Close X
Thursday, January 9, 2025
ADVT 
National

One-Vote Loss Leads To Big Win For B.C. Doctor Heading Association In 2016

The Canadian Press, 19 Jun, 2015 11:33 AM
    VANCOUVER — Doctors in British Columbia have elected a new president to head their professional association next year after a tie forced a second vote.
     
    Dr. Alan Ruddiman has been elected to head Doctors of BC, with 3,065 votes, while Dr. Brian Day received 2,462 votes.
     
    Outgoing president Dr. Charles Webb says about half of the 11,000 members cast votes in the run-off election, the highest turnout ever.
     
    Ruddiman asked for a recount of last month's election after he lost to Day by one vote, but the results showed a tie, triggering another election.
     
    Ruddiman is a family physician in Oliver, B.C., and says doctors must take a leading role in finding solutions to overcrowding in hospitals through efficiencies in the medical system while Day is an outspoken advocate for privatization.
     
    Day has launched a constitutional challenge of B.C.'s restrictions on private health care, and a trial that has been delayed several times is expected to go ahead later this year.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Vancouver Plan To Ban Edible Pot While Licensing Dispensaries Sparks Debate

    Vancouver Plan To Ban Edible Pot While Licensing Dispensaries Sparks Debate
    VANCOUVER — If Vancouver has its way, the dozens of illegal pot shops scattered across the city will soon have business licences and health warnings hanging in their windows.

    Vancouver Plan To Ban Edible Pot While Licensing Dispensaries Sparks Debate

    U.S. Man Mistaken For Former CBC Host Evan Solomon Online

    U.S. Man Mistaken For Former CBC Host Evan Solomon Online
    A case of mistaken identities has thrust an American software developer into the controversy surrounding former CBC News host Evan Solomon.

    U.S. Man Mistaken For Former CBC Host Evan Solomon Online

    Some Ontario Students Won't Get Report Cards During Teachers' Work-To-Rule

    Some Ontario Students Won't Get Report Cards During Teachers' Work-To-Rule
    TORONTO — Hundreds of thousands of elementary school students in two of Ontario's largest boards will not be receiving report cards as an administrative strike by teachers hits the one-month mark.

    Some Ontario Students Won't Get Report Cards During Teachers' Work-To-Rule

    Police Racial Profiling 'Corrosive,' Ontario Human Rights Commission Says

    Police Racial Profiling 'Corrosive,' Ontario Human Rights Commission Says
    TORONTO — Racially biased policing is destructive and counterproductive and should be stamped out immediately, the Ontario Human Rights Commission said Thursday.

    Police Racial Profiling 'Corrosive,' Ontario Human Rights Commission Says

    Risks To Canada's Financial Stability Inched Higher Amid Oil Slump: Central Bank

    Risks To Canada's Financial Stability Inched Higher Amid Oil Slump: Central Bank
    OTTAWA — The still-uncertain fallout from the steep drop in oil prices has left the country's financial system more vulnerable to any significant economic shocks to employment and incomes, the Bank of Canada said Thursday.

    Risks To Canada's Financial Stability Inched Higher Amid Oil Slump: Central Bank

    Lululemon Takes Steps To Enable Founder Chip Wilson To Sell Remaining Stake

    NEW YORK — Lululemon founder Dennis (Chip) Wilson could sell his family's remaining stake in the yoga gear retailer a year after pushing for board changes.

    Lululemon Takes Steps To Enable Founder Chip Wilson To Sell Remaining Stake