Insurance

  • September 08, 2025

    Stronger laws required to protect Canadian health data

    Canada needs more robust legislation to prevent electronic health records from being accessed and potentially used by foreign entities.

  • September 05, 2025

    Carney pauses 2026 EV mandate amid tariff stress, announces comprehensive Buy Canadian policy

    Prime Minister Mark Carney has paused the 2026 electric vehicle (EV) mandate target for automakers and auto importers as part of a strategy to support sectors impacted by U.S.-imposed tariffs. The automobile sector in Canada has been one of the hardest hit by the imposition of U.S. tariffs, with Canadian cars facing 25 per cent tariffs in the U.S. Carney said that protectionist measures put in place by the U.S. were fundamentally reshaping all its trading relationships but noted that Canada currently has the best deal of any U.S. trading partner, with 85 per cent of trade between the two countries being tariff-free.

  • September 04, 2025

    Canada cuts its Russian oil price cap to reduce funds for Russia’s war on Ukraine

    Ottawa’s reduction of the price cap it imposes on seaborne Russian-origin crude oil recently came into force, as part of coordinated efforts by Canada, the European Union and the United Kingdom to impede the financing of Russia’s illegal all-out war against Ukraine.

  • September 03, 2025

    Legal experts & advocates push PM Carney for urgent action to secure Canada’s ‘digital sovereignty’

    Legal experts, advocacy organizations and prominent Canadians are asking Ottawa to urgently legislate and implement measures to counter the digital risks to Canada’s autonomy and democracy posed by artificial intelligence (AI), foreign interference and U.S. tech giants’ dominance of domestic digital infrastructure.

  • September 02, 2025

    LSM annual report a ‘comprehensive’ look at fiscal year, road ahead: president

    As Manitoba’s law society takes stock of its most recent fiscal year, the regulator’s new president aims to continue the work of minding lawyers’ well-being as part of a new strategic plan. Law Society of Manitoba (LSM) president Kyle Dear recently sat down with Law360 Canada to discuss the recent release of the law society’s 2025 annual report — a 31-page snapshot of the regulator’s latest fiscal year, which ran from April 1, 2024, to March 31, 2025.

  • August 29, 2025

    ‘Right to be forgotten’ privacy issues under PIPEDA and Charter heading to Federal Court

    Does Parliament’s private-sector privacy law protect the “right to be forgotten”? That question, at least in part, is now headed to Federal Court, following a groundbreaking determination this week by Canada’s privacy commissioner that Canadians have a right under the federal Personal Information Protection and Electronic Documents Act (PIPEDA) — in some circumstances and when certain criteria are met — to have online material about them delinked from their names (“de-listed”) so that published material is not listed in search engine results when their name is searched.

  • August 29, 2025

    Karyn Jemmott joins McCague Borlack

    McCague Borlack LLP has announced that Karyn Jemmott has joined its Toronto office as a law clerk.

  • August 26, 2025

    Reasonably late? Ontario court clarifies investigative duties in priority disputes

    In Intact Insurance Company v. Aviva Insurance Company of Canada, Court File No. CV-22-00690361-0000 (May 7, 2025), the Ontario Superior Court of Justice upheld an arbitration decision allowing Aviva to pursue its priority dispute against Intact despite serving its Notice of Dispute nearly three years after the 90-day deadline had passed.

  • August 21, 2025

    ‘Inadequate’ pay deters outstanding jurists from federal bench; $28,000 boost needed: commission

    Canada’s 1,198 federally appointed judges should get a substantial lump sum salary increase — $28,000 — as their pay package is no longer enough to attract “outstanding” private bar lawyers to the bench, says the federal Judicial Compensation and Benefits Commission, echoing warnings made by federal judicial leaders over the past few years.

  • August 15, 2025

    Equity meets Regulation: Ontario court reinforces limits on expense reimbursement in priority disputes

    In its recent decision in Echelon General Insurance Co. v. Unifund Assurance, 2025 ONCA 324, the Ontario Court of Appeal clarified that, absent deflection, insurers are generally expected to bear their own pre-arbitration costs — even if they ultimately succeed in a priority dispute.

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