Saturday, December 6, 2025
ADVT 
National

Philippe Couillard Not Excluding Possibility Of Tightening Quebec Language Law

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 29 Apr, 2015 11:24 AM
  • Philippe Couillard Not Excluding Possibility Of Tightening Quebec Language Law
QUEBEC — Premier Philippe Couillard is not excluding the possibility of tightening Quebec's language law to force major retailers to include French wording in their commercial trademark English names.
 
The Quebec Court of Appeal ruled earlier this week the French Language Charter does not allow the province's language watchdog to force companies such as Best Buy, Old Navy and Curves to add a French component to their name.
 
Couillard's government appealed an April 2014 lower-court ruling that was in favour of the companies.
 
The Opposition Parti Quebecois urged the premier in the national assembly today to amend Bill 101 immediately to fix the loopholes.
 
Couillard replied such a scenario has not been excluded but that he wants to analyze the appeals court judgment before deciding on a course of action.
 
Several multinationals originally took the province to court after they were told by the language watchdog to change their names or risk running afoul of the rules governing the language of business in the province.

MORE National ARTICLES

Northern Ontario First Nation Community Begins Evacuation Due To Flooding

Northern Ontario First Nation Community Begins Evacuation Due To Flooding
KASHECHEWAN, Ont. — The evacuation of a remote northern Ontario First Nation has begun as the rapidly rising Albany River threatens the community.

Northern Ontario First Nation Community Begins Evacuation Due To Flooding

Kathleen Wynne Says Transit, Infrastructure Plans Will Be Cornerstone Of Ontario Budget

Kathleen Wynne Says Transit, Infrastructure Plans Will Be Cornerstone Of Ontario Budget
TORONTO — Sales of Crown assets to pay for billions of dollars in new transit and infrastructure projects will be a key focus of today's Ontario budget, also expected to include details on a new provincial pension plan.

Kathleen Wynne Says Transit, Infrastructure Plans Will Be Cornerstone Of Ontario Budget

Mammoth Park? Extinct Beast's Genome Decoded, Possible Step In Reviving Species

Mammoth Park? Extinct Beast's Genome Decoded, Possible Step In Reviving Species
Scientists have sequenced the near-complete genomes of two woolly mammoths that lived 40,000 years apart in different areas of Siberia, providing new insights into the species' evolution and eventual extinction at the close of the Ice Age.

Mammoth Park? Extinct Beast's Genome Decoded, Possible Step In Reviving Species

Family Of Loretta Saunders Shares Grief After Guilty Pleas In Daughter's Murder

Family Of Loretta Saunders Shares Grief After Guilty Pleas In Daughter's Murder
Miriam Saunders says she's been overwhelmed with grief since the slaying last year of her daughter Loretta, but the Inuit woman from Labrador says she still plans to continue her daughter's work as an advocate for murdered and missing aboriginal women.

Family Of Loretta Saunders Shares Grief After Guilty Pleas In Daughter's Murder

Halifax Airport's Main Runway Returns To Full Service After Last Month's Crash

Halifax Airport's Main Runway Returns To Full Service After Last Month's Crash
Halifax Stanfield International Airport says antenna array damaged by the crash of the Air Canada flight has been completed and runway approach lights have also been repaired.

Halifax Airport's Main Runway Returns To Full Service After Last Month's Crash

Crown Dissects Duffy's Editorial Contracts With Friend Gerald Donohue

Crown Dissects Duffy's Editorial Contracts With Friend Gerald Donohue
OTTAWA — The minutiae of Mike Duffy's contractual paperwork continues to hold the spotlight at the suspended senator's fraud trial.

Crown Dissects Duffy's Editorial Contracts With Friend Gerald Donohue