Latest news with #SaskatchewanGovernment


CBC
10 hours ago
- Politics
- CBC
Appeal court set to deliver decision on Sask. pronoun policy
The Saskatchewan Court of Appeal is set to release its decision in the Saskatchewan Minister of Education v. UR Pride Centre for Sexuality and Gender Diversity on Monday, settling a years-long dispute over the Saskatchewan government's pronoun policy. In August 2023 the Saskatchewan government announced that it was requiring parental consent for children under the age of 16 who want to use a different name or pronoun at school. Later that month the UR Pride Centre for Sexuality and Gender Diversity filed an originating application against the new policy, requesting a judge strike down the changes. It said the policy was not justifiable under the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, and denied gay and gender-diverse students "a safe and welcoming educational environment in which to be themselves." UR Pride also argued that the policy outed children who weren't ready to express their new identity to their parents, and that that would potentially put them at risk of harm. The decision is expected to be delivered shortly after 10 a.m.


CTV News
04-07-2025
- Business
- CTV News
Many Sask. childcare operators can't continue $10-a-day childcare without extension of federal program
A recent survey of Saskatchewan childcare operators shows that most respondents feel they will not be able to continue offering $10-per-day childcare if the province does not sign an extension of the program with Ottawa. The survey, conducted by Child Care Now Saskatchewan and shared by the Opposition NDP on Friday, revealed that more than 77 per cent of respondents feel they would be unable to continue offering $10-a-day childcare. Child Care Now Saskatchewan says it surveyed around 50 operators across the province in March, with 22 individual or multi-centre organizations responding - which represents 1,526 $10 per day spaces. The Saskatchewan Government's current agreement with Ottawa expires March 31, 2026. Saskatchewan and Alberta are the only two provinces without a new agreement to extend the program to 2031. Ontario currently has an agreement in principle. On Friday, NDP MLA Joan Pratchler said Saskatchewan is facing a childcare crisis and parents need reassurance that they'll have a place to care for their children in the near future. Pratchler recently sent a letter to Minister of Education Everett Hindley, indicating that affordable high-quality childcare is being put in a precarious position without a signed deal. The NDP says that parents, operators and early childhood educators have been calling on the province to get a deal done since the start of 2025. 'There is money on the table, and we need answers as to why they are not signing the extension – the livelihood of every family in Saskatchewan that uses childcare is at stake,' Cara Werner from the Southeast Saskatchewan Directors Association said in a news release. Cara Steiner, executive director of Prairie Lily Early Learning Centre in Regina, said in the release that without a new federal deal and provincial funding formula, many businesses are not sustainable and will be forced to close. 'Time is up. People are losing patience. Get moving already and sign the thing,' Pratchler said in the release. Throughout 2025, the provincial government has indicated it plans to sign an agreement with Ottawa to extend the federal program and is ready to negotiate. In an emailed statement on Friday the province indicated that it is continuing to call on the federal government to sit down and re-negotiate an extension to the childcare agreement. 'Ministry of Education officials have had ongoing meetings with federal counterparts as part of the current agreement, during which time they have re-affirmed our commitment to signing an extension,' the statement read. 'Education Minister Everett Hindley has also written numerous letters to the previous and now current federal minister to set up a meeting to discuss the extension,' the province said. The province also feels the NDP simply wants it to sign the offer on the table, adding that the current agreement doesn't expire until March 2026 and there is room to negotiate a better offer that would benefit Saskatchewan people. During an interview with CTV Morning Live on April 17, Hindley indicated that the province would be ready to begin negotiations with Ottawa once the April 28 federal election was done. In the interview, Hindley said provinces that signed a new agreement early on were now starting to come back to the table to ask questions, and Saskatchewan wanted to prioritize a fair deal over moving quickly to sign. 'You are seeing some of the other provinces now start to come back and say we signed this deal rather quickly back in February and now we want to make some changes,' he said. Hindley also indicated at the time that the province was presented with an offer from Ottawa in February and given a two-week window to negotiate. 'We said we need to bring forward some concerns that are being brought to our attention by families and childcare operators around the province,' he said. One of those concerns, according to Hindley, was how Ottawa's offer to Saskatchewan differed from Manitoba's. A main question surrounded Saskatchewan children aging out of the $10 program when they turn six. 'And in Manitoba that is not the case they've got a limit of [seven-years-old], so we are saying that's a commonsense thing we think should be applied here in Saskatchewan, why wouldn't we negotiate that into the new deal,' Hindley said. Hindley indicated that the province does not want substantive major changes to the current offer it has, but wanted to ensure any agreement they sign is long-term, sustainable and ensures the addition of more childcare spaces.


CBC
30-05-2025
- Climate
- CBC
Saskatchewan joins Manitoba in declaring state of emergency over wildfires
Cliff Buettner, the former director of Prince Albert Grand Council Emergency Services, says current weather forecasts make for complicated next steps. The Saskatchewan government declared a state of emergency on Thursday as wildfires continue to threaten communities across the province.


CBC
29-05-2025
- Climate
- CBC
Sask. declares state of emergency due to wildfires
The Saskatchewan government has declared a provincewide state of emergency, as wildfires raging in the north force thousands to flee their homes. The state of emergency will be in effect for 30 days, but could be extended.


CBC
29-05-2025
- Climate
- CBC
Sask. premier declares provincial state of emergency
The Saskatchewan government has declared a provincewide state of emergency, as wildfires raging in the north force thousands to flee their homes. The state of emergency will be in effect for 30 days, but could be extended.