Category Archives: Carleton assignments

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Ontario man Manfred Loerzel’s livestock shipment business is still up and running after being fined twice for inhumane transport of horses.

Last year, Canadian Food Inspection Agency fined him and his company Loerzel Farm Transport Inc. $26,000 for causing the death of two horses during transportation. The agency’s investigation suggests the trailer that his company used had projections that injured the horses, which violates of the Health of Animals Act.

According to the agency’s prosecution records, that act brought in $297,000 through fines since 2011, the highest among other regulations. And of all the eight prosecution cases, four are about inhumane transport of horses, and Loerzel’s company are involved in two of them.

Allison Danyluk Roff, a veterinarian with the agency’s office in Regina, does road checks on livestock trailers along two local highways. “The most common noncompliance in my opinion is overcrowding,” says Danyluk Roff, “and people often mixing different classes of horses together in a trailer, they could get aggressive.”

Heather Clemenceau from the Canadian House Defence Coalition, says the group is working on an access to information request to try to identify more of ill-treatments to horses during shipments.

She says in one such incident, a horse fell down the trailer after the driver hit the brake suddenly. However, the driver continued on to his destination knowing the female horse was down, which left the horse suffering in pain for more than six hours.

Clemenceau says in other cases, horses coming in from the U.S. are left too long without feed and water. Canadian Food Inspection Agency staff check and seal loads of horses at border checkpoints. The agency says the horses should remain on the truck overnight so their staff don’t have to cut the seal and reseal again. But this could leave the horses more than a day without food. Canadian regulations allow horses to be transported for up to 36 hours without a break.

International horse meat supplier

Horse shipments along the Canada-U.S. border have been increasing since 2006, when the American government initially banned horse slaughter for human consumption. As a result, the number of horses slaughtered in Canada in federally and provincially inspected establishments has more than doubled from 2006 to 2008.

The Canadian Horse Defence Coalition identified five Canadian slaughterhouses, where live horses imported from south of the border are being killed.

 


 

According to figures from Canadian Food Inspection Agency, Canada exported 13,960,034 kilograms of horse meat last year. Canadian Meat Council says the major markets include Switzerland, Japan, France, Belgium and Kazakhstan.

Bankrupt farmer gets fresh start with livestock transport business

Former Ontario farmer Loerzel declared bankruptcy in 2005. According to his Statement of Affairs document, he owed $799,000 to 44 creditors, including a finance company, a farm equipment company, a cell phone carrier, a car dealer and a bank. However, at the time of the bankruptcy, he had only $3,601 worth of assets to pay his creditors.

Loerzel owned two farm properties together with his parents before running into debt, and he got the sole ownership after the death of his parents. However, the TD Bank seized and sold the two properties in 2003 and 2004 after he lost a business contract.

A year after filing bankruptcy, Loerzel was cleared from all the debt because his creditors recognized he had no money to pay back his debt. Loerzel also get to keep most of his assets, including household goods and his 1994 Ford car as those items are deemed of little value. The $100 his had on hand before declaring bankruptcy was used to cover the fee to file claim with the Office of Superintendent and Bankruptcy.

According to records kept by Ontario government services, Loerzel incorporated his livestock transport company, Loerzel Farm Transport Inc., in 2007. But two years into his business, veterinary inspectors from the Canadian Food Inspection Agency found through their routine inspections that the trailer his company used had sharp angles that caused injuries to a number of horses and death to two horses. In 2010, during similar inspections, the agency staff once again concluded Loerzel’s company did not provide an adequate mode of transportation.

However, it wasn’t until three years later, when the Ontario Court of Justice in Windsor finally registered two convictions against both of the incidents, and struck down a total fine of $72,000.

The Canadian Food Inspection Agency declined to give more details on the two cases. And the Ontario court of Justice says there’s no record of Loerzel’s company being fined.

Whether Loerzel paid the fines or not remains a question. But his company, Loerzel Farm Transport Inc., is still registered with the Ontario government with an active status.

Canada exports horses for slaughter too?

An article on the Canadian Horse Defence Coalition website, dated October 18, 2012, says draft horses from Alberta being shipped to Japan from Calgary International Airport are jammed in wooden crates to the point that they can’t stand.

The group says since 2009, it has been receiving anonymous footage showing horses being loaded into trucks with electronic prods and transported to the airport.

The article reveals draft horses from Canadian producers have been routinely shipped to Japan via airports in Calgary and Winnipeg. And they get slaughtered in Japan for horse sashimi, which is a Japanese raw meat dish, once they grow bigger and meet certain weight limits.

However, on the Canadian Food Inspection Agency’s website, horses exported to Japan are only identified as for permanent stay or racing. Among the more than 30 countries that buy live horses from Canada, only the U.S. has a category that says for “immediate slaughter.”

In the Canadian Horse Defence Coalition article, it quotes a 2008 Alberta Horse Welfare Report, saying the horses exported to Japan are worth $20,000 each.

 

 

 

 

 

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Allie’s test map

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Fire hydrants magnets for parking tickets in Toronto

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Here is a map of the top 20 fire hydrants that attracted the most tickets in Toronto in 2013. You can search by ward of by amount….HAVE FUN!







Medical marijuana lawsuit could be groundbreaking for federal privacy lawsuits

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Lemon Kush by Mark/Flickr
Lemon Kush by Mark/Flickr

Medical marijuana users are suing Health Canada, in a case that could open doors for other privacy lawsuits against the federal government, and highlight shortcomings in Canada’s Privacy Act, experts say.

“If this case actually proceeded, and resulted in a court decision, it would be precedent-setting,” says Kris Klein, a lawyer at nNovation law firm who has been an advisor to the Privacy Commissioner of Canada.

But it still faces steep hurdles to get there.

Privacy compromised

The case started last November, after Health Canada sent letters to 40,000 medical marijuana users across the country. Rather than the usual discreet envelopes sent by courier, these went through regular post, and had “Marihuana Medical Access Program” and the patients’ names and addresses clearly displayed on the envelopes.

Patients say this violated their privacy by disclosing to an unknown number of people that they consume and possess marijuana, and that they have grave health conditions. They say it also put them in danger, as many patients in the program also grow marijuana at home, and the information could leave them vulnerable to break-ins and violence.

“That address on that piece of paper outed a lot of people, including designated growers,” says Jason Wilcox, a patient based in Vancouver. As the founder of the Cannabis in Canada Society and an avid social media user, Wilcox isn’t afraid to admit he smokes pot – but he is worried that people could now find out where he grows it.  He says for people living in small towns where everyone knows everyone, the problem is even worse.

Jason Wilcox on how he believes the letters endangered growers

Health Canada apologized for the gaffe in a statement on their website, saying it “deeply regrets this administrative error”.  But patients have slapped the organization with a class action lawsuit, which is now being waged by four law firms working together across Canada.

The Privacy Act: outdated?

The plaintiffs are seeking financial compensation from the federal government, which is a new and barely-explored territory in Canadian privacy law. That’s because Canada’s Privacy Act, which regulates how the federal government handles people’s personal information, doesn’t actually say if people have the right to claim damages if their privacy is invaded. In fact, the only remedy the Act explicitly states is to complain to the federal Office of the Privacy Commissioner.

Because of that, many courts have interpreted the Act to mean that “the legislation didn’t intend for there to be a remedy and that the court doesn’t actually have the right to award a remedy,” says Kate Saunders, a Vancouver lawyer with Branch MacMaster LLP who is handling the medical marijuana case.

Klein says this is one of the areas where he feels the privacy law desperately needs reform. “The Privacy Act right now gives these hollow rights,” he says. “You’re not really giving us rights if, at the same time, you can go ahead and violate them without any negative consequence.”

Listen to Kris Klein on why he thinks the Privacy Act needs reform

The Office of the Privacy Commissioner shares Klein’s concerns. In the watchdog organization’s most recent annual report, then-commissioner Jennifer Stoddart slammed the government’s continued failure to update the Privacy Act, calling it “troubling.” In a speech last November, Stoddart also called for a complete overhaul of the Act, and lamented the lack of penalties for ignoring privacy guidelines. “Wouldn’t it be better to have the force of law to motivate better practices so rather than focusing on reporting breaches, the emphasis would be on avoiding them altogether?” she said.

Privacy lawsuits on the rise

Saunders and Klein both say they’re seeing an increase in the number of people looking for legal recourse when their privacy is violated. Klein says in the digital age, people are becoming a lot more aware of their personal information, “and as people become more aware, they want to hold organizations accountable if they have that personal information.”

In the Privacy Commissioner’s annual report, Stoddart said that the number of complaints to her Office by citizens has hit a record high two years in a row, with an increase of 133% this past year. While that number was inflated by two significant incidents, Stoddart said it was still concerning.

On the flip side, she also said that data breaches reported by government were at an all-time high for the third year in a row, with 30% more breaches reported than the year before.

But without legal recourse, says Klein, complaining to the Privacy Commissioner is “the end of the road.”

A new avenue

In the absence of hard legislation, the Privacy Commissioner recommends a new, common-law avenue that could offer promise, known as intrusion upon seclusion. It’s borrowed from American case law, and can award damages for an intrusion into someone’s privacy, even if there is no physical loss. This argument will play a key role in the medical marijuana case.

Saunders says they owe a big debt to a ground-breaking 2012 case in the Ontario Court of Appeal, known as Jones v. Tsige. For the first time, a Canadian court used intrusion upon seclusion to award damages for a privacy breach.

“The Jones and Tsige case opened up an avenue that was very exciting for privacy lawyers,” says Saunders, because it meant that, at least in Ontario, there is a common-law right to privacy.  “It created a very strong argument that there is a right to privacy in the rest of Canada as well.”

Listen to Kate Saunders on how Jones v Tsige matters to privacy law

Since then, a number of privacy lawsuits in Ontario have relied on intrusion upon seclusion, but the medical marijuana case would be the first to bring it into the federal arena.

“This is why this case is very interesting,” says Saunders. “It provides an opportunity for the government to weigh in on the status of the common-law right to privacy, federally.”

 

The long road ahead

But there’s a long road ahead to get to that point. Saunders says they will be applying for certification next month, which means the court must determine whether it’s appropriate for the case to be treated as a class action.

And even to be certified, Klein says they’ve got an uphill battle. “Most people are not overly sympathetic to the plaintiffs,” he says, saying the incident is largely viewed as a relatively minor mistake.

On top of that, because the Privacy Act doesn’t give any guidelines on what warrants compensation and what doesn’t, he says there’s a lot of risk involved. “The plaintiffs’ lawyers who are taking this on now, they’re gutsy,” he says.

After certification, Saunders says, about 90% of cases will be settled out of court – which means they don’t set any precedent for future cases.

Whichever way this battle goes, there’s no shortage of privacy class actions that are headed for the federal arena right now, including several in Saunders’ office. “But as it stands, we don’t have a good read on which way the federal court is going to lean on them.”