Category : Search result: Manitoba ethics law


Manitoba Beekeepers Fight Highway Expropriation Threat

A Manitoba beekeeping family faces devastating losses as the province's planned highway expansion targets their century-old farm for expropriation, putting 1,200 hives and their entire business at risk.

Third ex-minister fined in Manitoba ethics breach

Another former Manitoba cabinet minister has been fined for breaking the province's conflict of interest law, marking the third such penalty in recent months. Discover the details of the ethics breach and growing accountability concerns.

Essex OPP Officers Now Wearing Body Cameras

Essex County Ontario Provincial Police have launched a body-worn camera program for frontline officers, enhancing transparency and evidence collection in police-community interactions.

Toronto Police Car Rams Suspect in Dramatic Arrest

Shocking incident unfolds in Toronto as a police officer intentionally drives into a suspect during an arrest attempt. New details reveal the chaotic confrontation that left one man hospitalized.

Winnipeg Radon Testing Demand Skyrockets

Winnipeg's radon screening initiative faces unprecedented demand as residents seek free testing for the dangerous radioactive gas. Learn why this invisible threat has homeowners concerned and how to protect your family.

Alberta's Notwithstanding Clause Faces Intense Scrutiny

Alberta's plan to invoke the notwithstanding clause in its sovereignty act legislation sparks intense constitutional debate and sets the stage for a historic political showdown over provincial powers versus federal authority.

Ontario Lawyers Disciplined for Professional Misconduct

The Law Society of Ontario has disciplined numerous lawyers for serious professional misconduct, including sexual harassment, misappropriation of client funds, and ethical violations that shake public trust in the legal profession.

Simple Fix Saves Child Porn Minimum Sentences

University of Alberta law professor Steven Penney offers constitutional solution to preserve mandatory minimum sentences for child pornography offenses while avoiding controversial use of notwithstanding clause.

Supreme Court Rejects Trump Tariff Appeal

The U.S. Supreme Court has rejected former President Donald Trump's appeal in a landmark case challenging his administration's steel tariff policies, dealing a significant legal defeat with far-reaching implications for trade law and presidential power.

Bloc candidate appeals one-vote loss to Supreme Court

A Bloc Québécois candidate is escalating his one-vote election defeat to the Supreme Court of Canada, challenging the razor-thin margin in Terrebonne riding and potentially setting a constitutional precedent.

Winnipeg businesses terrorized by serial arsonist

A Winnipeg business community lives in fear as another suspicious fire strikes, believed to be connected to a string of arsons targeting local establishments in the Exchange District.

Canadian toymaker battles Trump tariffs in Supreme Court

A British Columbia-based toymaker is leading the charge against Trump-era tariffs in a Supreme Court showdown that could reshape U.S.-Canada trade relations and protect Canadian businesses from punitive border taxes.

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