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Death of inmate from suspected opioid overdose at Ottawa jail prompts call for inquest

It s hard. We lost someone important to us. Three days earlier, said RIcher, she had spoken to him from the jail  and he was excited about getting out, so, like, what s going on and what happened? Dr. Louise McNaughton-Filion, regional supervision coroner for eastern Ontario, says it could take months to determine the cause of Rafter s death.(Judy Trinh/CBC News) The Ontario Ministry of Community Safety and Correctional Services said in an email that a mandatory internal investigation into Rafter s care and custody will determine if proper policies and procedures were followed, but the ministry couldn t give further details.

This week in history: March 15-21

This week in history: March 15-21
wsws.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from wsws.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

OPTrust CEO warns against premature end to stimulus as reflationary trade plays out

Article content The chief executive of one of Canada’s biggest pension funds is sounding a note of caution about the risk of policymakers removing economic stimulus too soon, noting that the growth needed to justify the withdrawal of COVID-19-related aid has not yet materialized. “My central view is that we are in a reflationary trade,” Peter Lindley, president and CEO of the Toronto-based OPSEU Pension Plan Trust Fund (OPTrust), told the Financial Post in an interview Tuesday. “I think we are going to be entering a period of good stimulus, modest inflation, which will be positive for the economy, positive for the equity and other growth-type assets.”

Pensions, Benefits & Executive Compensation Newsletter – March 2021 | Blake, Cassels & Graydon LLP

Fraser v Canada, 2018 FCA 223, as discussed in our . Ms. Fraser, Ms. Fox and Ms. Pilgrim (Claimants) were three retired members of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) who took maternity leave in the 1990s. Upon returning to full-time service, they experienced difficulties balancing their work obligations with childcare responsibilities. These difficulties caused Ms. Fox to retire from the RCMP in 1994 and resulted in Ms. Fraser taking unpaid leave in 1997. At the time, the RCMP did not permit regular members to work part-time. In December 1997, the RCMP introduced a job-sharing program in which multiple RCMP members could split the responsibilities of one full-time position, allowing each member to work fewer hours than a full-time employee. The Claimants enrolled in the job-sharing program along with 137 other RCMP members between 1997 and 2011. Most participants were women with children. From 2010 to 2014, all RCMP members who job-shared were women, and most of them cited c

Liquor store union challenges 7-Eleven s booze bid - Winnipeg Free Press

Save to Read Later TORONTO - A union that represents many of Ontario’s liquor store workers said it objects to 7-Eleven s recent liquor sales licence applications in Ontario, part of the retailer s plan to serve alcohol in some of its stores. A 7-Eleven is shown in Palo Alto, Calif., on July 1, 2008. THE CANADIAN PRESS/AP, Paul Sakuma TORONTO - A union that represents many of Ontario’s liquor store workers said it objects to 7-Eleven s recent liquor sales licence applications in Ontario, part of the retailer s plan to serve alcohol in some of its stores. The multinational convenience store chain said in February that it plans to serve Ontario-made beer and wine products, using trained servers during limited hours in certain areas of its stores.

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