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Published on: 7 Jan 2011 By (Dianne Saxe)

Congratulations to Peter Kent

We want to send our congratulations, best wishes and some sympathy to the Hon. Peter Kent, Canada’s new Minister of the Environment. Β We do agree with Jeffrey Simpson: Minister Kent has an extremely difficult job, given his leader’s staunch opposition to effective action on the major environmental issues of our day. Β Perhaps it is just...

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Published on: 29 Apr 2011 By (Dianne Saxe)

Mumbling about climate change

As you’ve probably noticed, no one is talking about climate change in the federal election. The Ontario government is keeping the issue pretty low key too. They quietly released both their annual GHG mitigation report as well as its climate change adaptation plan and strategy with no fanfare last Thursday (just prior to the Easter...

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Published on: 5 May 2015 By

Court of Appeal Upholds ERT Finding in Blanding’s Turtle Case

On April 20, 2015, the Ontario Court of Appeal restored the finding of the Environmental Review Tribunal (β€œERT”) that the proposed Ostrander Point wind farm would result in β€œserious and irreversible” harm to the Blanding’s turtle. The Ostrander Point wind farm project is a nine-turbine 22.5 megawatt wind farm on Crown land in Prince Edward...

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Published on: 3 Jun 2011 By (Dianne Saxe)

Transit, loss, and compensation

Our column in today’s award-winning SLAW revisits the Heyes case. “Public works often impose heavy losses on those in private property nearby. Under what circumstances should they be compensated?Β  That should have been the question in Heyes v. Vancouver, now Susan Heyes Inc. (Hazel & Co.) v. South Coast B.C. Transportation Authority. Alas, it was...

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Published on: 30 May 2011 By (Dianne Saxe)

Brownfield Regulation amended

The Ministry of the Environment has amended Ontario Regulation 153/04, under the Environmental Protection Act (EPA), related to brownfields. According to the MOE, the amendments “are technical and are consistent with the policy intent of the existing O. Reg. 153/04, as amended in December 2009. The amendments clarify the intent and scope of certain provisions,...

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Published on: 9 Feb 2011 By (Dianne Saxe)

Innovative thinking about water?

Diane Cunningham, director of the Lawrence National Centre for Policy and Management at the Richard Ivey School of Business organized another great forum last month on innovation for Canadian environmental Β issues. This year’s forum was on Water Innovation; the keynote address and panelist presentations are posted atΒ http://www.ivey.uwo.ca/lawrencecentre/water-innovation-2011/default.htm. This is exactly the sort of thing that...

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Published on: 17 Jan 2011 By

End of slow death by rubber duck?

In 2009, we blogged about plastics that contain (and release) phthalates, plasticizers used in the manufacture of soft vinyl used in many products (https://www.siskinds.com/slow-death-by-rubber-duck/). New Phthalates Regulations under the Hazardous Products Act (HPA) were registered on December 9 2010, and will come into force on June 9, 2011. They should help reduce phthalate exposure for...

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Published on: 14 Jan 2011 By (Dianne Saxe)

Environmental Law Firm of the Year

Who is the environmental law firm of the year? Β There seem to be a lot of rating services competing to decide. This week, we have been honoured as an (or the?) Β β€œEnvironmental Law Firm of the Year” for Canada by two of them: Corporate INTL Magazine, and DealMakers Monthly. Β We thought you would like to...

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Published on: 30 Jul 2013 By (Dianne Saxe)

Personal liability for officers and directors- how far?

Should company directors and officers be personally liable for contamination they did not cause? β€œDirectors’ liability is one of the primary instruments used by policymakers to promote good corporate governance. However, … [t]he imposition of ever-increasing personal liability on directors may eventually affect the management and business efficiency of Canadian corporations.” So concludes a research...

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