Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

Court Hears Nurse's Appeal Over $26k Fine

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 17 Sep, 2019 08:44 PM

    REGINA - The lawyer for a Saskatchewan nurse who was disciplined for criticizing her grandfather's care on Facebook says the decision to punish her was based on numerous legal errors.

     

    Carolyn Strom was found guilty of professional misconduct by the Saskatchewan Registered Nurses Association in 2016 and fined $26,000.

     

    She's appearing before the Saskatchewan Appeal Court to ask the court quash that decision.

     

    Her lawyer, Marcus Davies, argues that the association's discipline committee misquoted from legal decisions and directly misrepresented the outcomes of cases it relied on to reach a decision.

     

    In February 2015 Strom made Facebook comments that some unnamed staff at her grandfather's long-term-care facility in Macklin, Sask., were not up to speed on delivering end-of-life care.

     

    The nurses association is asking the Appeal Court whether professionals have the charter right to say whatever they want on social media, and publicly embarrass health-care facilities without getting all of the facts.

     

    The Saskatchewan Union of Nurses, Canadian Constitution Foundation and the BC Civil Liberties Association are intervening in the case.

     

    "If this ruling is upheld and her $26,000 fine is upheld, it's really sending a message that you can't criticize anything about the health-care system if you are a nurse," said Megan Tweedie, litigation counsel for the civil liberties group.

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Father Takes Stand At Trial, Denies Killing Daughters And Attempting Suicide

    A Vancouver Island man testified Wednesday that he didn't kill his two daughters and denied he tried to take his own life on the day they died.

    B.C. Father Takes Stand At Trial, Denies Killing Daughters And Attempting Suicide

    Border Official Questioned Meng On Alleged Business In Iran: Court Documents

    VANCOUVER - Court documents released ahead of a Huawei executive's extradition trial suggest a Canadian border official questioned Meng Wanzhou about her business before RCMP arrested her.

    Border Official Questioned Meng On Alleged Business In Iran: Court Documents

    RCMP Originally Planned To Arrest Meng Wanzhou On Plane, Defence Lawyers Say

    RCMP Originally Planned To Arrest Meng Wanzhou On Plane, Defence Lawyers Say
    In court documents released Tuesday, the defence alleges a "co-ordinated strategy" to have the RCMP delay the arrest, so that border officials could question Meng under the pretence of a "routine immigration check."    

    RCMP Originally Planned To Arrest Meng Wanzhou On Plane, Defence Lawyers Say

    Ontario Government Releases Updated Sexual-Education Curriculum

    Ontario Government Releases Updated Sexual-Education Curriculum
    The Ontario government has released the new sexual-education curriculum, replacing a much-criticized teaching plan brought in after the Progressive Conservatives took power last year.

    Ontario Government Releases Updated Sexual-Education Curriculum

    Cases Against Two St. Mike's Students Accused In Alleged Sex Assaults Concluded

    Cases Against Two St. Mike's Students Accused In Alleged Sex Assaults Concluded
    TORONTO - The cases against two students accused in alleged sex assaults at a private Toronto school have concluded.    

    Cases Against Two St. Mike's Students Accused In Alleged Sex Assaults Concluded

    Trudeau Vows To Stand Firm Against 'Increasingly Assertive' China

    MONTREAL - Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says Canada will seek dialogue with China but won't back down in its defence of Canadians against what he calls an increasingly assertive global power.    

    Trudeau Vows To Stand Firm Against 'Increasingly Assertive' China