BEGIN:VCALENDAR
VERSION:2.0
PRODID:-//Law Society of Saskatchewan - ECPv6.16.3//NONSGML v1.0//EN
CALSCALE:GREGORIAN
METHOD:PUBLISH
X-ORIGINAL-URL:https://www.lawsociety.sk.ca
REFRESH-INTERVAL;VALUE=DURATION:PT1H
X-Robots-Tag:noindex
X-PUBLISHED-TTL:PT1H
BEGIN:VTIMEZONE
TZID:America/Regina
BEGIN:STANDARD
TZOFFSETFROM:-0600
TZOFFSETTO:-0600
TZNAME:CST
DTSTART:20250101T000000
END:STANDARD
END:VTIMEZONE
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Regina:20260415T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Regina:20260415T130000
DTSTAMP:20260604T091226
CREATED:20260218T225546Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260309T200028Z
UID:10000291-1776254400-1776258000@www.lawsociety.sk.ca
SUMMARY:Webinar - Signals of Trouble: Spotting Potential Decision Traps That Escalate Cyber Liability (CPD 451)
DESCRIPTION:Qualifies for 1.0 CPD hour\, all of which qualify for Ethics \nLawyers are often contacted after a cybersecurity incident is believed to be finished. Systems may be back online\, and the organization may believe the issue is contained. In many cases\, however\, communications have not yet gone out or have been sent before the organization has fully considered its legal\, regulatory\, insurance\, or contractual obligations. This stage is where gaps can frequently surface and where legal exposure may increase. \nThis session focuses on what lawyers commonly encounter once the urgency of the initial incident has quieted. Timelines may be incomplete\, documentation may be missing\, and early decisions\, particularly around communications\, may not be clearly recorded or may have been made without full advice. Clients may be unaware that regulatory obligations\, insurance conditions\, or contractual duties remain outstanding\, or that earlier actions may narrow their options going forward. \nIn some cases\, the root cause has not been addressed\, and the organization may still be vulnerable. Participants will learn how to recognize these signals of trouble early\, how to ask practical and targeted questions\, and how to guide clients toward steps that may help reduce further risk. The session emphasizes legal awareness rather than technical expertise and supports lawyers in identifying the issues that tend to matter most at this stage of an incident. \nParticipants will leave with: \n\nA clear framework for spotting early indicators of unresolved or escalating cyber risk\nPractical suggestions for distinguishing technical remediation from legal risk signals\nActionable next step considerations for guiding clients forward\n\nPresenters:\nDavid Krebs\, Miller Thomson LLP\nBrennen Schmidt\, ALEUS Consulting Group \n__________\nFor virtual activities\, registration closes one hour before the program start time. Materials’ links are typically available two business days in advance of the program date (subject to availability and where applicable). Registrations received within two business days of the date of the program may result in not receiving materials’ links until the program date. \nProgram formats and dates are subject to change. Prices are subject to GST. This program is being recorded and will be available to registrants and on-demand subject to any issues with the recording. We reserve the right to change speakers\, modify the program schedule\, and/or revise content if necessary. In the unlikely event that the Law Society of Saskatchewan is forced to modify its program schedule\, registrants will be notified.
URL:https://www.lawsociety.sk.ca/event/webinar-signals-of-trouble-spotting-potential-decision-traps-that-escalate-cyber-liability-cpd-451/
LOCATION:Online
CATEGORIES:CPD Activity,Law Society CPD Activity,Virtual
ORGANIZER;CN="Continuing Professional Development":MAILTO:cpd@lawsociety.sk.ca
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Regina:20260422T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Regina:20260422T130000
DTSTAMP:20260604T091226
CREATED:20260304T163827Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260421T193247Z
UID:10000292-1776859200-1776862800@www.lawsociety.sk.ca
SUMMARY:Free Webinar Replay - Law Society Mentorship Program - Mentoring in the Legal Profession (CPD 420)
DESCRIPTION:Qualifies for 1.00 CPD hours. This webinar is pre-recorded. \nThe Law Society is launching the third year of a Mentorship Program\, designed to support lawyer development and reinforce a diverse and inclusive legal profession. As we approach the launch of this year’s program\, please join this webinar replay for a discussion about fostering effective mentoring relationships\, and good practices and tips for a positive mentorship experience. \nThe webinar will also provide an overview of the mentorship registration process and use of the online platform and will discuss lessons learned from the first year of the program. \nPresenter: Jennifer Houser\, Law Society of Saskatchewan\n___ \nFor this virtual activity\, registration closes 30 minutes before the program start time. Materials’ links are typically available two business days in advance of the program date (subject to availability and where applicable). Registrations received within two business days of the date of the program may result in not receiving materials’ links until the program date. \nProgram formats and dates are subject to change. Prices are subject to GST. This program is being pre-recorded and will be available to registrants and on-demand subject to any issues with the recording. We reserve the right to change speakers\, modify the program schedule\, and/or revise content if necessary. In the unlikely event that the Law Society of Saskatchewan is forced to modify its program schedule\, registrants will be notified.
URL:https://www.lawsociety.sk.ca/event/free-webinar-replay-law-society-mentorship-program-mentoring-in-the-legal-profession-cpd-420/
LOCATION:Online
CATEGORIES:CPD Activity,Law Society CPD Activity,Virtual
ORGANIZER;CN="Continuing Professional Development":MAILTO:cpd@lawsociety.sk.ca
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Regina:20260428T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Regina:20260428T130000
DTSTAMP:20260604T091226
CREATED:20260330T235432Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260414T171154Z
UID:10000293-1777377600-1777381200@www.lawsociety.sk.ca
SUMMARY:Free Webinar - Understanding Indigenous Identity: Law\, Community and Self-Determination (CPD 452)
DESCRIPTION:Qualifies for 1.0 CPD hours\, all of which qualifies for Ethics. \nPlease follow the link to register: Understanding Indigenous Identity: Law\, Community. and Self-Determination \nJoin us for an engaging discussion on Understanding Indigenous Identity: Law\, Community and Self-Determination\, a thoughtful webinar co-hosted with Lexis Nexis. This webinar explores the complex and often contested meaning of Indigenous identity in Canada\, examining how legal frameworks\, community belonging\, colonial histories\, and self‑government shape who is recognized\, who defines membership. \nWhy do these distinctions matter? Through conversation with Honourable Judge Lua Gibb and Delia Opekokew alongside moderator Matt Canning\, the discussion will unpack the differences between federally administered status and band membership\, the intergenerational impacts of status rules\, and the role of membership codes in affirming Indigenous jurisdiction and nationhood. \nSpeaker Bios\n \nThe Honourable Judge Lua Gibb\, Provincial Court of Saskatchewan is a member of the Onion Lake Cree Nation\, was appointed to the provincial court in January 2020. Prior to her appointment to the bench\, Judge Gibb worked with the province as a Crown Prosecutor; as Senior Counsel with the Public Prosecution Service of Canada and as the northern advocate and an investigator at the Saskatchewan Advocate for Children and Youth focusing on child welfare. \nAn intergenerational residential school survivor\, Judge Gibb has dedicated her legal career to creating transformative change in the way the justice system impacts Indigenous peoples and communities. She has been a champion for improving community outcomes through advocacy\, reconciliation\, and the promotion of access to justice in child welfare and criminal law. Judge Gibb has served as a faculty member for the National School for Prosecutors\, where she delivered training in how Canada’s residential schools have affected the criminal justice system as well as understanding unconscious bias in decision-making. To read more\, click here. \nDelia Opekokew (Cree\, Canoe Lake Cree First Nation\, Saskatchewan)\, IPC\, LSM\, LLD (honoris causa)\, works in association with J. de Whytell Law. \nDelia was the first Indigenous woman to be called to the Bar in Ontario in 1979 and in Saskatchewan in 1983. She attended the Beauval and Lebret Indian Residential Schools for 11 years\, the University of Winnipeg for her undergraduate studies where she received the University of Winnipeg Bursary for first year arts with distinction. She earned her LL.B. from Osgoode Hall Law School. \nDelia specializes in Aboriginal Law and Indigenous Law and represents First Nation clients from coast to coast.Delia’s experience includes representing Canoe Lake Cree First Nation’s Peoples in their successful Treaty 10 land claim. She was counsel for the Saskatchewan First Nations Veterans Association in their court action alleging that they were wrongfully deprived of veterans benefits that they were legally and morally entitled to as a result of their service in World War I\, World War II and the Korea War\, which benefits were received by their non-Indian fellow soldiers\, which action was successfully settled. To read more\, click here.  \nModerator: Matt Canning\nAs Corporate Counsel for North America at LexisNexis\, Matthew Canning provides practical and strategic legal advice across a broad range of commercial\, regulatory\, and compliance matters. Passionate about enabling growth through sound legal frameworks\, Matt plays a key role in advancing LexisNexis’s mission to advance the rule of law. \n___\nFor virtual activities\, materials’ links are typically available two business days in advance of the program date (subject to availability and where applicable). Registrations received within two business days of the date of the program may result in not receiving materials’ links until the program date. \nProgram formats and dates are subject to change. Prices are subject to GST. This program is being recorded and will be available to registrants and on-demand subject to any issues with the recording. We reserve the right to change speakers\, modify the program schedule\, and/or revise content if necessary. In the unlikely event that the Law Society of Saskatchewan is forced to modify its program schedule\, registrants will be notified.
URL:https://www.lawsociety.sk.ca/event/free-webinar-understanding-indigenous-identity-law-community-and-self-determination-cpd-452/
LOCATION:Online
CATEGORIES:Collaborative Event,CPD Activity,Law Society CPD Activity,Virtual
ORGANIZER;CN="Continuing Professional Development":MAILTO:cpd@lawsociety.sk.ca
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR