Business

  • August 14, 2025

    DEI dilemma: U.S. state bars grapple with DEI programs, language amid legal threats

    State bar leaders across the U.S. are wrestling with whether to stand firm on their diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI) programs or quietly rework programs and language as they face rising political pressure and potential legal challenges.

  • August 14, 2025

    BD&P welcomes Katerina Maragos to its energy group

    Burnet, Duckworth & Palmer, LLP (BD&P) has announced that Katerina Maragos has joined its energy group.

  • August 14, 2025

    Feds issue call for Cyber Security Cooperation Program 2025 proposals

    The federal government has issued a new call for proposals under the 2025 Cyber Security Cooperation Program (CSCP) to “strengthen the country’s cyber resilience and address evolving cyber threats.”

  • August 14, 2025

    Bar ramps up campaign to end ‘Zoom-only’ policy & get intervener counsel back into SCC’s courtroom

    Prominent intervener groups are telling the Supreme Court of Canada that its 2022 practice direction confining their counsel to Zoom and barring intervener lawyers from making submissions in person before the judges is hurting their advocacy and restricting access to justice for public interest groups. However, the top court says it’s sticking with its current policy since “virtual appearances have proven to be an effective means of supporting equal access.”

  • August 14, 2025

    Requirements for U.S. companies ‘carrying on business’ in Ontario

    The COVID-19 pandemic resulted in a shift toward remote work. Now, in the current environment of tariffs and anti-immigration sentiment in the U.S., many Canadians working in the U.S. for U.S. companies are returning to Canada while continuing to be employed by their U.S. employer. This has resulted in many U.S. companies setting up shop in Ontario without necessarily setting up a brick-and-mortar location in the province. This raises questions as to what obligations and liabilities companies have if their employees are working in Ontario, but the company is not registered in Ontario.

  • August 13, 2025

    Court upholds dismissal of warranty claim against manufacturer over defective toilets

    The Ontario Court of Appeal has upheld a decision striking Ottawa Community Housing Corporation (OCHC)’s warranty and negligence claims over defective toilet systems, ruling the manufacturer was not a seller under the Sale of Goods Act (SGA) and the losses were pure economic loss.

  • August 13, 2025

    Cowichan Nation descendants successful in land claims in ‘longest trial’ in Canada

    In an Indigenous land claim case that spanned 513 trial dates, the B.C. Supreme Court has found that descendants of the historic Cowichan Nation have a claim to land and right to fish in an area of Richmond, B.C., and on the southern arm of the Fraser River. The province has noted it plans to appeal the decision.

  • August 13, 2025

    Feds emphasize support for canola producers as China launches preliminary anti-dumping measures

    In response to China’s preliminary anti-dumping duties on canola seed from Canada, the federal government has released a statement stressing it will stand “shoulder-to-shoulder” with Canadian “canola producers, workers and exporters.”

  • August 13, 2025

    Ontario offering $1B loan program to support sectors impacted by U.S. tariffs

    Ontario has launched a program to support businesses impacted by U.S. tariffs. The Protect Ontario Financing Program was unveiled Aug. 13 and will provide Ontario-based businesses, such as those in the steel, aluminum and auto sectors, with up to $1 billion in liquidity support in the form of loans to protect workers and operations.

  • August 13, 2025

    What to make of the Wapekeka courtroom shooting, part two

    Systemic issues run deep. The longstanding failure of Canadian policing systems to address the needs of Indigenous communities has been documented in numerous reports and legal inquiries. For instance, Canada’s Supreme Court affirmed in Quebec (Attorney General) v. Pekuakamiulnuatsh Takuhikan, [2024] S.C.J. No. 39 that Quebec’s refusal to adequately fund First Nations policing violated its duty to negotiate in good faith and breached the honour of the Crown.

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