Supreme Court upholds 6-month mandatory minimum for soliciting or obtaining sex with children
Supreme Court of Canada Justices Suzanne Côté (left) and Michelle O’Bonsawin described the ‘sexual commodification of children’ as ‘a veritable scourge in Canada, one that the state has every interest in suppressing and severely punishing.’
Friday, July 10, 2026 @ 5:19 PM
The Supreme Court of Canada has affirmed 7-2 the constitutional validity of the mandatory minimum penalty (MMP) of six months’ incarceration for those who pay to obtain — or communicate to buy — sex with persons under age 18. On July 10, Justices Suzanne Côté and Michelle O’Bonsawin, in joint reasons for the majority, allowed the appeal of the Attorney General of Quebec and set aside the Quebec Court of Appeal’s 2024 decision that struck down s. 286.1(2)(a) of the Criminal Code as a violation of the Charter’s s. 12 prohibition against cruel and unusual punishment: Quebec (Attorney General) v. Denis, 2026 SCC 25. ... [read more]
Federal Court overturns CAF refusal to refer home-equity loss claim to Treasury Board
Wednesday, July 15, 2026 @ 3:56 PM
The Federal Court has set aside the Canadian Armed Forces’ (CAF) refusal to refer a retired officer’s request for reimbursement of a nearly $190,000 home-equity loss arising from a military posting, ruling that the decision failed to grapple with whether the catastrophic loss and the inadequacy of the relocation policy warranted referral to the Treasury Board. ... [read more]
Class action launched over inadequate compensation in firearms buyback program
Wednesday, July 15, 2026 @ 3:02 PM
The Canadian Coalition for Firearm Rights (CCFR) has filed a proposed class action against Canada under recent amendments to Saskatchewan’s Firearms Act, arguing that the federal government must compensate licensed gun owners at fair value after the 2020 firearm bans. ... [read more]
CFIB give feds A+ on internal trade report card, highlight strain felt by small businesses
Wednesday, July 15, 2026 @ 2:07 PM
The Canadian Federation of Independent Business (CFIB) has given the federal government an A+ in its 2026 State of Internal Trade: Canada’s Interprovincial Cooperation Report Card. While the CFIB applauded the “significant progress” made by the feds, the organization cautioned that “these high scores reflect commitments more than actual progress felt on the ground.” ... [read more]
Court limits holdback priority to unpaid invoices absent subcontractor claims
Tuesday, July 14, 2026 @ 5:13 PM
The Ontario Court of Appeal has ruled that construction lien claimants’ priority over a building mortgagee is limited to the deficiency in the statutory 10 per cent holdback based on unpaid invoices, rather than total invoices, where no subcontractor lien claims exist. ... [read more]