Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. Company To Pay $50,000 For Illegally Importing Orchid-Containing Herbal Oil

The Canadian Press, 11 Mar, 2019 08:55 PM
  • B.C. Company To Pay $50,000 For Illegally Importing Orchid-Containing Herbal Oil

VANCOUVER — A British Columbia company has been ordered to pay $50,000 in penalties for illegally importing a herbal oil containing a protected orchid species.


Environment and Climate Change Canada says Topwin Trading Co. Ltd. pleaded guilty to violating a trade act earlier this month, three years after the Canada Border Services Agency intercepted a shipment containing over 10,000 vials of the oil.


The department says a shipping invoice indicated it included plant material derived from a species of orchid native to East Asia and known as the hyacinth orchid or Chinese ground orchid.


It says in a release enforcement officers from Environment and Climate Change inspected and detained 51 boxes of the vials.


The department says Topwin Trading also pleaded guilty in 2010 to illegally importing a carton of another plant species that is commonly used in dried form as a medicinal herb.


It says exploitation of the world's wild flora and fauna is not tolerated in Canada.

MORE National ARTICLES

Montreal Police Won'T Face Charges In Fatal 2017 Shooting Of Black Man: Crown

MONTREAL — Quebec's Crown prosecutors' office say it won't press charges against the Montreal police officers who fatally shot a black man during a 2017 intervention.

Montreal Police Won'T Face Charges In Fatal 2017 Shooting Of Black Man: Crown

Immigration And Clean Power Top Agenda For Federal And Atlantic Officials

Immigration And Clean Power Top Agenda For Federal And Atlantic Officials
HALIFAX — A federal program aimed at attracting foreign workers to Atlantic Canada will be extended for another two years.

Immigration And Clean Power Top Agenda For Federal And Atlantic Officials

Alberta Ban On School Seclusion Rooms Comes With Possible Exemptions

Alberta Ban On School Seclusion Rooms Comes With Possible Exemptions
EDMONTON — Alberta Education Minister David Eggen says schools and parents will be able to request exemptions to a ban on seclusion rooms that will take effect this fall.

Alberta Ban On School Seclusion Rooms Comes With Possible Exemptions

Health Tips From Officials As Herring Egg Harvest Opens On Vancouver Island

Health Tips From Officials As Herring Egg Harvest Opens On Vancouver Island
VICTORIA — Health officials are offering some food safety advice as this year's herring egg harvest opens along a section of Vancouver Island's east coast.

Health Tips From Officials As Herring Egg Harvest Opens On Vancouver Island

Trudeau Names Lawrence MacAulay Veterans-Affairs Minister In Cabinet Shuffle

OTTAWA — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is making longtime MP Lawrence MacAulay his new veterans-affairs minister to fill the void left by the resignation of Jody Wilson-Raybould as part of a minor cabinet shuffle this morning.

Trudeau Names Lawrence MacAulay Veterans-Affairs Minister In Cabinet Shuffle

Case Against Nova Scotia Man Convicted Of Murder Dropped

Case Against Nova Scotia Man Convicted Of Murder Dropped
HALIFAX — A Nova Scotia man who served 17 years in prison for murder has been acquitted of the charge.    

Case Against Nova Scotia Man Convicted Of Murder Dropped