Close X
Monday, September 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

Sexual Harassment Complainants Are Free To Speak Out: Ontario Liberals

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 09 May, 2016 11:04 AM
    TORONTO — Ontario's governing Liberals are denying suggestions that a woman who accused a now-former member of the legislature of workplace sexual harassment is prevented from speaking out about it.
     
    Premier Kathleen Wynne revealed Friday that former Liberal MPP Kim Craitor was asked to resign in 2013 after workplace sexual harassment complaints were made against him.
     
    Craitor, now a city councillor in Niagara Falls, has not responded to several messages from The Canadian Press, but he told the Niagara Falls Review that the allegations were "unfounded and unsubstantiated."
     
     
    A woman who worked in Craitor's office told the paper she disputed his characterization of the allegations as "unfounded," but that she was bound by a non-disclosure agreement and couldn't say any more.
     
    Craitor also told the newspaper that the Liberal party paid the complainants "to keep the allegations quiet," but Deputy Premier Deb Matthews says that severance was "completely separate" from any confidentiality agreement.
     
    Matthews also disputes that complainants are muzzled by non-disclosure agreements, saying, "victims are free to tell their story."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Tough Road Ahead To Begin Random Drug Testing For Toronto Transit Workers

    Tough Road Ahead To Begin Random Drug Testing For Toronto Transit Workers
    An attempt to make random drug and alcohol testing mandatory for the majority of Toronto public transit employees will be difficult, says a legal expert who cites a recent Supreme Court of Canada decision. 

    Tough Road Ahead To Begin Random Drug Testing For Toronto Transit Workers

    Cop Who Killed Sammy Yatim Seeks To Avoid Mandatory Minimum Prison Sentence

    Cop Who Killed Sammy Yatim Seeks To Avoid Mandatory Minimum Prison Sentence
    Const. James Forcillo has filed a constitutional challenge to the mandatory minimum sentence of four or five years that he faces in the death of 18-year-old Sammy Yatim.

    Cop Who Killed Sammy Yatim Seeks To Avoid Mandatory Minimum Prison Sentence

    Autopsy Underway On Severed Human Remains Found Behind Toronto Butcher Shop

    Autopsy Underway On Severed Human Remains Found Behind Toronto Butcher Shop
    Spokeswoman Cheryl Mahyr says an autopsy of the remains is underway and authorities hope it could shed some light on what might have happened to the victim.

    Autopsy Underway On Severed Human Remains Found Behind Toronto Butcher Shop

    Fire Danger Already Extreme In Parts Of Prairies Where Ground Is Tinder Dry

    Fire Danger Already Extreme In Parts Of Prairies Where Ground Is Tinder Dry
    REGINA — Large swaths of red — meaning extreme risk — cover Alberta and Saskatchewan on the latest fire danger map from Natural Resources Canada.

    Fire Danger Already Extreme In Parts Of Prairies Where Ground Is Tinder Dry

    'Serious' Power Steering Defect Found In Several FCA Vehicles: Transport Canada

    OTTAWA — Transport Canada says it has identified a "serious safety issue" involving the power steering systems on more than 295,000 vehicles sold by Fiat Chrysler Automobiles.

    'Serious' Power Steering Defect Found In Several FCA Vehicles: Transport Canada

    Toronto Police Search For Sniper In Man's Death On Driveway

    Toronto police say they're searching for a sniper who killed a man on a residential driveway last fall using a high-powered rifle. Clinton Yow Foo, 37, died from a single shot in the city's east end in October last year.

    Toronto Police Search For Sniper In Man's Death On Driveway