Jeremy
@jopolsky.bsky.social
210 followers 120 following 45 posts
Posts Media Videos Starter Packs
This is my 9,874,652 request for L'Expert to stop listing its lawyers alphabetically.

Just randomize them. Don't punish lawyers with the X, W, and Z names.
A good canvas on the changing face of 🇨🇦 Courts.

A distinct advantage of 🇨🇦 appointment system, with mandatory retirement at 75--a feature of our constitution--means that we do have generation turnover of Courts faster than in places like the United States.

www.theglobeandmail.com/canada/artic...
A new generation of judges is redefining what Canada’s top courts look like
Among 1,180 federally appointed judges, 47 per cent are women and 6 per cent are racialized, according to data from the Office of the Commissioner of Federal Judicial Affairs
www.theglobeandmail.com
We get 1 hour each side at the Supreme Court in 🇨🇦.

We often get longer at our Courts of Appeal.
My test for BlueSky as a platform is posting my deeply held opinion that:

Raisins are the surest way to ruin a good cookie (or really any food).
Can not abiding by double spacing cost your client… costs in Ontario?

Maybe. In Bah v. Diallo, 2024 ONSC 6500, a family law case, SHARMA denied a party costs bc they did not follow the practice direction.

The affidavit was single not double spaced. It contained argument instead of only facts.
How many is Auer like the Phantom of the opera?

It’s written by the same ppl but it’s better than Katz

- @andrewbernstei9.bsky.social on Breakfast with Appeal
The SCC releases a decision from the bench today in a case that affects a child.

I’ve been critical of decisions from the bench, but this checks most of the boxes - (1) clear urgency (2) reasons to follow

The only issue is the indication of a dissent…

video.isilive.ca/scc/2024/202...
Video
video.isilive.ca
Once again @canlii.bsky.social I love you, but I promise that if I’m searching for a case that went to the Supreme Court, I don’t want the Court of Appeal version.

Pls don’t send me there.
Reposted by Jeremy
And here is a question:

Judicial salaries are fixed by independent commissions: this is a constitutional requirement grounded in judicial independence.

Shouldn’t the same be true of adequate funding for the judiciary?

It is a bad look for judges to have to rattle the begging bowl publicly.
Hard agree on this.

As a tribunal member (albeit one with a very modest annual workload) I benefit enormously from support services provided by the ATSSC. It makes my job much easier. Many superior court judges do not have comparable resources. It makes their jobs much harder.
There is a larger resources (fed + prov) problem to fix, including court staffing, judicial resources (clerks?), rules of court, unnecessary procedures, technological frictions and sometimes even substantive law.

We need a holistic approach.
Reposted by Jeremy
Hard agree on this.

As a tribunal member (albeit one with a very modest annual workload) I benefit enormously from support services provided by the ATSSC. It makes my job much easier. Many superior court judges do not have comparable resources. It makes their jobs much harder.
There is a larger resources (fed + prov) problem to fix, including court staffing, judicial resources (clerks?), rules of court, unnecessary procedures, technological frictions and sometimes even substantive law.

We need a holistic approach.
There is a larger resources (fed + prov) problem to fix, including court staffing, judicial resources (clerks?), rules of court, unnecessary procedures, technological frictions and sometimes even substantive law.

We need a holistic approach.
There appears to be a new motion practice at the Supreme Court of Canada: to move for reconsideration. In Poonian v. BCSC, the appellants (who were partially successful) moved for reconsideration or a re-hearing.

The motion was denied.

www.scc-csc.ca/case-dossier...
Supreme Court of Canada - SCC Case Information - Docket - 40396
Thalbinder Singh Poonian, et al. v. British Columbia Securities Commission
www.scc-csc.ca
It is great (and important) that judicial vacancies are getting so much attention. We undoubtedly need vacancies filled.

But to say that the backlog in crim and civil cases are wholly about judges misses the forest for the trees.

There is a larger resources (fed + prov) problem to fix.
Opinion - An obvious fix for Canada’s judge shortage: The logjam causing so many vacancies lies in the PMO and the justice minister’s office. Removing it would be simple, if the political will were there
An obvious fix for Canada’s judge shortage
The logjam causing so many vacancies lies in the PMO and the justice minister’s office. Removing it would be simple, if the political will were there
www.theglobeandmail.com
We’ll have to get you to an SCC argument one day…
Today, it seems the line is playing exactly as the Nazi-sympathizing Emcee would have intended.
On more than one occasion in the past two weeks — since the election — a small number of audience members have squealed with laughter at “She wouldn’t look Jewish at all.” In the late 1960s, we softened the line because the truth was too hard to hear.
Musical theatre and today’s truth

In a show about antisemitism the audiences aren’t shocked like they used to

I’m hearing from friends in the current Broadway production of “Cabaret” that the line is once again getting an audible response, but of a different sort.

www.nytimes.com/2024/11/24/o...
Opinion | I Starred in ‘Cabaret.’ We Need to Heed Its Warning.
Much has changed since the show debuted on Broadway in 1966, but it’s what hasn’t changed that should worry us.
www.nytimes.com