Latest updates
CLEO is pleased to announce that we have added new features to the Steps to Justice embed tools.
Accessibility
Embedded content is more accessible to users with disabilities. Users can now tab their way through the content or let their screen readers read the content to them. If you have already embedded Steps to...
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.steps-box .item{display: inline-block;vertical-align: top;width: 33.333333%;padding: 0 6px;margin: 0 0 12px;}
.steps-box .step{position: relative;font-size: 17px;line-height: 1.882352941176471em;color: #fff;padding: 37px 36px 160px;overflow: hidden;background: #106c9d;}
.steps-box .step...
Steps to Justice now has information about online shopping and ordering a product or service over the phone or by mail. Find out more at: http://stepstojustice.ca/category/legal-topic/consumer-law/buying-goods-and-services
Here is just some of the new legal content we have launched recently on Steps to Justice:
- Employment and Work - Employment Insurance
- Social Assistance - Working while on social assistance
- Family Law - Child Protection - Motherrisk
- Social Assistance - Assets or inheritances
- Consumer Law -...
TORONTO, Jan. 18, 2017 /CNW/ - Problems with landlords, unfair treatment at a job, and getting separated or divorced: these are some of the issues that Ontarians face every day. However, many cannot access the information they need to understand the legal implications of their problems and respond.
Now they can go to Steps to Justice – a...
Stepstojustice.ca aims to provide reliable answers to common legal questions and problems. 'It’s sort of like an FAQ (Frequently Asked Questions) of law,' says Paul Schabas, the treasurer of the Law Society of Upper Canada.
By Alyshah Hasham Staff Reporter thestar.com
Wed., Jan. 18, 2017
What can happen if I’m behind in my...
Steps to Justice was profiled in a January 4, 2017 column entitled Technologizing Access to Justice in Slaw: Canada's online legal magazine. Here is a excerpt from that article:
By The Action Group on Access to Justice
Last month, Ryerson University’s Legal Innovation Zone (LIZ) and Ontario’s Ministry of the Attorney General...
Steps to Justice was profiled in a September 29, 2016 column entitled Default vs. Diversity in Slaw: Canada's online legal magazine. Here is a excerpt from that article:
I recently attended an access to justice conference where the majority of speakers and attendees were white men. As a South Asian woman my presence felt...