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N.L. government invests in 18 new Crown attorneys amid severe staffing crunch
Newfoundland and Labrador Justice Minister Bernard Davis announced Wednesday afternoon that the provincial government is investing nearly $24 million to improve the province's justice system.... The investment comes after CBC News reported in numerous stories that Crown attorneys in the province were "suffocating" from overwhelming workloads and a critical staffing shortage.
[ ...Suite ]Date de parution : 2024-11-14
Newfoundland to add more Crown prosecutors
Newfoundland and Labrador has agreed to hire more Crown lawyers following cries of a shortage of prosecutors in the province. The “multi-year investment” will include the hiring of 18 new Crown lawyers, according to a news release.
[ ...Suite ]Date de parution : 2024-11-13
Critical shortage of Crown attorneys has 'gone on way too long' and is hurting public safety
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[ ...Suite ]Date de parution : 2024-11-13
Most criminal cases in Ontario now ending before charges are tested at trial
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[ ...Suite ]Date de parution : 2024-11-12
Crown attorneys in N.L. are 'crumbling' under their workload, and it's putting the public at risk
Shawn Patten, president of the Newfoundland and Labrador Crown Attorneys Association, believes Happy Valley-Goose Bay report recommendations could make workload 'untenable'.... "And right now our office is doing its best to make public safety a priority. But we're crumbling. Our foundation is crumbling."
[ ...Suite ]Date de parution : 2024-11-06
PC Justice Critic Calling for Review of Staffing Levels in Crown Attorney’s Office
The Newfoundland and Labrador Crown Attorneys Association says some prosecutors have up to 200 cases on their plate, and sometimes work until early morning preparing for a trial. PC Justice Critic Helen Conway Ottenheimer believes that Crown attorneys are too important a player in the justice system to allow shortcomings in staffing to impact their ability to always be at the top of their game.
[ ...Suite ]Date de parution : 2024-08-12
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Court rules Quebec’s back-to-work legislation unconstitutional
02-10-2019
Marc Dion, president of LANEQ
A Quebec court ruling that declared unconstitutional a special law that forced provincial government lawyers and notaries to put a halt to the longest Canadian strike by public civil servants may give them much needed ammunition to persuade the government to introduce binding arbitration, according to legal experts.
Quebec Superior Court Justice Johanne Brodeur found that the special law, which also prohibited government lawyers and notaries from striking for three years until March 31, 2020, “substantially” breaches the right of freedom of association under s. 2(d) of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms and that the infringement is not justified under s. 1 of the Charter. She also found that it violated s. 3 of the Quebec Charter of Human Rights and Freedoms.
“The government did not demonstrate that the total repeal of the right to strike, for three years, without a meaningful mechanism to resolve bargaining impasses, constitutes minimal impairment,” said Justice Brodeur in a 75-page ruling that heeded guidance from the landmark ruling by the Supreme Court of Canada in Saskatchewan Federation of Labour v. Saskatchewan [2015] 1 S.C.R. 245. “For the Court, the impairment goes beyond what is reasonably necessary,” added Justice Brodeur in Avocats et notaires de l’État québécois (LANEQ) c. Procureure générale du Québec 2019 QCCS 3897 issued on Sept. 18.
The ruling chastises the Quebec government for its attitude and for adopting a special law that breached the Charter, noted Benoît Pelletier, a law professor with the University of Ottawa, who wrote a prescient legal opinion commissioned by LANEQ in September 2016, a month before the infamous strike. In the legal opinion, Pelletier argued that since Quebec has over the years systematically revoked the right to strike of government lawyers and notaries, they should turn to the Saskatchewan ruling to bolster their case.
“The judge held that if you are going to remove the right to strike as was the case here then there has to be an efficient and impartial mechanism in its place,” said Pelletier, a former minister in Jean Charest’s Liberal government from 1998 to 2008. “The Quebec government did not put in place such a process, and therefore it breached the rights of association of government lawyers and notaries. And secondly, it breached their constitutional rights because it suspended their right to strike for three years.”
The decision sends a strong signal to governments across the country that they cannot introduce back-to-work legislation which does not include an alternative dispute resolution mechanism when the right to strike is limited in any way, otherwise they risk infringing the Charter, added Marc Dion, president of LANEQ, the association representing more than 1,100 Quebec government lawyers and notaries. The decision also, pointed out Dion, “invites” the government to put to an end “once and for all” to the rocky labour relationship between the two parties.
“Several times in the ruling the judge invites the government to take measures that will put an end to the labour strife,” said Dion. “Justice Brodeur has given us a boost because she said the impact of the strike underlines the importance of a system that provides continuous service, access to justice and maintains the rule of law.”
Labour relations between government lawyers and the province have developed into bitter and protracted disputes since the turn of the century. In October 2016, LANEQ launched a strike after 20 bargaining sessions, six sittings with a mediation and more than 27 other meetings held over the course of 21 months led to an impasse. The strike lasted four months, and took a crippling toll on the justice system even though government lawyers and notaries provided essential services. More than 3,000 cases before administrative tribunals were rescheduled, 21 bills and 228 draft regulations were postponed, and the review of legal documents and government contracts was suspended.
After initially demanding binding arbitration overseen by a compensation committee with a chair chosen and appointed by both parties, LANEQ watered down its stance and sought — and is still seeking — a special status within the Quebec civil service that is on par with Crown prosecutors. In exchange LANEQ would forgo its right to strike.
Unlike in the past, there is optimism that the government and LANEQ can reach an agreement. Both parties have held discussions since last fall when a new Quebec government, the Coalition Avenir Québec headed by Premier François Legault, came into power. But Dion, asserting that he is bound by confidentiality, declined to discuss the progress of the negotiations. “We are continuing discussions to reach our objective and reform the bargaining regime,” said Dion. “The decision by the Superior Court justice is no doubt an important development for LANEQ.”
The change in government will give a lift to the negotiations, believes Pelletier. “The previous government seemed to have it in for government lawyers and notaries, and it’s no wonder then that they were severely castigated by Justice Brodeur,” said Pelletier. He thinks that LANEQ’s proposal to forge an independent committee that will examine and determine its labour conditions is sound. Failing that, a non-binding independent committee could establish labour conditions, and “I would not be surprised if LANEQ would accept such an arrangement.”
LANEQ, however, also lost a legal battle against the government before the Quebec Labour Administrative Tribunal. It lodged a complaint that accused the government of negotiating in bad faith. The labour tribunal rejected the complaint in a 105-page decision that was issued three days after Justice Brodeur’s ruling, and LANEQ is considering lodging an appeal.
A call to counsel representing the Quebec government was not returned.