Ontario Superior Court in Atikameksheng Anishnawbek v. Canada lets First Nation relitigate a case decided 135 years ago that affected the boundaries of its reserve lands. Good summary of it from @HearsayDaily https://t.co/WhsxEHTwDe
Supreme Court Canada 'no such thing as secret trials' explained by @HearsayDaily https://t.co/pOuDKiuLWr Re CBC v Named Person 2024 #SCC 21 https://t.co/ZSA45J1v2m
Great look at the Supreme Court of Canada's changing approach to interventions in today's @HearsayDaily which looks at stats since 2000. Seeing big shifts with TWU in 2017 and again after 2021 w/ practice direction & McGregor decision https://t.co/WXpZrAI8vQ #SCC
@HearsayDaily with the best case summary ever: “If you prefer your outcomes in tongue-twister form, the Court ordered the province to reconsider whether to consider requests for reconsideration.”
If you aren’t subscribed yet, you are missing out on some solid law puns + memes!
🎧 [Podcast] CIAJ's host Sarah Rowe is welcoming lawyer Dylan Gibbs (@DylanJGibbs), Founder & Author of @HearsayDaily, a plain language email newsletter aiming to keep Canadian lawyers informed of key decisions and topical legal news #InAllFairness
👉🏾 https://t.co/WjgygIQYUA
Big thank you to @DylanJGibbs for giving us a shoutout in today’s edition of the Hearsay newsletter.
If you don’t already subscribe to Hearsay, be sure to check it out!
https://t.co/ehF7gQSO1i
Very interesting look at the current state of judicial vacancies in yesterday's @HearsayDaily. Things are improving but still a long way to go, especially in AB, BC, ON and SK https://t.co/uMyAh6wPFt
There’s an Easter egg in the SCC decision about Doug Ford’s mandate letters — right where the majority said it didn’t need to pick a standard of review because it wouldn’t change the result. 🧵
I recently discovered a super new Canadian legal morning newsletter. I love it because its written in #plainlanguage, focuses on issues that us "regular" people care about and it is concise! I encourage all my legal beagle friends to check it out: https://t.co/aBxcCwa4Jg
I’ve been subscribed to the Hearsay newsletter by @DylanJGibbs for a few weeks now, and I’ve been loving it! High quality, easy to digest legal news, delivered straight to your inbox.
I highly recommend checking it out and subscribing here:
https://t.co/CfEGfZxS38
Today's newsletter: Legal regulators publish guidance on ethical use of generative AI
Plus -- the legal challenge to Ontario's big new thermal spa, mandatory vaccination wasn't wrongful dismissal, and lawyer scolded for attempt at judicial mind-reading
https://t.co/LD0HovbQCs
In today's newsletter:
Federal government went too far with plastic regulation. Saskatchewan debuts its carbon tax evasion scheme. Supreme Court of Canada won't bring Syrian refugees home. Jury verdict in terrorism case
https://t.co/ZYH6nrV8L3
#canlaw#lawtwitter
@HearsayDaily is an amazing resource that anyone interested in law-related news in Canada should follow. It’s a quick daily read that pulls together everything from case summaries to legislative developments to local stories. Not sure how @DylanJGibbs does it but I’m glad he does
Hearsay has quickly become my second favourite Canadian legal newsletter after the @CDNConstFound's Freedom Update (sign up here https://t.co/Nx0W3ynuMN)
Hearsay is a breezy daily read with case summaries that aren't a chore. Nice work @DylanJGibbs! https://t.co/oSvzXcrkQI
The Supreme Court of Canada has three hearings this week.
The Court is dealing with enforcing letters of credit (today), the effect of appeal rights on judicial review (tomorrow), and compensation for constructive expropriation (Thursday).
#scc#canlaw
https://t.co/mQqNVnH6Wt
We sent a summary of the SCC’s week ahead to Hearsay Readers at the start of the week. Want content like this in your inbox? Join the Hearsay community for free at https://t.co/ix6hEOzQiZ (9/9)
Iris and Dow are looking to the SCC for clear direction on which route to take. Filing taxes is hard enough, shouldn’t it be easy to fight about them? (8/9)