Close X
Monday, September 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

Ottawa Spent $2.2 Million In Legal Fees For Maternity, Sickness Benefits Lawsuit

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 14 Mar, 2016 12:18 PM
    OTTAWA — Newly released figures show the federal government has spent more than $2.2 million in legal fees fighting a class-action lawsuit over maternity and sickness benefits.
     
    The majority of that — $2.06 million — has been through the federal Justice Department with a further $176,377 estimated to have been spent at Employment and Social Development Canada.
     
    The figures are contained in documents tabled in Parliament last week in response to a request from New Democrat MP Niki Ashton and show the government added about $1 million to the overall legal bill for the case in the last year.
     
    The government is being sued for refusing to pay sickness benefits to women who became ill while on maternity leave.
     
     
    Parliament decided in 2002 to allow those who were diagnosed with cancer, for instance, to access 15 extra weeks of EI payments on top of their year of maternity leave.
     
    The lawsuit alleges that didn't happen and some 60,000 women were denied such claims over a decade.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Two Indo-Canadians To Be Tried For Surrey Teen Maple Batalia’s Murder At SFU Campus

    Two Indo-Canadians To Be Tried For Surrey Teen Maple Batalia’s Murder At SFU Campus
    Batalia, 19 at that time, was fatally shot at Surrey Simon Fraser University campus on September 28, 2011.

    Two Indo-Canadians To Be Tried For Surrey Teen Maple Batalia’s Murder At SFU Campus

    B.C. Court Tosses Roy Fraser's Appeals Of First-And Second-Degree Murder In 2009 Kamloops Killings

    B.C. Court Tosses Roy Fraser's Appeals Of First-And Second-Degree Murder In 2009 Kamloops Killings
     Convicted murderer Roy Fraser has lost an appeal of his first- and second-degree murder convictions for two slayings near Kamloops, B.C.

    B.C. Court Tosses Roy Fraser's Appeals Of First-And Second-Degree Murder In 2009 Kamloops Killings

    B.C. Court To Rule On Whether Site C Protesters Can Be Removed From Tent Camp

    A judge is expected to rule this morning on whether to grant BC Hydro an injunction to remove people protesting the Site C dam project from a tent camp near Fort. St. John.

    B.C. Court To Rule On Whether Site C Protesters Can Be Removed From Tent Camp

    Court Acquits Mom Maria Shepherd Who Admitted Killing Stepchild Based On Faulty Forensics

    Court Acquits Mom Maria Shepherd Who Admitted Killing Stepchild Based On Faulty Forensics
    The decision in favour of Maria Shepherd, of Brampton, Ont., came after a short hearing at the urging of both Crown and defence.

    Court Acquits Mom Maria Shepherd Who Admitted Killing Stepchild Based On Faulty Forensics

    Nova Scotia Couple Honoured For Marriage That Has Lasted 80 Years

    Nova Scotia Couple Honoured For Marriage That Has Lasted 80 Years
    Bill and Bertie Nickerson have been married 80 years and still live in the same brick house he had built for them following their marriage in 1935.

    Nova Scotia Couple Honoured For Marriage That Has Lasted 80 Years

    The LNG Industry Would Boost B.C. Economy, If It Goes Ahead Finds Study

    The LNG Industry Would Boost B.C. Economy, If It Goes Ahead Finds Study
    The board found that if the industry produces 30 million tonnes per year of LNG, Canada's economy would grow by $7.4 billion a year over 30 years.

    The LNG Industry Would Boost B.C. Economy, If It Goes Ahead Finds Study