Publication
La Cour suprême du Canada tranche : les cadres ne pourront se syndiquer au Québec
Le 19 avril dernier, la Cour suprême du Canada a rendu une décision fort attendue en matière de syndicalisation des cadres.
Publication | July 2016
On July 13, 2016, the EEOC issued an update to its proposal to expand collection of pay data from federal contractors. The new rule was published in the Federal Register on July 14, 2016 (available here). The EEOC's initial proposed rule, which was published in January 2016, would require any business with 100 or more workers to provide detailed information about their pay practices to the federal government through the annual EEO-1 Report. The goal of these regulations was to better track gender-based pay disparities, so as to increase enforcement of equal pay standards. The pay range data collection was initially supposed to start with the September 2017 report. However, the updated rule changes the EEO-1 filing deadline to March 31, 2018. The move is supposed to ease the burden on employers by aligning the EEO-1 with federal obligations to calculate and report W-2 earnings. The previous proposed rule would have required employers to report W-2 income from October 1-September 30 of every year, which employers argued was overly burdensome. The new filing deadline remedies this.
The public comment period opened July 14, 2016, when the revised proposal was published. Members of the public will have until August 15, 2016 to submit written comments to the U.S. Office of Management and Budget (OMB).
Publication
Le 19 avril dernier, la Cour suprême du Canada a rendu une décision fort attendue en matière de syndicalisation des cadres.
Publication
Le budget 2024 propose d’élargir la portée de certains pouvoirs permettant à l’ARC de demander des renseignements aux contribuables tout en prévoyant de nouvelles conséquences pour les contribuables contrevenants.
Publication
L'impôt minimum de remplacement (IMR) est un impôt sur le revenu additionnel prévu dans la Loi de l’impôt sur le revenu (Canada) (la « Loi ») auquel sont assujettis les particuliers et certaines fiducies qui pourraient autrement avoir recours à certaines déductions et exemptions et à certains crédits pour réduire leur impôt sur le revenu fédéral canadien régulier.
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