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UCP government changes to age eligibility that could cause the early loss of benefits for hundreds of former foster children could go before Canada’s highest court if an application for an appeal to be heard is granted.
Last month, Alberta’s Court of Appeal overturned a March 2020 ruling by the Court of Queen’s Bench that had temporarily halted the loss of government benefits for hundreds of young adults who were in state care as children. The lower court had granted a temporary injunction, which paused the UCP’s changes to the Support and Financial Assistance Agreements (SFAA) program until the constitutionality of those amendments could be determined.
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Patients who suffer from severe opioid use disorder could face irreparable harms including risk of death or sexual assault if a government-funded treatment program is halted next month, an Alberta court heard Wednesday.
Clinics in Calgary and Edmonton, which provide injectable opioid agonist treatment (iOAT), are slated to close in March following a decision by the United Conservative government, pending the outcome of a court challenge.
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Shuttering those clinics would lead to “adverse health effects” for iOAT patients, who are likely to return to using street opioids, experience homelessness, contract sexually transmitted infections or lose access to primary care, argued Edmonton lawyer Avnish Nanda during Wednesday’s injunction hearing.
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Patients who suffer from severe opioid use disorder could face irreparable harms including risk of death or sexual assault if a government-funded treatment program is halted next month, an Alberta court heard Wednesday.
Clinics in Calgary and Edmonton, which provide injectable opioid agonist treatment (iOAT), are slated to close in March following a decision by the United Conservative government, pending the outcome of a court challenge.
We apologize, but this video has failed to load.
Try refreshing your browser, or Lawyer argues suspending iOAT could lead to patients dying Back to video
Shuttering those clinics would lead to “adverse health effects” for iOAT patients, who are likely to return to using street opioids, experience homelessness, contract sexually transmitted infections or lose access to primary care, argued Edmonton lawyer Avnish Nanda during Wednesday’s injunction hearing.
The new proposal would separate the smoking and service areas so staff wouldn t be exposed. Guests would need to enter the dining space for food and drink.