development. The town has a population of around 2,500 and is notable as Canada's first UNESCO Global Geopark, designated in 2014 due to its significant paleontological discoveries, including dinosaur fossils.

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