Best Theratronics failed to bargain in good faith, labour board rules | Unpublished
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Source Feed: Ottawa Citizen
Author: Joanne Laucius
Publication Date: March 4, 2025 - 15:58

Best Theratronics failed to bargain in good faith, labour board rules

March 4, 2025
The Canada Industrial Relations Board has decided that a Kanata employer whose workers were on strike for nearly 10 months failed to bargain in good faith. Read More


Unpublished Newswire

 
Marcel Pepin still remembers when American peacekeepers would stroll into his Canadian Armed Forces barracks on their joint base in the Sinai Peninsula to borrow a T-shirt with a maple leaf or beaver on it so they could feel safer strolling in the nearby Egyptian town of Arish.That was in the 1980s, but, he says, this natural kinship between the soldiers of the two armies endured over the 16 years he served, including the many hours he worked with American sailors on base in Vancouver Island. He still has a number of friends from the United States, but he said the trade war started by...
March 4, 2025 - 21:36 | Mike Hager, Claire Donnan | The Globe and Mail
A B.C. member of Parliament is recognizing the public-service contributions of three civilians who rushed to the aid of Corporal Nathan Cirillo after he was shot in a terrorist attack in Ottawa in 2014.Ottawa residents Barbara Winters, Martin Magnan and Margaret Lerhe all happened to be near the National War Memorial for different reasons when Cpl. Cirillo was shot while standing sentry at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier.
March 4, 2025 - 21:16 | Kristy Kirkup | The Globe and Mail
British Columbia’s Finance Minister Brenda Bailey delivered the fiscal plan for the coming year just hours after U.S. President Donald Trump made good on his threat from months ago to impose 25-per-cent tariffs on almost all Canadian exports. It meant that many of the assumptions included in hundreds of pages of documents bolstering B.C.’s economic plan, numbers from months ago, were already out of date.In February, the Finance Ministry crunched the numbers anew, assuming 25-per-cent tariffs on most Canadian exports, except for energy and critical minerals with a 10-per-cent tariff. The...
March 4, 2025 - 21:02 | Wendy Cox | The Globe and Mail