June 2018

Ageism: An (un)accepted form of discrimination in the workplace

Written by Jessica Rochman Fowler The tech industry is no stranger to age bias in employment practices. Several articles have been written over the past few years about ageist assumptions that permeate the tech world, including that older people can’t keep up with improving technology, or that older employees should “let the younger people do it,” with “it” referring to any number of tasks. The fact is, employing older people….

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Elder Care, Elder Law

Creation of a Testamentary Trust for Purposes of the 21-Year Deemed Disposition Rule

Last week I was fortunate to be able to attend STEP Canada’s 20th National Conference, along with 780 other trust and estate practitioners.  This was my third consecutive year attending the Conference, and yet again, it did not disappoint.  Individuals from not only across Canada but also around the world gave insightful and interesting presentations on various estates and trusts related topics. The STEP Canada/Canada Revenue Agency Round Table is….

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Canada Revenue Agency, Trusts

And the Estate Goes to…

It is imperative to make a will.  Too often lawyers come across files where an individual dies without a will (i.e. “intestate”), leaving behind a messy estate to be wrapped up and distributed.   People often wonder who inherits an intestate person’s estate. When a person dies intestate in Ontario, the distribution of his or her estate is governed by the intestacy rules set out at Part II of the Succession….

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Uncategorized

Income Splitting Loans: What’s the Use?

We have blogged about income splitting arrangements available to individuals who wish to loan funds to his/her lower income spouse or adult child, or in the case of minor children, a discretionary family trust. Such loans would be used to invest in income producing properties such marketable securities, mutual funds, real estate income trusts (to name a few). The income from these properties less the interest paid on the loans….

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Canada Revenue Agency, Estate Planning, Interest, Investments, Property, Spouse, Tax Issues, Uncategorized

Cancer 1: Dementia 0

Over the last few weeks I had the pleasure of attending two hospital events. One was a fundraiser for the new Women’s (College) Hospital and the other was a recognition lunch by Princess Margaret Cancer Foundation; two world class hospitals that we are lucky to have located in Toronto. Both key note speakers were articulate, well recognized experts in their fields and both spoke about advances in cancer research. It….

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Disability

Estate Planning for Millennials

As a “millennial” (an imprecise demographic term which describes those born between 1980 and somewhere in the late 1990s), I often hear about the ways in which my generation is doing things differently (often worse) than those generations before us: we live on our smartphones[1], we can’t seem to get out of our parents’ houses and in to our own places[2], and we are delaying getting married and having families….

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Uncategorized
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