Elsie Daoust from Nelligan Law, talked to CTV Morning Live host Rosey Edeh, about custody and parenting schedules over the holidays.
Clip link:.
Canada Latest News, Canada Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
Carson Jerema: Justin Trudeau stands firm against the rule of lawThis is a reinvention of the law, one that the Liberals shouldn\u0027t get away with
Read more »
How Viola Desmond's salon space has been reimagined through art | CBC NewsThose walking along Gottingen Street in Halifax can now step into an art space created to honour civil rights activist Viola Desmond. The Viola Desmond Experience was created by artist Marven Nelligan and was unveiled last week.
Read more »
Abortion and Politics: Majority support law to guarantee access; wouldn’t stop pro-life candidates from running - Angus Reid InstituteThose who would ban abortion entirely also less likely to support spending programs for single mothers November 28, 2022 – As a political and medical battle rages in the United
Read more »
Failure of intelligence led to failure in policing during Freedom Convoy: 'levels of law enforcement must act sooner,' say insiders and expertsThe duration and severity of this past winter’s Freedom Convoy protest in downtown Ottawa began with a failure of intelligence leading to a failure in policing, and is “a confirmation of the failure of preparation,” say security experts and insiders following the Public Order Emergency Commission. Wesley Wark, national security expert and a senior fellow at the Centre for International Governance Innovation, said there is now a better understanding of policing failures which were very evident in the early days of the Freedom Convoy occupation in Ottawa and in terms of the border blockades. “Real policing failures, by which I mean an inability to respond quickly and effectively to these occupation, either in Ottawa or at the borders,” said Wark, who added that those failures were a direct product of intelligence breakdown. “Intelligence at all levels, from local police forces, to Ottawa police, to provincial, to federal especially, did not have a good handle on either the intentions or the capabilities of the Freedom Convoy protest,” said Wark. Wark pointed to the OPP’s “Project Hendon,” described in his newsletter as an “ambitious project to bring together law enforcement agencies from across Canada to study the rise of mass civil dissent and protests. The project initially focused on public safety threats prompted by a series of protests surrounding Indigenous issues such as the Wet’suwet’en pipeline protests in British Columbia and related protests in Ontario. Ontario Provincial Police and Ottawa Police crowd in on Metcalfe Street on Feb. 17, 2022, after arresting a protester during the Freedom Convoy in Ottawa. The Hill Times photograph by Andrew Meade As the pandemic took hold, the attention of the project shifted to monitoring anti-government activity fueled by opposition to public health measures, according to Wark. “To be fair to the project, their threat assessments on the Freedom Convoy were the best intelligence product that we’ve seen,” said Wark. “The pr
Read more »
Opinion | Exhaust all options before allowing MAID in cases with mental health issuesOpinion: I am concerned that by March 2023 the law will permit MAID based solely on mental illness, without a full set of standards to govern what are complex cases, writes Miriam Edelson.
Read more »
Watch: As police boost presence downtown, data backs perception of rising crimeWatch: Police say they've boosted their presence downtown, and they say data backs the perception of rising crime. What do you think about how Calgary has dealt with this issue? Watch the video on our website and join the conversation. yyc yyccc
Read more »