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Receivership Versus CCAA In Real Property Development: Constructing A Framework For Analysis - Corporate/Commercial Law

Lawson Lundell LLP In the fall of 2015, the well-known corporate lawyer Martin Lipton issued a paper entitled Will a New Paradigm for Corporate Governance Bring Peace to the Thirty Years War. McCarthy Tétrault LLP Very soon, an Alberta corporation will no longer be required to have any Canadian citizens on its board of directors. In addition, director resident information will no longer be collected. Torys LLP Legal proceedings related to environmental, social, and governance (ESG) issues are increasingly common in Canada, the United States, and elsewhere. Miller Thomson LLP Charitable remainder trusts have been popular in the U.S. for some time but not as widely used in Canada as a result of differences in our tax regime

Romano a no-show at LU town hall, participants call for funding to stabilize university

Romano a no-show at LU town hall, participants call for funding to stabilize university Ministry says province funded Laurentian in the range of $73M to $81M over the last five years, far more than other institutions’ Mar 4, 2021 9:00 AM By: Heidi Ulrichsen Updated Participants in a March 3 virtual town hall meeting on Laurentian University show their support for the institution. (Heidi Ulrichsen/Sudbury.com) Speakers at a March 3 town hall meeting on Laurentian University’s restructuring amid its insolvency expressed their dismay at the situation, and called upon the province to step up and provide secure funding for the school. The event was organized by Sudbury NDP MPP Jamie West, the community group Save our Sudbury (which has been speaking out about the issues surrounding Laurentian’s restructuring) and the Ontario Confederation of University Faculty Associations (OCUFA). 

FlightHub fined $5-million for misleading customers

JONATHAN HAYWARD/The Canadian Press Travel website FlightHub Group Inc. has been hit with a $5-million penalty by Canada’s Competition Bureau for charging hidden fees, posting fake customer reviews and misleading consumers about its prices for flights. The settlement also includes $400,000 penalties each for company directors Matthew Keezer and Nicholas Hart, the competition watchdog said on Wednesday. “FlightHub is also required to remove any online reviews of its services that were posted by or on behalf of the company but appeared to be from genuine customers,” the agency said in a statement. The review page has already been removed.

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