Close X
Thursday, January 9, 2025
ADVT 
National

Acronym Acrimony In Quebec As Anti-corruption Unit Warns Union Over Using 'UPAC'

Darpan News Desk IANS, 28 Oct, 2016 12:59 PM
    MONTREAL — Call it acronym acrimony.
     
    The province's anti-corruption unit certainly wasn't laughing over a public-sector union's appropriation of the word ''UPAC.''
     
    The four letters make up the unit's French acronym and are very well known in the province.
     
    So the corruption fighters weren't happy when they found out a union representing professionals working in the Quebec public service had appropriated the acronym.
     
    The union was using the letters as a play on words in its bid to get a new contract from the government.
     
    The official UPAC fired off a cease-and-desist letter to the union and its strategy seems to have paid off: the labour group has changed one word in its campaign so it is now known as OPAC.
     
    Ironically, some of the union's own members work for the anti-corruption squad.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Armoured Car Robbed In Montreal After Being Hit By Backhoe

    Armoured Car Robbed In Montreal After Being Hit By Backhoe
    MONTREAL — An armoured vehicle was robbed in Montreal on Friday after being hit with the front end of an backhoe tractor on a busy street.

    Armoured Car Robbed In Montreal After Being Hit By Backhoe

    Two Arrested In Connection To Sexual Assaults At Universite Laval Residence

    Quebec City police have arrested two men in connection with alleged break-ins and sexual assaults at a university residence.

    Two Arrested In Connection To Sexual Assaults At Universite Laval Residence

    Winnipeg Police Investigate Whether Young Child Suffered Fentanyl Overdose

    Winnipeg Police Investigate Whether Young Child Suffered Fentanyl Overdose
    WINNIPEG — Police in Winnipeg are investigating whether a young child suffered a possible fentanyl overdose.

    Winnipeg Police Investigate Whether Young Child Suffered Fentanyl Overdose

    Nova Scotia Sees Sharp Spike In Opioid Overdose Deaths: 70 In Eight Months

    Nova Scotia Sees Sharp Spike In Opioid Overdose Deaths: 70 In Eight Months
    HALIFAX — Seventy people died of opioid overdoses in Nova Scotia in the first eight months of 2016, a spike that is raising early fears of a British Columbia-style crisis.

    Nova Scotia Sees Sharp Spike In Opioid Overdose Deaths: 70 In Eight Months

    Feds Seek Input On Shifting Some Mortgage Default Risk From Taxpayers To Banks

    Under Canada's current system, lenders are able to transfer virtually all of the risk from insured mortgages to insurers, which are indirectly backstopped by taxpayers, the government said.

    Feds Seek Input On Shifting Some Mortgage Default Risk From Taxpayers To Banks

    Surrey’s Seva Thrift Celebrates Diwali

    Surrey’s Seva Thrift Celebrates Diwali
    The air is crisp, the season is fall and Seva Thrift has now been open for 3 months. 

    Surrey’s Seva Thrift Celebrates Diwali