Close X
Wednesday, November 20, 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 doctors who refuse treatment on moral grounds must give referral: new rules

    Ontario doctors who refuse treatment on moral grounds must give referral: new rules
    TORONTO — Canada's largest medical regulator wants to change its policies so that doctors who refuse to perform certain procedures — such as abortions — on moral grounds must refer patients to another doctor.

    Ontario doctors who refuse treatment on moral grounds must give referral: new rules

    New housing price index up 0.1 per cent in October: Statistics Canada

    New housing price index up 0.1 per cent in October: Statistics Canada
    OTTAWA — Statistics Canada says its new housing price index rose 0.1 per cent in October, following an identical rise in September.

    New housing price index up 0.1 per cent in October: Statistics Canada

    Oil's slide expected to surface at provincial-federal finance ministers' meeting

    Oil's slide expected to surface at provincial-federal finance ministers' meeting
    OTTAWA — The topic of sliding oil prices is expected to surface this weekend when provincial finance ministers from across Canada have their first face-to-face meeting with federal counterpart Joe Oliver.

    Oil's slide expected to surface at provincial-federal finance ministers' meeting

    Supreme Court to hear federal challenge to Omar Khadr youth status

    Supreme Court to hear federal challenge to Omar Khadr youth status
    TORONTO — A decision by the Supreme Court of Canada to hear the federal government's challenge of Omar Khadr's youth status stunned his lawyers on Thursday, although not much would have changed for him if the decision had gone the other way.

    Supreme Court to hear federal challenge to Omar Khadr youth status

    Extending life of CF-18s to 2025 to cost about $400 million: independent report

    Extending life of CF-18s to 2025 to cost about $400 million: independent report
    OTTAWA — A long-awaited market analysis into which fighter jet could replace the CF-18s tells the Harper government it can postpone a decision and keep flying the current fleet until 2025, but it will cost roughly $400 million.

    Extending life of CF-18s to 2025 to cost about $400 million: independent report

    Dead Child Found In Car Trunk In Surrey; Mother Arrested By Police

    Dead Child Found In Car Trunk In Surrey; Mother Arrested By Police
    SURREY, B.C. — Homicide investigators in Surrey, B.C., say they have arrested a woman believed to be the mother of a child who was found dead in a vehicle.

    Dead Child Found In Car Trunk In Surrey; Mother Arrested By Police