Also please do more for the average Canadian so people don’t get the funny idea to vote for the fascist Skippy for a change who is much worse than the liberals we have today.
The Supreme Court of Canada will not delve into a dispute between Nova Scotia and its teachers union that stretches back several years.
The province’s Supreme Court ruled two years ago that a four-year contract imposed in a 2017 law, known as Bill 75, was significantly worse than a tentative agreement Nova Scotia Teachers Union members had earlier rejected.
The court said that at best, Bill 75 was an overzealous but misguided attempt at fiscal responsibility.
It concluded the law violated the Charter guarantee of freedom of association, which the Supreme Court of Canada has said protects the right to collective bargaining on fundamental workplace issues.
However, the court did not grant any additional remedy, prompting the teachers union to take its case to the provincial Court of Appeal.
The challenge was dismissed last year, and the union then asked the Supreme Court of Canada for a hearing.
The original article contains 148 words, the summary contains 148 words. Saved 0%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!
You are not logged in. However you can subscribe from another Fediverse account, for example Lemmy or Mastodon. To do this, paste the following into the search field of your instance: !canada@lemmy.ca
Huge if true
Did you post the correct link? Body of the article doesn’t seem to match the posted headline.
Nope… Fixed!
Looks good
Not for me.
Different instance, perhaps federation isn’t working well.
Working now.
No more delays.
Also please do more for the average Canadian so people don’t get the funny idea to vote for the fascist Skippy for a change who is much worse than the liberals we have today.
Also: you went too fast and cut corners with ArriveCan making it a steaming pile of uselessness.
This is the best summary I could come up with:
The Supreme Court of Canada will not delve into a dispute between Nova Scotia and its teachers union that stretches back several years.
The province’s Supreme Court ruled two years ago that a four-year contract imposed in a 2017 law, known as Bill 75, was significantly worse than a tentative agreement Nova Scotia Teachers Union members had earlier rejected.
The court said that at best, Bill 75 was an overzealous but misguided attempt at fiscal responsibility.
It concluded the law violated the Charter guarantee of freedom of association, which the Supreme Court of Canada has said protects the right to collective bargaining on fundamental workplace issues.
However, the court did not grant any additional remedy, prompting the teachers union to take its case to the provincial Court of Appeal.
The challenge was dismissed last year, and the union then asked the Supreme Court of Canada for a hearing.
The original article contains 148 words, the summary contains 148 words. Saved 0%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!