This lawyerâs billboard was cleverly designed to go viral but is also well designed with a simple message and not much text on the Billboard, so itâs easily read and understood while driving by in three seconds. The billboard, for a divorce lawyer in Albany, NY, shows the wedding ring finger extended but made to [â¦]
The post Designing a Billboard to Go Viral appeared first on Lawyer Advertising Blog.
With the recognition that a brand name or trade name is important for business, there is a trend among large prestigious law firms and even some smaller law firms to rebrand their law firm name to one that is good for branding. Whatâs good for branding? A simple one-word tradename, preferably one that stands out.A Hence, [â¦]
The post The New Trend of Rebranding Law Firms with Trade Names appeared first on Lawyer Advertising Blog.
The top Super Bowl commercials are rated by the public for entertainment but which commercial is the best to sell the product? ItâsA the MichaelA BublA(c) BublyaC/ commercial by Goodby Silverstein & Partners. Why is the MichaelA BublA(c) BublyaC/ Super Bowl TV commercial my winner? Itâs not analytics. SPARK Neuro is an interesting company offering neuro analytics to [â¦]
The post A Blackberry BublA(c) Please appeared first on Lawyer Advertising Blog.
Most lawyers know by now that they need a custom vanity phone number to compete with a and stand out from a other attorneys in their field. However, the next question can be more complicated. How do you choose the ideal phone number for your law firm? On the surface, it might seem easya| find [â¦]
The post How to Find the Ideal Phone Number for Your Law Firm appeared first on Lawyer Advertising Blog.
A lawyer who recognized the value of billboards ran into a roadblock when he purchased five buildings for the purpose of advertising his law firm on billboards. In an effort to reduce the number of billboards, New York Cityâs permit requirements for outdoor advertising now only allow a billboard when the building is occupied by [â¦]
The post Recognizing the Value of Billboards, Lawyer Runs into a Roadblock appeared first on Lawyer Advertising Blog.
Does your law office advertise a slogan or vanity phone number on your website or advertising? If you havenât trademarked it, you might be in for an unpleasant surprise. I once put âNo Fee Guaranteeâ on my law firm website. Sometime later, I received a letter advising that it was trademarked and that I would [â¦]
The post Is Your Vanity Phone Number or Slogan Protected? appeared first on Lawyer Advertising Blog.
Beginning in October, if your law firm website doesnât use SSL, Google will warn visitors who use your contact form that it is aNot Securea. Potential clients will likely go to another lawyerâs website when they see the warning. This is what a website without SSL looks like in the address bar of Chrome This [â¦]
The post Will Google Warn Visitors Away From Your Website? appeared first on Lawyer Advertising Blog.
With the importance of Internet advertising for lawyers, some attorneys have the misconception that the internet makes 1-800 vanity phone numbers less important then they used to be. In the Internet Age, Vanity Phone Numbers Are More Relevant According to a study of US customers by research agency eConsultancy, phone calls were the most preferred [â¦]
The post Are Vanity Phone Numbers Still Relevant? appeared first on Lawyer Advertising Blog.
Kirkpatrick Creative, an advertising agency representing law firms, says probably not. Not surprisingly, it seems that print yellow page phone books still work. Usually, when a new form of media arrives on the scene, it doesnât replace another form of media but just adds another dimension. One caveat is that Iâm not sure how long [â¦]
The post Can You Afford to Drop the Yellow Pages? appeared first on Lawyer Advertising Blog.
Is your law firm really going to extremes when providing customer service to your clients? This lawsuit funding company does. In fact, theyâll go so far as to kill someone for you! Maybe the defendant. This video shows a testimonial on a TV commercial from Oasis Legal, a company providing lawsuit funding to personal injury [â¦]
The post Does Your Customer Service Kill? appeared first on Lawyer Advertising Blog.
Because McMurtry . . . [more]
The post Remembering Attorney General Roy McMurtry appeared first on Slaw.
Current postings on Slaw Jobs:
. . . [more]
The post Friday Jobs Roundup appeared first on Slaw.
INTRODUCTION
Webber Academy (or athe schoola), a private educational institution in Alberta, defined itself as non-denominational: it did not engage in any overt religious practice (with one possible and qualified exception). Yet, after two Alberta Human Rights Commission (AHRC) decisions, two Queenas Bench (as it then was) (QB) judgements, two Court of Appeal (CA) rulings and two denial of leaves to appeal by the Supreme Court of Canada (SCC), it was held to have discriminated without justification against two Muslim students whom it prohibited from engaging, on school property, in overt prayers. How did this happen? And what does it . . . [more]
The post The Lack of Protection for Non-Denominational Identity: The Webber Academy Case appeared first on Slaw.
Written by Daniel Standing, LL.B., Content Editor, First Reference Inc.
The Supreme Court of British Columbia rendered a decision (2024 BCSC 55 (CanLII)) on judicial review which looked at the employerâs choice to implement a COVID-19 vaccination policy, and whether, under the Labour Relations Code, it was obligated to enter into discussions with the union first. The case provides employers with insight into the difficulty of overturning a tribunalâs decision.
Background
The workplace was a provincially run rapid transit company. The Court considered a unionâs petition for judicial review of a decision by the British Columbia Labour . . . [more]
The post Missing Discussions at Center of Union COVID Dispute appeared first on Slaw.
While weare all aware that there are substantive differences between Canadian law and the law of other jurisdictions, itas much easier to forget that the practice of law varies just as much from nation to nation. Thereas more than one way to do almost anything, and the Canadian legal system is founded on a very specific set of choices, norms, and traditions.
Upon arriving in Canada from her native Australia, and despite her . . . [more]
The post Thursday Thinkpiece: Internationally-Trained Lawyers Need More Than Just NCA Exams appeared first on Slaw.
The Facts
The Calgary City Police were investigating fraud in online liquor sales and came across a payment processor who processed the suspect transactions. . . . [more]
The post R. v. Bykovets: SCC Recognized Privacy Rights for IP Addresses appeared first on Slaw.
The post Sharenthood: Turning Childhood Into Lucrative Content appeared first on Slaw.
PANAL (DROIT) : Dans le cadre de lâaffaire du meurtre de Guylaine Potvin, le tribunal dA(c)clare recevable le tA(c)moignage dâune biologiste judiciaire A titre de tA(c)moin expert concernant lâutilisation du nouvel outil dâenquAate dA(c)signA(c) comme le A<
IntitulA(c) :A R. c. Grenon, 2024 QCCS 551
Juridiction . . . [more]
The post Summaries Sunday: SOQUIJ appeared first on Slaw.
Written by Christina Catenacci, BA, LLB, LLM, PhD, Content Editor, First Reference Inc.
In January 2024, a British Columbia labour arbitrator had no hesitation concluding that an employee, who was the grievor accusing a female colleague of sexual harassment in this case, was actually the one who was sexually harassing the female colleague. Simply put, the arbitrator found that the grievorâs evidence was not credible, the female colleagueâs account was credible and consistent with the evidence, and the female colleague did not do what the employee accused her of. As a result, the labour arbitrator agreed with the employer that . . . [more]
The post Blaming Victim of Sexual Harassment Not a Good Defence appeared first on Slaw.
The post Democratizing Justice, Whose Problem Is It? appeared first on Slaw.
The post What if Access to Justice Was Never Going to Lead to Poverty Alleviation? appeared first on Slaw.
Afsana Gibson-Chowdhury is the founder of Gibson Chowdhury, Clear Collaborative Mediation and a renowned advocate for equity, diversity and inclusion among legal, dispute resolution and . . . [more]
The post The Court of Owlsa| and Other Things That Mean Different Things to Different People appeared first on Slaw.
Last week, I was asked to provide a peer-review of an article submission to a law journal.
After reviewing it thoroughly, I began to suspect that at least some of the content may have been AI-generated.
What Gives?
First off, there were at least two citations that led to dead ends. By now we all know this is a dead give away.
Second, there was little to no language linking paragraphs together. So there might have been two or three paragraphs written on a distinctive topic, but no language to alert the reader that a new topic was about to . . . [more]
The post Anticipating AI-Generated Law Journal Submissions appeared first on Slaw.
This week the randomly selected blogs are 1.A PierreRoy & AssociA(c)s 2. IFLS at Osgoode 3. Employment & Human Rights Law in Canada 4. Barry Sookmant 5. Meurrens on Immigration
PierreRoy & AssociA(c)s
ResponsabilitA(c)s daadministrateurs daentreprise : ce que vous devez savoir
Si vous Aates laadministrateur daune entreprise aux prises avec des difficultA(c)s financiA"res, vous . . . [more]
The post Mondayas Mix appeared first on Slaw.
PANAL (DROIT) : Dans une affaire de violence conjugale et postconjugale, la juge de premiA"re instance a commis 2A erreurs de principe en omettant dâA(c)valuer correctement le risque que lâimposition dâune peine avec sursis A lâaccusA(c) poserait pour la collectivitA(c); une peine dâemprisonnement de 6A mois est substituA(c)e aux 10A . . . [more]
The post Summaries Sunday: SOQUIJ appeared first on Slaw.
On April 4, 2024, the Alberta Court of Appeal released its decision in Altius Royalty Corporation v Alberta, 2024 ABCA 105 (CanLII).
The appellants own a royalty interest in a coal mine. In 2014 they acquired royalty interests in the Genesee coal mine. This coal fuels the Genesee power plant in Alberta.
By 2012 federal performance standards, the end of life of the three coal-fired plants was determined to be 2039, 2044 and 2055 (para 3).
They claim their interest was constructively expropriated (paras 2 and 5) when the government of Canada amended the regulations to require the . . . [more]
The post Environmental Regulation Is Not âConstructive Expropriationâ appeared first on Slaw.
Current postings on Slaw Jobs:
. . . [more]
The post Friday Jobs Roundup appeared first on Slaw.
It started as soon as I began my law career as an articling student. A lawyer gave me a task on Friday due Monday, meaning I would lose my weekend. I felt a little bit of pride a who, little old me, tasked with something so important? But I soon learned what is urgent is rarely important, and important rarely urgent. Having âuncovered every rockâ and discovered nothing further, I watched my research memo fall into the abyss of make-work legal projects, more for show and profit, productivity measured more in money than in legal progress. I think I gained . . . [more]
The post When Practicing Law Is Slow Death appeared first on Slaw.
Written by Daniel Standing, LL.B., Content Editor, First Reference Inc.
The interim decision of Caroline Sand, Member of the Human Rights Tribunal of Ontario in 2024 HRTO 233 (CanLII) shows what can happen when a party is invited to participate but decides not to. As it turns out, the technique of putting oneâs head in the sand works for ostriches but not for employers who seek to avoid liability for human rights complaints.
Background
The matter arose out of a sex-based human rights complaint by an employee against her former employer, a social club. The employer had numerous opportunities to . . . [more]
The post The Perils of Remaining Silent appeared first on Slaw.
Suing for Silence : Sexual Violence and Defamation Law
Author: Mandi Gray
Publication Date: March 1, 2024
ISBN: 9780774869171
Page count: 180 pages; 6 x 9
Excerpt: Introduction
In summer 2017, I received a Facebook message from Lynn, a Canadian tattoo artist in her late twenties. Women from all . . . [more]
The post Thursday Thinkpiece: Suing for Silence : Sexual Violence and Defamation Law appeared first on Slaw.
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