Close X
Friday, November 1, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. First Nation Ordered To Pay Woman Nearly $160,000 For Wrongful Dismissal

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 08 Apr, 2015 04:05 PM
    VANCOUVER — A longtime employee of a First Nation on Vancouver Island has been awarded nearly $160,000 for being fired without cause and reasonable notice. 
     
    The Cowichan Tribes dismissed Jennifer George, the associate executive director of its child and family services program, in May 2013, partly because of an altercation at a pub about three months earlier.
     
    A band investigator's report, submitted as evidence in court, accused George of being intoxicated, verbally harassing another member and threatening to take away her children.
     
    Court heard the alleged victim, Anita Seymour, was dating the father of two of George's grandchildren and was also the sister of the band's human resources manager. 
     
    B.C. Supreme Court Justice Ronald Skolrood says the First Nation failed to prove any of the allegations or that George was dishonest during a subsequent investigation.
     
    George was awarded about $159,000 in general and aggravated damages, although the judge declined to award punitive damages to the woman who began working for the band in 1980.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Ontario Premier Says Indiana's Religious Objections Law Discriminates Against Gay Couples

    TORONTO — Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne, who is openly gay, is urging businesses upset by a so-called religious objections law in Indiana to set up shop in her province.

    Ontario Premier Says Indiana's Religious Objections Law Discriminates Against Gay Couples

    Citizenship Ceremony Marks 100 Days To Pan Am Games

    Citizenship Ceremony Marks 100 Days To Pan Am Games
    TORONTO — Zsofi Balasz hadn't even received her Canadian passport when she competed for her new country in the Pan Am Games in Rio de Janeiro.

    Citizenship Ceremony Marks 100 Days To Pan Am Games

    Widespread Use Of Drones By Business Years Away, Experts Say

    Widespread Use Of Drones By Business Years Away, Experts Say
    Businesses may have started planning for the day when drones help their future plans take flight, but experts say corporate visions will have to stay more grounded for several years.

    Widespread Use Of Drones By Business Years Away, Experts Say

    Damaged Nova Scotia Tall Ship Towed Inshore After Difficult Rescue At Sea

    Damaged Nova Scotia Tall Ship Towed Inshore After Difficult Rescue At Sea
    PORTSMOUTH, N.H. — A disabled Nova Scotia tall ship that suffered a series of equipment failures off the U.S. East Coast has been towed inshore.

    Damaged Nova Scotia Tall Ship Towed Inshore After Difficult Rescue At Sea

    Canadian Singer-songwriter Joni Mitchell Hospitalized In Los Angeles

    Canadian Singer-songwriter Joni Mitchell Hospitalized In Los Angeles
    LOS ANGELES — Joni Mitchell was in intensive care in a Los Angeles-area hospital on Tuesday, according to the Twitter account and website of the folk singer and Rock and Roll Hall of Famer.

    Canadian Singer-songwriter Joni Mitchell Hospitalized In Los Angeles

    From A Mountain Top To Centre Block: How Harper Made The Case For War

    From A Mountain Top To Centre Block: How Harper Made The Case For War
    OTTAWA — Twice in six months, Prime Minister Stephen Harper put a motion before the House of Commons to commit Canada to war with the militants of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant.

    From A Mountain Top To Centre Block: How Harper Made The Case For War