Saturday, July 4, 2026
ADVT 
National

B.C. expands employee whistleblower protections

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 01 Apr, 2022 02:59 PM
  • B.C. expands employee whistleblower protections

VICTORIA - Whistleblower protections are being extended to more public-sector employees in British Columbia as part of an expansion of the Public Interest Disclosure Act.

The Ministry of Attorney General says in a statement the act applies to government ministry staff and independent offices of the legislature, but as of Friday it also includes employees at most provincial tribunals, agencies, boards and commissions.

The statement says the act, which became law in December 2019, allows employees to share information about wrongdoings that affect the public interest with designated officers or the Office of the Ombudsperson without reprisals.

The ministry says more agencies, boards and commissions will be covered by the protections later this year followed by health authorities and the education sector over the next two years.

The whistleblower protection law was introduced following a report by ombudsperson Jay Chalke into the 2012 firing of eight Health Ministry workers, one of whom later died by suicide.

A B.C. government employees union lawyer told the province's public inquiry into money laundering last year that better whistleblower protections for front-line casino workers may have prevented illegal cash from circulating at gaming venues.

MORE National ARTICLES

Only Tories and Liberals on all N.B. ballots

Only Tories and Liberals on all N.B. ballots
The Progressive Conservatives and Liberals are the only two parties fielding candidates in all of New Brunswick's 49 ridings, but the Greens are the sole party to have reached gender parity with their slate of nominees.

Only Tories and Liberals on all N.B. ballots

WATCH: Covid related illness spotted in 8 BC children, Hurricane Laura continues to wreak havoc in USA - Canucks back on ice this saturday

WATCH: Covid related illness spotted in 8 BC children, Hurricane Laura continues to wreak havoc in USA - Canucks back on ice this saturday
Covid related illness spotted in 8 BC children - Hurricane Laura continues to wreak havoc in USA - Canadian Economy falls steeply after more than 40 years - Canucks back on ice this saturday

WATCH: Covid related illness spotted in 8 BC children, Hurricane Laura continues to wreak havoc in USA - Canucks back on ice this saturday

Deficit through June $120B, Feds say

Deficit through June $120B, Feds say
The federal government ran a deficit of $120.4 billion during the first three months of its 2020-2021 fiscal year as the treasury pumped out aid to cushion the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Deficit through June $120B, Feds say

Quebec reduces COVID isolation period to 10 days

Quebec reduces COVID isolation period to 10 days
Quebec is reducing the mandatory isolation period required for people infected with COVID-19 from 14 days to 10.

Quebec reduces COVID isolation period to 10 days

Economy posts record plunge

Economy posts record plunge
Statistics Canada says the economy posted its steepest decline on record in the second quarter as the COVID-19 pandemic forced the closure of non-essential businesses and slowed the economy to a crawl.

Economy posts record plunge

Duffy loses appeal over Senate lawsuit

Duffy loses appeal over Senate lawsuit
An attempt by Sen. Mike Duffy to overturn a decision blocking him from suing the Senate for millions of dollars over his suspension without pay has been rejected.

Duffy loses appeal over Senate lawsuit