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The Law Society is created and governed by Alberta's Legal Profession Act. [6] As a law society, the LSA is much more than a professional association and every lawyer who practises in Alberta must belong to it. The society's mandate is to regulate the legal profession in the public interest.
2006–11: The Board and stakeholders continue to seek self-governance. Phase Two is never implemented. 2011: The Board offers to lead the process for the creation of a task force to reform governance. 2012: A Plan review is led by the government. 2013–14: The Public Sector Wage Arbitration Act (Bill 9) [8] is tabled.
Supplementary Retirement Plan for Public Service Managers [55] – established on July 1, 1999, this plan provides additional pension benefits to public service managers of designated employers who participate in the Management Employees Pension Plan (MEPP) and whose annual salary exceeds the yearly maximum pensionable earnings limit under ...
Canadian Information Processing Society of Alberta - Board of Directors Regulatory/Adjudicative Offers networking opportunities to IT professionals, professional certification, accreditation of post-secondary IT programs, and operates an IT job board. Advanced Education: Chartered Professional Accountants of Alberta - Board of Directors
In Canada, the National Virtual Law Library Group had presented a proposal for a free data base to the Federation of Law Societies of Canada in August 2000. Out of this initiative CanLII was created. CanLII is a non-profit organization that provides free access to legal information.
AUPE began life on March 26, 1919, when a small group of Alberta government employees held a founding meeting in north Edmonton's First Presbyterian Church. They agreed to incorporate the Civil Service Association of Alberta (CSA), and elected Judson Lambe as their first president. They adopted a crest that declared: "Unity Strength Protection."
The Society is a non-profit organization consisting entirely of students from both the University of Alberta Faculty of Law and the University of Calgary Faculty of Law. The Law Review has published issues consistently since 1955. Nonetheless, its predecessor, the Alberta Law Quarterly, was established in 1934 by University of Alberta law students.
Lords of the Western Bench: A Biographical History of the Supreme and District Courts of Alberta, 1876-1990. Calgary: Legal Archives Society of Alberta. ISBN 978-0-9681939-0-7. Mittelstadt, David (2014). People Principles Progress: The Alberta Court of Appeal's First Century 1914 to 2014 (PDF). Calgary: The Legal Archives Society of Alberta.