Thursday, June 11, 2026
ADVT 
National

Saskatchewan Fixes Essential Services Law After Supreme Court Ruling

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 15 Oct, 2015 11:25 AM
    REGINA — Saskatchewan has fixed a law that the Supreme Court struck down as unconstitutional because it prevented some public-sector employees from striking.
     
    Amendments to the essential services law include removing a definition of essential services and allowing the parties involved to determine what duties must be maintained.
     
    The changes also set up a tribunal which can decide what are essential services if the two sides can't reach an agreement.
     
    Part of the old law said that if the two sides couldn't agree, the government got to choose who was an essential worker.
     
    Labour Minister Don Morgan says the changes were made in consultation with labour groups and he believes they comply with the high court's ruling.
     
    The essential services legislation introduced after the Saskatchewan Party first won power in 2007 was challenged by labour groups all the way to the Supreme Court.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Kayakers Find Human Remains After 19-Year-Old Delores Brown Goes Missing In B.C.

    Kayakers Find Human Remains After 19-Year-Old Delores Brown Goes Missing In B.C.
    RCMP have said Delores Brown was reportedly walking on Penelakut Island on July 27 and that foul play was involved in her disappearance.

    Kayakers Find Human Remains After 19-Year-Old Delores Brown Goes Missing In B.C.

    Bon Jovi To Play Vancouver After Original Concert Cancelled At Stanley Park

    Bon Jovi To Play Vancouver After Original Concert Cancelled At Stanley Park
     Bon Jovi fans praying to see the band in Vancouver just had to hold on until a cancelled concert was back on again at another venue.

    Bon Jovi To Play Vancouver After Original Concert Cancelled At Stanley Park

    UBC Faculty Call On Chairman To Resign Over Academic Dispute

    UBC Faculty Call On Chairman To Resign Over Academic Dispute
    Board of governors chairman John Montalbano came under fire from the faculty association and Prof. Jennifer Berdahl after UBC's president quit in early August.

    UBC Faculty Call On Chairman To Resign Over Academic Dispute

    BC Hydro Lawyer Says Stop-work Order Would Cause Expensive Delays On Site C Dam

    BC Hydro Lawyer Says Stop-work Order Would Cause Expensive Delays On Site C Dam
    VANCOUVER — A stop-work order for the Site C dam will cause "extreme prejudice" to BC Hydro at a cost of hundreds of millions of dollars and a one-year delay in the construction schedule, the utility's lawyer says.

    BC Hydro Lawyer Says Stop-work Order Would Cause Expensive Delays On Site C Dam

    5 More People Sickened In Connection With Raw B.C. Shellfish

    5 More People Sickened In Connection With Raw B.C. Shellfish
    The Public Health Agency of Canada says 53 people have been sickened in B.C. and another 19 in neighbouring Alberta since June 1.

    5 More People Sickened In Connection With Raw B.C. Shellfish

    Mayor Lauds Economic Spinoff From New $40-Million Cascades Casino In Kamloops

    Mayor Lauds Economic Spinoff From New $40-Million Cascades Casino In Kamloops
    Cascades Casino Kamloops opened the doors to its new $40 million, 5,800-square-metre entertainment centre on Wednesday night in the same city that's home to the B.C. Lottery Corporation's head office.

    Mayor Lauds Economic Spinoff From New $40-Million Cascades Casino In Kamloops