Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

Supreme Court Will Tuck Into UberEats Case About Drivers' Benefit Rights

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 May, 2019 08:13 PM

    OTTAWA — The Supreme Court of Canada will help decide whether a proposed class-action lawsuit against ride-hailing service Uber can move ahead.


    The high court has agreed to hear Uber's challenge of an Ontario Court of Appeal decision that paved the way for the suit aimed at securing a minimum wage, vacation pay and other benefits for drivers.


    The man behind the planned class action, David Heller, is a driver for UberEats, a service that calls on drivers to deliver food from restaurants to Uber customers.


    He argues that Uber drivers are employees, which entitles them to protections under Ontario's Employment Standards Act.


    Ontario's highest court said a clause in Uber's services agreement that requires all disputes to go through arbitration in the Netherlands amounted to illegally outsourcing an employment standard.


    The Supreme Court, following its usual custom, gave no reasons for agreeing to hear Uber's appeal and no date for the high-court hearing has been set.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Quebec Cattle Farmers Want Beyond Meat To Stop Marketing Itself As Plant-Based Meat

    MONTREAL — Cattle producers across the country are backing Quebec colleagues who have filed a complaint over a popular new meatless burger that is being advertised as "plant-based meat."

    Quebec Cattle Farmers Want Beyond Meat To Stop Marketing Itself As Plant-Based Meat

    More Than 100 People Fall Sick In Suspected Norovirus Outbreak In B.C. Hotels

    More Than 100 People Fall Sick In Suspected Norovirus Outbreak In B.C. Hotels
    VANCOUVER — Over 100 people have fallen sick following a suspected norovirus outbreak at two Vancouver-area hotels over the weekend.

    More Than 100 People Fall Sick In Suspected Norovirus Outbreak In B.C. Hotels

    Feds 'Deeply Concerned' By China's Arrests Of Canadians Kovrig, Spavor

    Public Safety Minister Ralph Goodale says the government is "deeply concerned" about China's decision to formally arrest two Canadians citizens it has been holding since December.

    Feds 'Deeply Concerned' By China's Arrests Of Canadians Kovrig, Spavor

    Canada Introducing Digital Charter To Combat Hate Speech, Misinformation

    Canada Introducing Digital Charter To Combat Hate Speech, Misinformation
    PARIS — A new digital charter will dictate how the country will combat hate speech, misinformation and online electoral interference in Canada, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau told a technology conference in Paris on Thursday.

    Canada Introducing Digital Charter To Combat Hate Speech, Misinformation

    Archbishop Fears Quebec Government's Secularism Bill Will Erode Freedoms

    MONTREAL — The Quebec government's move to legislate on secularism will come at the expense of individual freedoms, Montreal's archbishop said Thursday.

    Archbishop Fears Quebec Government's Secularism Bill Will Erode Freedoms

    Trump Pardons Conrad Black For 2007 Fraud Conviction In U.S.

    Trump Pardons Conrad Black For 2007 Fraud Conviction In U.S.
    WASHINGTON — U.S. President Donald Trump has granted a full pardon to Conrad Black, a former newspaper publisher who has written a flattering political biography of Trump.

    Trump Pardons Conrad Black For 2007 Fraud Conviction In U.S.