Legal Letters for Canada
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Defective Vehicle Demand LetterDemand a refund, replacement, or repair for a defective vehicle under Canadian Consumer Protection Acts and CAMVAP. Includes specific provincial timelines and statutory damages.$19 USDDefective Vehicle Final NoticeStage-2 of the Canadian defective vehicle ladder. A final warning before pursuing CAMVAP arbitration or provincial court.$19 USDOverdue Invoice Demand LetterSend a firm, legally aggressive demand to a Canadian client who hasn't paid an invoice. Invokes provincial statutory interest rates.$19 USDDebt Collection Final NoticeStage-2 of the Canadian freelancer debt collection ladder. An aggressive, final warning before filing suit, invoking the exact local provincial court name.$19 USDOntario Unpaid Wages Demand — Employment Standards Act 2000Stage-1 of the Ontario wages chain. First-person demand to a provincially-regulated Ontario employer under the Employment Standards Act 2000. Cites ESA ss.11, 12, 13, 22-32, 33-41, 57-61, 63-65, 74, 96, 103-106, 111. 14-day response window before MOL Employment Standards Branch referral. UPL-safe under LSO By-Law 4 (first-person demand). Federally-regulated employers redirected to Canada Labour Code Part III route.$19 USDOntario Employment Standards Claim — Narrative for MOL FilingStage-2 of the Ontario wages chain. Narrative for filing the Employment Standards Claim with the Ministry of Labour (ontario.ca/page/file-employment-standards-claim) after the employer ignored, denied, or partially answered the stage-1 demand. Documents ESA 2000 contraventions and requests enforcement (Compliance Order under s.103, 10% admin cost recovery, interest, AMPs under ss.74-74.18, reprisal remedy under s.74). Includes ESA s.97 election notice. $9 returning-buyer price for stage-1 buyers.$19 USDOntario RTA Tenant Demand — Illegal Entry, Lock Change, HarassmentStage-1 of the Ontario tenant chain. First-person demand to a landlord under Residential Tenancies Act 2006 ss.20-25, 27, 29. Covers illegal entry, lock changes without providing a key, harassment / threats / coercion, vital-service withholding, substantial interference with reasonable enjoyment, and agent conduct. Cites s.234 provincial-offence exposure (fines up to $50,000 / $250,000) and s.235 reprisal prohibitions. 7-day response window before LTB Tenant Application T2 filing. UPL-safe under LSO By-Law 4.$19 USDOntario RTA — Final Notice Before LTB Tenant Application (T2)Stage-2 of the Ontario tenant chain. Final notice to the landlord with rent-abatement calculation against LTB precedent banding (10-30% of monthly rent for non-emergency interference; higher for vital-service withholding) and concrete intent to file LTB Tenant Application T2 plus Rental Housing Enforcement Unit referral. NOT a T2 form draft — settlement-pressure correspondence only. $9 returning-buyer price for stage-1 buyers.$19 USDOntario RTA Repair Demand — Section 20 Maintenance + Vital ServicesStage-1 of the Ontario RTA repairs chain. First-person demand from a tenant under RTA 2006 ss.20 (maintenance) and 21 (vital services). Covers heat / water / electricity / gas, leaks, mould, pests, structural, electrical, fire safety, appliances, windows-doors, common areas, environmental hazards. Cites Maintenance Standards Regulation O. Reg. 517/06 (or municipal property-standards by-law) and s.234(a)-(b) provincial-offence exposure ($50k / $250k fines). 14-day window before LTB T6 + municipal inspection. Explicit warning that Ontario does NOT authorise rent withholding. UPL-safe under LSO By-Law 4.$19 USDOntario RTA — Final Notice Before LTB T6 + Municipal EnforcementStage-2 of the Ontario RTA repairs chain. Final notice with rent-abatement calculation against LTB precedent banding (5-15% low / 15-30% moderate / 30-50% high / 50-100% severe), and concrete intent to file LTB T6 + municipal property-standards inspection + RHEU referral. NOT a T6 form draft. $9 returning-buyer price for stage-1 buyers.$19 USDCanada Labour Code Part III — Unpaid Wages Demand (Federal Employees)Demand letter for federally regulated Canadian employees (banks, telecoms, airlines, interprovincial trucking, railways, broadcasting, federal Crown, marine shipping, federal pipelines, postal & courier, grain elevators, First Nations band councils, nuclear facilities). Cites CLC ss.184, 184.01, 191-202, 230 (graduated termination notice in force 1 Feb 2024), 235 (severance), 239(1.2) (paid medical leave), 240 (unjust dismissal — 12-month service eligibility + 90-day filing deadline), 246.1 (reprisal), 251.01 → 251.1 → 251.12 (wage-recovery spine; s.247.1 is REPEALED). Federal minimum wage $18.15/hr effective 1 April 2026 (ESDC press release 24 Mar 2026). 14-day window before Labour Program complaint at canada.ca.$19 USDCRA Notice of Objection — Income Tax Act s.165Formal Notice of Objection to the Chief of Appeals at a CRA Tax Services Office or Tax Centre under Income Tax Act (R.S.C. 1985, c. 1 (5th Supp.)) s.165. Triggers Minister's reconsideration under s.165(3) and preserves right of appeal to Tax Court of Canada under s.169. Deadlines: individuals + graduated rate estates — later of 1 year after filing-due date OR 90 days after Notice of Assessment (s.165(1)(a)); corporations + other taxpayers — 90 days (s.165(1)(b)). Federal letter scales across all 10 provinces + 3 territories. UPL-safe — CRA Appeals intake is designed for self-filers. Verified to laws-lois.justice.gc.ca/eng/acts/i-3.3/section-165.html.$19 USDIRCC Mandamus Precursor — Demand for Delayed Decision (Federal Court Pre-Litigation)Pre-litigation written demand to IRCC for a delayed immigration decision. Cites Federal Courts Act (R.S.C. 1985, c. F-7) s.18.1 + IRPA (S.C. 2001, c. 27) + Apotex Inc. v. Canada (AG), [1994] 1 FC 742 (CA), aff'd [1994] 3 SCR 1100 (the leading mandamus authority). Establishes the 'demand and reasonable opportunity to comply' prerequisite required by the Federal Court before granting mandamus. Federal letter — applies to every IRCC delay regardless of province; covers PR, citizenship, study/work permits, spousal sponsorship, refugee, PNP, BOWP/OWP/SOWP, PGWP. UPL-safe at demand stage; Federal Court application benefits from counsel.$39 USDCanada Labour Code s.240 — Unjust Dismissal Demand (Federal Employees)Pre-filing demand for federally-regulated employees dismissed without just cause. Cites Canada Labour Code (R.S.C. 1985, c. L-2) ss. 240–242 + CIRB adjudication (post-Bill C-44 2019 reform) + s.246.1 anti-reprisal. Eligibility: 12+ months continuous service, non-managerial, non-unionised (Wilson v. Atomic Energy, 2016 SCC 29). Filing deadline: 90 days from dismissal (s.240(2)). Remedies under s.242(4): reinstatement, back-pay, aggravated damages per Honda v. Keays, 2008 SCC 39. Filing is free at canada.ca. UPL-safe.$39 USDBC Illegal Rent Increase Challenge — RTA s.42 DemandStage-1 demand to a BC landlord to withdraw an illegal rent-increase notice under Residential Tenancy Act, SBC 2002, c.78 ss.42 + 43. Cites 2026 BC rent-cap 2.3% (gov.bc.ca news release; CBC News). Defects covered: cap-exceeding; wrong Form RTB-7; <3 calendar months notice; within 12 months; retaliatory; defective service under s.88. Stage-2: RTB Application for Dispute Resolution at tenancydispute.gov.bc.ca/DisputeAccess (RTA s.67) with $100 fee + monetary order. UPL-safe; BC RTB intake designed for tenant self-filers.$9 USDOntario Illegal Rent Increase Challenge — RTA 2006 DemandStage-1 demand to an Ontario landlord to withdraw an illegal rent-increase notice under Residential Tenancies Act, 2006 (SO 2006 c.17) ss. 116, 119, 120 + 2026 Ontario guideline 2.1% (ontario.ca/page/residential-rent-increases; statutory cap 2.5% under s.120(2.1)). Above-Guideline Increases require LTB s.126 application — cannot be unilateral. Defects covered: exceeding guideline; wrong Form N1; <90 days notice; within 12 months; first-occupancy s.6.1 exemption misapplied. Stage-2: LTB Form T1 (filing fee $48) at tribunalsontario.ca/ltb. RTA s.135 limit: 1 year from illegal payment. UPL-safe.$9 USDOntario Common-Law Reasonable Notice — Wrongful Dismissal DemandWithout-prejudice demand for common-law reasonable-notice damages beyond the ESA minimum. Cites Bardal v. Globe & Mail (1960), 24 DLR (2d) 140 (Ont HC); ESA 2000 s.5(1) (no contracting out); Honda v. Keays, 2008 SCC 39 (manner-of-dismissal damages); Matthews v. Ocean Nutrition, 2020 SCC 26 (bonus + options vesting through notice period); Waksdale v. Swegon, 2020 ONCA 391 + Rahman v. Cannon Design, 2022 ONCA 451 (termination-clause invalidity); Wallace v. United Grain Growers, [1997] 3 SCR 701. Provincial — Ontario. Executive-market letter — 12-24 months of recovery typical on Bardal/Waksdale facts.$39 USDCriminal Code s.347 — Criminal Interest Rate Refund DemandFederal demand to a lender citing Criminal Code (RSC 1985 c.C-46) s.347 — criminal rate of interest reduced from 60% effective annual rate to 35% APR effective 1 January 2025 (Canada Gazette Part II Vol 159 No 1; gazette.gc.ca/rp-pr/p2/2025/2025-01-01/html/si-tr4-eng.html). Covers consumer installment, lines of credit, private personal loans, BNPL. Exemptions: pawnbroker <CAD $1,000 (48% cap); commercial CAD $10,001-$500,000 (48% cap); commercial >$500,000 (no cap); payday (provincial). Civil enforcement: Garland v. Consumers' Gas Co., 2004 SCC 25 (void for illegality). Federal letter — applies in every province + territory.$9 USDQuebec Notice of Objection (MR-93.1.1-V) — Revenu QuébecBilingual French/English Notice of Objection to a Revenu Québec assessment (Quebec personal income tax, QST, source deductions, fuel tax, mining tax, etc.). Cites Tax Administration Act (RLRQ c.A-6.002) s.93.1.1 (90-day deadline from notice date) + s.93.1.1.1 (extension up to 1 year on impossibility). MR-93.1.1-V form or equivalent letter accepted. Filing is FREE. Plain-language wizard; UPL-safe under Loi sur le Barreau (RLRQ c.B-1) ss.128-129.$19 USDOntario Notice of Objection — Ministry of FinanceSelf-filed Notice of Objection to an Ontario Ministry of Finance assessment under any MOF-administered statute: Taxation Act 2007 (non-CRA matters), Employer Health Tax Act, Retail Sales Tax Act, Fuel Tax Act, Gasoline Tax Act, Tobacco Tax Act, Mining Tax Act, Land Transfer Tax Act, IFTA. 180-day deadline (30 days IFTA); extension to 1 year on impossibility. Filing is FREE. Ontario personal income tax goes through federal CRA via cra-notice-of-objection-ita-s165, not this letter. UPL-safe under LSO By-Law 4.$19 USDNova Scotia Security Deposit Return Demand — Residential Tenancies Act s.12AStage-1 demand from a Nova Scotia tenant to the landlord under RTA (R.S.N.S. 1989, c.401) s.12A. Triggers the 10-day return rule (s.12A(1)) and signals s.12A(4) — landlord who fails to file a security deposit claim with the Director within 10 days is barred from ANY deduction. Cites Residential Tenancies Regulations (deposit capped at one-half month rent; wear-and-tear deductions barred). Stage-2: Form J — Application to Director of Residential Tenancies, FREE. UPL-safe under Legal Profession Act (S.N.S. 2004, c.28).$19 USDNova Scotia Form J — Application to Director — Security Deposit RecoveryStage-2 narrative attached to Form J at the Residential Tenancies Program. Recovers a wrongfully withheld security deposit + interest + costs + (where applicable) administrative penalties under RTA s.12A + s.13 + s.17. FREE filing for tenants. Director's order appealable to Small Claims Court of Nova Scotia within 10 days. $9 returning-buyer price for stage-1 (nova-scotia-rta-deposit-return-demand) buyers via the receipt-token flow.$19 USDNova Scotia Repair Demand — RTA s.9 (Statutory Condition 1)Stage-1 demand from a Nova Scotia tenant under RTA (R.S.N.S. 1989, c.401) s.9 Statutory Condition 1 (landlord shall keep premises in a good state of repair AND fit for habitation AND in compliance with health/safety/housing-standards laws). Signals Form J — Application to Director stage-2, plus Public Health Act / municipal property-maintenance bylaws as parallel tracks. Bill 178 (2025) directs the Minister of Service Nova Scotia to publish landlord repair standards. UPL-safe under Legal Profession Act (S.N.S. 2004, c.28).$19 USDNova Scotia Form J — Application to Director — Repair / Statutory Condition 1Stage-2 narrative attached to Form J. Seeks an order to repair, rent abatement, reimbursement of out-of-pocket expenses, and (where applicable) administrative penalties for breach of RTA s.9 Statutory Condition 1. FREE filing for tenants. Director's order appealable to Small Claims Court within 10 days. Public Health Act + municipal property-maintenance bylaws run as parallel enforcement. $9 returning-buyer price for stage-1 (nova-scotia-rta-repair-demand) buyers via the receipt-token flow.$19 USDNew Brunswick Security Deposit Return Demand — RTA s.8.1 / s.10Stage-1 demand for NB tenant. NB has a UNIQUE system: the landlord must deliver the security deposit to the Residential Tenancies Tribunal within 15 days under s.8.1 — the Tribunal holds in trust. At end of tenancy the landlord has 7 days to file a retention claim; absent a claim the Tribunal returns the deposit. Cites RTA (SNB 1975 c.R-10.2) ss.8, 8.1, 10 + NB Reg 82-218 (wear-and-tear bar). Stage-2: Tribunal Application, FREE filing. UPL-safe under Law Society Act 1996 (S.N.B. 1996, c.89).$19 USDNew Brunswick Tribunal Application — Security Deposit RecoveryStage-2 narrative for NB Residential Tenancies Tribunal Application to recover the security deposit held in trust under s.8.1. Cites RTA SNB 1975 c.R-10.2 ss.8, 8.1, 10, 11 + NB Reg 82-218. FREE filing. Tribunal orders enforceable in Provincial Court of NB; appeals to Court of Queen's Bench within 30 days. $9 returning-buyer for stage-1 (new-brunswick-rta-deposit-return-demand) buyers.$19 USDNew Brunswick Repair Demand — Residential Tenancies ActStage-1 demand under NB Residential Tenancies Act (SNB 1975 c.R-10.2). Landlord obligation to deliver and maintain premises in good state of repair and fit for habitation throughout the tenancy. Cannot be waived by lease terms. Signals NB Residential Tenancies Tribunal as stage-2 escalation. Cites RTA + NB Reg 82-218. UPL-safe under Law Society Act 1996 (S.N.B. 1996, c.89).$19 USDNew Brunswick Tribunal Application — Repair / HabitabilityStage-2 narrative for NB Tribunal Application seeking order to repair, rent abatement, and reimbursement for breach of landlord repair / habitability obligations under NB RTA (SNB 1975 c.R-10.2). FREE filing. Tribunal orders enforceable in Provincial Court; appeals to Court of Queen's Bench within 30 days. $9 returning-buyer for stage-1 (new-brunswick-rta-repair-demand) buyers.$19 USDPEI Security Deposit Return Demand — Residential Tenancy Act (SPEI 2022 c.88)Stage-1 demand under the PEI Residential Tenancy Act (SPEI 2022 c.88, in force 8 April 2023; replaces the former Rental of Residential Property Act). 15-day return-or-file rule after the tenancy ends — the landlord must return the deposit or apply to the Director to retain it within 15 days, or owe the tenant double the deposit; the tenant may file an Application Re Determination of Security Deposit with the Director of Residential Rental Property. Wear-and-tear deductions are barred. Stage-2: Director Application, then IRAC appeal. UPL-safe under Legal Profession Act (RSPEI 1988 c.L-6.1).$19 USDPEI Application Re Determination of Security DepositStage-2 narrative for Application Re Determination of Security Deposit filed with the Director of Residential Rental Property at the PEI Rental Office. Decisions appealable to IRAC (Island Regulatory and Appeals Commission). FREE filing. Cites the PEI Residential Tenancy Act (SPEI 2022 c.88, in force 8 April 2023; replaces the former Rental of Residential Property Act) + Legal Profession Act (RSPEI 1988 c.L-6.1). $9 returning-buyer for stage-1 (pei-rrpa-deposit-return-demand) buyers.$19 USDPEI Repair Demand — Residential Tenancy Act (SPEI 2022 c.88)Stage-1 repair demand under the PEI Residential Tenancy Act (SPEI 2022 c.88, in force 8 April 2023; replaces the former Rental of Residential Property Act) — the landlord must keep the premises in a good state of repair, fit for habitation, and in compliance with health/safety/housing laws throughout the tenancy. Stage-2: Application with Director of Residential Rental Property; IRAC appeal. UPL-safe under Legal Profession Act (RSPEI 1988 c.L-6.1).$19 USDPEI Director Application — Repair (Residential Tenancy Act)Stage-2 narrative for the PEI Director of Residential Rental Property Application seeking order to repair, rent abatement, and reimbursement for breach of the landlord's repair obligation under the PEI Residential Tenancy Act (SPEI 2022 c.88, in force 8 April 2023; replaces the former Rental of Residential Property Act). FREE filing. Decisions appealable to IRAC. $9 returning-buyer for stage-1 (pei-rrpa-repair-demand) buyers.$19 USDNL Security Deposit Return Demand — Residential Tenancies Act, 2018Stage-1 demand under Newfoundland & Labrador Residential Tenancies Act, 2018 (SNL 2018 c.R-14.2). 10-day return rule after vacancy; if landlord has a claim, requires written agreement OR Application to Director of Residential Tenancies at Service NL. Wear-and-tear deductions barred. Stage-2: Director Application, FREE filing. UPL-safe under Law Society Act 1999 (SNL 1999, c.L-9.1).$19 USDNL Director Application — Security Deposit RecoveryStage-2 narrative for Application to the Director of Residential Tenancies at Service NL under Residential Tenancies Act, 2018 (SNL 2018 c.R-14.2). FREE filing. Director's order enforceable in NL Supreme Court. $9 returning-buyer for stage-1 (nl-rta-deposit-return-demand) buyers.$19 USDNL Repair Demand — Residential Tenancies Act, 2018Stage-1 demand under Newfoundland & Labrador Residential Tenancies Act, 2018 (SNL 2018 c.R-14.2). Landlord shall maintain premises in good state of repair, fit for habitation, and in compliance with health/safety/housing laws throughout the tenancy. Stage-2: Application to Director of Residential Tenancies at Service NL. UPL-safe under Law Society Act 1999 (SNL 1999, c.L-9.1).$19 USDNL Director Application — Repair / HabitabilityStage-2 narrative for the NL Director of Residential Tenancies Application seeking order to repair, rent abatement, and reimbursement for breach of the landlord's repair / habitability obligation under Residential Tenancies Act, 2018 (SNL 2018 c.R-14.2). FREE filing. Director's order enforceable in NL Supreme Court. $9 returning-buyer for stage-1 (nl-rta-repair-demand) buyers.$19 USDCanada PSDPA — Whistleblower Reprisal ComplaintFederal public-servant whistleblower-reprisal complaint to the Public Sector Integrity Commissioner (PSIC) under the Public Servants Disclosure Protection Act (SC 2005 c.46) s.19. 60-day filing window (s.19(2); extendable on Commissioner discretion). Contested complaints referred to the Public Servants Disclosure Protection Tribunal (PSDPT). Remedies: reinstatement, back-pay, compensation, record-cleansing, disciplinary action against reprisers. FREE filing. Covered: federal public service, RCMP civilian, federal agencies, Crown corporations. UPL-safe; PSIC intake designed for self-filers.$19 USDOntario Last-Month-Rent Interest Demand — RTA 2006 s.106(6)Demand under Residential Tenancies Act, 2006 (S.O. 2006, c.17) s.106(6) for unpaid annual interest on the LMR (last-month-rent) deposit at the s.120 guideline rate (2026 guideline: 2.1%; statutory cap 2.5% under s.120(2.1)). Landlord may apply interest to top-up under s.106(7), credit under s.106(8). Stage-2: LTB Form T1 (Tenant Application — Rebate) at tribunalsontario.ca/ltb. $53 filing fee (2025-2026); fee-waiver available. RTA s.135 1-year-back rule. UPL-safe under LSO By-Law 4.$9 USDCHRC Federal Discrimination Complaint NarrativeSelf-filed Canadian Human Rights Commission complaint narrative for federally regulated employers, services, federal departments, the RCMP, and First Nations governments. Cites CHRA ss.3 (13 prohibited grounds), 5 (services), 6 (commercial premises / residential accommodation), 7 (employment), 12 (hate publication), 14 (harassment), 14.1 (retaliation), 41(1)(e) (12-month time limit), 53(2)(e) and 53(3) (remedies up to $20,000 each, max $40,000 non-economic).$39 USDPIPEDA Access / Withdrawal of Consent / Deletion RequestConsumer privacy request under PIPEDA Schedule 1 (cl 4.3.8 withdraw consent, 4.5/4.5.3 limit retention, 4.9 access, 4.10 challenge) and s.8(3) 30-day response. Quebec Law 25 / AB PIPA / BC PIPA overlay framing where intra-provincial. OPC complaint then Federal Court under s.14 (1 year) with damages under s.16 (including damages for humiliation). Bill C-27 / CPPA died on the Order Paper 6 Jan 2025; PIPEDA remains the federal law.$19 USDCRTC / CCTS Telecom & TV Provider ComplaintProvider-direct telecom / TV complaint with CCTS escalation. Cites Wireless Code (TRP 2017-200), Internet Code (TRP 2019-269), TV Service Provider Code (BRP 2016-1), and Telecom Regulatory Policy CRTC 2026-43 (in force; enforced 12 June 2026 — bans activation / modification fees + ECF on wireless plans without subsidised devices + requires self-service mechanism). CCTS $5,000 cap, 1-year filing window (Procedural Code s.8.3(a)).$19 USDBC Unpaid Wages Demand — Employment Standards Act (RSBC 1996, c.113)Stage-1 of the BC wages chain. First-person demand under BC ESA. Cites s.17 (paydays), s.18 (48-hr / 6-day final pay), s.40 (overtime 1.5×/2×), s.44-46 (stat holidays), s.49.1 (5+3 sick days), s.57-58 (vacation 4%/6%), s.63 (termination notice max 8 weeks), s.74 (6-month complaint window), s.79-80 (Determination + 12/24-month recovery), s.83 (reprisal), s.96 (director personal liability — 2 months wages per employee per director, NOT pro-rated), s.98 admin penalty. Self-Help Kit prerequisite eliminated 2019 — file directly at services.labour.gov.bc.ca/Complaints/s/. Federal employers routed to CLC Part III.$19 USDBC Employment Standards Complaint — Narrative for Branch FilingStage-2 of the BC wages chain. Narrative for filing the Employment Standards Complaint at services.labour.gov.bc.ca/Complaints/s/. Documents ESA contraventions and requests enforcement (Determination s.79, AMP s.98 escalating $500/$2,500/$10,000, director liability s.96 with 2-months-per-employee-per-director, s.83 reprisal remedy, s.80 24-month extended recovery). Filing free; Self-Help Kit eliminated 2019. $9 returning-buyer for stage-1 buyers.$19 USDAlberta Unpaid Wages Demand — Employment Standards Code (RSA 2000, c.E-9)Stage-1 of the Alberta wages chain. First-person demand under Alberta ESC. Cites s.8 (10-day pay), s.21 (overtime 8/day OR 44/week whichever greater), s.34 (vacation), s.55-56 (graduated termination notice), s.82 (6-month complaint), s.87/89 (Officer's Order), s.90(3) (6-month admin lookback — KEY: civil court gives 2-year via Limitations Act), s.95 (21-day Umpire appeal — Provincial Court judge, NOT Adjudicator), s.112 (director personal liability 6 months wages per employee, 2-year cut-off), s.125 (anti-reprisal — 'Adverse effect on employment prohibited'). Part 4.1 penalties up to $10,000/day. Filing free at escs.alberta.ca.$19 USDAlberta Employment Standards Complaint — Narrative for Officer FilingStage-2 of the Alberta wages chain. Narrative for filing at escs.alberta.ca. Critical Alberta specifics: administrative back-wage lookback under s.90(3) is 6 MONTHS (civil court gives 2 years under Limitations Act — Scheffler v Mourits Trucking Ltd 2023 ABKB); anti-reprisal is s.125 ONLY; appeal is to UMPIRE under s.95 within 21 DAYS (not 30, not Adjudicator). Director liability s.112 with 2-year cut-off. $9 returning-buyer for stage-1 buyers.$19 USDBC Deposit Return Demand — Residential Tenancy Act s.38Stage-1 of the BC deposit chain. First-person demand under RTA SBC 2002 c.78. Cites s.19(1) (security deposit + pet damage deposit each capped at half-month — separate deposits, total may reach one month), s.18 + Guide Dog and Service Dog Act SBC 2015 c.17 (no pet deposit for certified guide/service dog), s.23/s.24 (move-in inspection extinguishment), s.35/s.36 (move-out inspection extinguishment), s.37 (tenant leaving obligations), s.38(1) (15-day return window from LATER of tenancy end or written forwarding address), s.38(6) DOUBLING PENALTY (landlord loses claim rights AND owes double the deposit), s.39 (1-year forwarding-address rule — failure to provide extinguishes recovery), s.60(1) (2-year limitation), s.84/s.85 (enforcement: Supreme Court / Provincial Court Small Claims under $35k). Lists RTB-12T-DR (Direct Request, written-only) vs RTB-12T-PT (Participatory) at tenancydispute.gov.bc.ca. UPL-safe under LPA SBC 1998 c.9 s.15(1)(a).$19 USDBC RTB Deposit Dispute Application — Narrative for Branch FilingStage-2 of the BC deposit chain. Narrative for filing the Application for Dispute Resolution at https://tenancydispute.gov.bc.ca/DisputeAccess/ after the landlord ignored, denied, or partially answered the stage-1 demand. Routes between RTB-12T-DR (Direct Request, written-only) and RTB-12T-PT (Participatory, telephone). Requests return of deposit, s.38(6) doubling penalty, s.24/s.36 extinguishment, interest, $100 filing-fee reimbursement. Cites s.19(1), s.23/s.24, s.35/s.36, s.37, s.38(1), s.38(6), s.39, s.60(1) (2-year), s.65/s.72 (cost recovery), s.77 (Director's order), s.79 (narrow review — $50 fee), s.84/s.85 (enforcement). $9 returning-buyer for stage-1 buyers.$19 USDAlberta Deposit Return Demand — Residential Tenancies Act s.46Stage-1 of the Alberta deposit chain. First-person demand under RTA SA 2004 c.R-17.1. Cites s.43 (deposit cap one month — NO separate pet deposit category in Alberta), s.44 (trust account + written receipt), s.45 (prescribed interest — 0% rate for 2026), s.46(1) (move-in / move-out inspection reports), s.46(2) (10-day return clock from GIVING UP POSSESSION — not from forwarding address; Alberta differs from BC here), s.46(5) (no wear-and-tear deductions), s.46(6) (no deductions absent inspection reports), ss.54.1-54.7 (RTDRS Part 5.1), s.54.3 (forum-exclusion rule), Limitations Act s.3 (2-year limit). Lists Form RTDR0008 (Tenant's Application) at rocs.alberta.ca/ols-rtdrs/#!/ols-login; RTDRS fees from 1 April 2026: $75 (≤$7,500) / $150 (>$7,500). NO doubled-deposit penalty in Alberta (unlike BC). UPL-safe.$19 USDAlberta RTDRS Deposit Application — Narrative for Tenancy Dispute OfficerStage-2 of the Alberta deposit chain. Narrative for filing Form RTDR0008 (Tenant's Application) at the Residential Tenancy Dispute Resolution Service (rocs.alberta.ca/ols-rtdrs/#!/ols-login) or alternatively in the Alberta Court of Justice (Civil Division — formerly Provincial Court, renamed April 1, 2023). Cites s.43, s.44, s.45, s.46(1), s.46(2), s.46(5), s.46(6), ss.54.1-54.7, s.54.3 forum-exclusion, Limitations Act s.3. Requests return of deposit, prescribed interest, s.46(6) preclusion declaration, filing-fee reimbursement, general damages. RTDRS fees from 1 April 2026: $75 (≤$7,500) / $150 (>$7,500); ~30-day target decision. $9 returning-buyer for stage-1 buyers.$19 USDBC Repair Demand — Residential Tenancy Act ss.27, 32, 33Stage-1 of the BC repair chain. First-person demand under RTA SBC 2002 c.78. Cites s.32(1) (landlord must maintain rental property compliant with health/safety/housing law AND suitable for occupation), s.27 (essential services — heat, water, electricity, locks, hot-water, gas, smoke detectors), s.33(1)-(5) (narrow emergency-repair right with two-attempt requirement and reimbursement under s.33(5) + s.67), s.45(3) (tenant termination for material-term breach with cure-notice), s.60(1) (2-year limit from end of tenancy), s.65(1)(a) (order to comply), s.65(1)(b) (rent deduction for repairs), s.65(1)(f) (rent reduction equivalent to value loss), s.67 (compensation), s.84-85 (enforcement; s.83 is REPEALED). Signals Form RTB-12T-CT (Current Tenancy) at tenancydispute.gov.bc.ca (Direct Request not available for repair orders). Verified May 2026: Bill 14 (2024) did not amend the repair framework. UPL-safe under LPA SBC 1998 c.9 s.15(1).$19 USDBC RTB Repair Application — Narrative for Branch FilingStage-2 of the BC repair chain. Narrative for filing the Application for Dispute Resolution at https://tenancydispute.gov.bc.ca/DisputeAccess/ using Form RTB-12T-CT (Current Tenancy) where still in the unit, or RTB-12T-PT (Past Tenancy) after move-out. Direct Request NOT available for repair claims. Requests s.65(1)(a) order to comply with s.32, s.65(1)(b) rent-deduction for repairs, s.65(1)(f) rent reduction equivalent to value loss, s.67 compensation, s.33(5) emergency-repair reimbursement, $100 filing-fee reimbursement. Cites s.27, s.32, s.33, s.45(3), s.60(1), s.62, s.65, s.67, s.77, s.79, s.84/s.85 enforcement (s.83 REPEALED). $9 returning-buyer for stage-1 buyers.$19 USDAlberta Repair Demand — Residential Tenancies Act s.16(c) + Public Health Act / MHHSStage-1 of the Alberta repair chain. First-person demand under RTA SA 2004 c.R-17.1 s.16(c) (landlord must ensure premises meet Minimum Housing and Health Standards under Public Health Act + Housing Regulation Alta Reg 173/1999). Cites RTA s.1(1)(p)(ii) (landlord's substantial breach = breach of s.16(c) only), s.28 (tenant 14-day termination GATED on unmet PHA s.62 order), s.37 (workhorse remedies: damages, rent abatement, COST OF PERFORMING LANDLORD'S OBLIGATIONS — Alberta's functional repair-and-deduct equivalent; court termination at (d)), s.38 (start-of-tenancy KB specific-performance), ss.54.1-54.8 (RTDRS Part 5.1), s.54.3 (forum-exclusion); PHA RSA 2000 c.P-37 s.62 (AHS executive-officer order — VACATE/UNFIT/CLOSE/WORK), s.62.1 + s.63 (AHS carry-out + cost recovery), s.5(3) (10-day Public Health Appeal Board appeal); Limitations Act s.3 (2-year discoverability). CRITICAL: RTDRS CANNOT specifically order repairs. DUAL-TRACK escalation signaled: PHA (fast — actual repair) + RTDRS/Court (damages under s.37). Alberta has NO statutory self-help repair-and-deduct. UPL-safe under LPA RSA 2000 c.L-8 s.106.$19 USDAlberta RTDRS Repair Application — Dual-Track Narrative (PHA + RTA s.37)Stage-2 of the Alberta repair chain. DUAL-TRACK narrative for (a) Public Health Act s.62 complaint to Alberta Health Services Environmental Public Health (fast track — PHA s.62 inspection + order, s.62.1 + s.63 AHS carry-out and cost recovery, s.5(3) 10-day Public Health Appeal Board), and (b) RTDRS Form RTDR0008 (or Alberta Court of Justice Civil Division) for monetary remedies under RTA s.37: damages, rent abatement, cost of performing landlord's obligations, court termination (court only). Cites RTA s.16(c), s.28 (gated on PHA order), s.37, s.38, ss.54.1-54.8, s.54.3; PHA ss.5(3), 62, 62.1, 63; Limitations Act s.3; LPA s.106. RTDRS fees from 1 April 2026: $75 / $150. RTDRS CANNOT order specific repairs. $9 returning-buyer for stage-1 buyers.$19 USDManitoba Deposit Return Demand — The Residential Tenancies Act s.32Stage-1 of the Manitoba deposit chain. First-person demand under The Residential Tenancies Act (CCSM c.R119). Cites s.29 (security cap half-month), s.29.1 (pet damage deposit cap ONE month — separate from s.29; total max 1.5 months — differs from BC), s.30 (trust account), s.31 (interest — 0.5% per year for 2025-2026 per Manitoba RTB), s.32(1) (14-day return clock from END OF TENANCY — not forwarding address; Manitoba differs from BC), s.32(2) (28-day landlord claim-notice forfeiture rule), s.32(3) (FREE tenant application to Director), s.39 (voluntary condition reports — no extinguishment unlike BC/AB), s.154 (Director's orders), s.157 (filing in Court of King's Bench Small Claims, $20,000 ceiling under CCSM c.C285), s.161 (RTC appeal — strict short deadlines), s.173. No doubled-deposit penalty. Verified Bill 32 (2025 — unlawful-activity amendment) did not touch the deposit framework. UPL-safe under LPA CCSM c.L107.$19 USDManitoba RTB Deposit Application — Narrative for Director FilingStage-2 of the Manitoba deposit chain. Narrative for filing Form F2 (Application for Compensation or Other Orders) at the Residential Tenancies Branch (https://www.gov.mb.ca/cca/rtb/). FREE tenant filing. Documents RTA contraventions and requests remedies: return of deposit, prescribed interest under s.31 (0.5% for 2025-2026), s.32(2) forfeiture declaration where landlord missed 28-day claim notice, compensation under s.154. Cites s.29 (half-month security cap), s.29.1 (one-month pet cap), s.30, s.31, s.32(1)-(2), s.39, s.154, s.157 (Court of King's Bench Small Claims $20k ceiling), s.161 (RTC appeal), s.173. NO doubled-deposit penalty. $9 returning-buyer for stage-1 buyers.$19 USDSaskatchewan Deposit Return Demand — The Residential Tenancies Act, 2006 s.32Stage-1 of the Saskatchewan deposit chain. First-person demand under The Residential Tenancies Act, 2006 (SS 2006, c.R-22.0001). Cites s.25(1) (single deposit cap ONE month — NO separate pet category; any pet amount must fit inside single cap), s.25(2)-(3) (50% at signing, balance within 2 months), s.25(5) (excess recoverable), s.30 (trust account / Trustee Act 2009 authorized securities), s.32(1) (7-BUSINESS-DAY return from END OF TENANCY — either return + interest OR apply to ORT + pay un-disputed portion), s.32(2) (tenant written agreement waives duty), s.33(1)-(2) (60-day tenant filing window at ORT), s.34 (Hearing Officer SHALL order full return + interest — MANDATORY where landlord missed s.32), s.70/s.71 (orders enforced by registration directly in Court of King's Bench), s.72 (30-day Court of King's Bench appeal on law / jurisdiction). Reg s.6 (interest 0% under-5-year tenancies; prescribed bank rate for 5+). NO doubling penalty, NO inspection-report extinguishment. ORT Form 9, $50 fee (waivable). UPL-safe under LPA 1990 c.L-10.1; 2025 amendments created limited-licence non-lawyer providers.$19 USDSaskatchewan ORT Deposit Application — Narrative for Hearing OfficerStage-2 of the Saskatchewan deposit chain. Narrative for filing Form 9 (Application for Claim) at the Office of Residential Tenancies (https://www.saskatchewan.ca/ort). $50 filing fee (waivable). 60-day filing window from end of tenancy under s.33(2). Requests mandatory full return under s.34 (Hearing Officer SHALL order — no discretion where s.32(1) was missed), accrued prescribed interest under Reg s.6 (5+ year tenancies only), excess-deposit recovery under s.25(5), $50 filing-fee reimbursement. Cites s.25(1) (single one-month cap), s.30, s.32(1) (7-business-day landlord duty), s.33(2) (60-day tenant window), s.34 (mandatory full return), s.70/s.71 (Court of King's Bench enforcement — no Small Claims step), s.72 (30-day appeal). Telephone hearings. $9 returning-buyer for stage-1 buyers.$19 USDManitoba Unpaid Wages Demand — The Employment Standards Code (CCSM c.E110)Stage-1 of the Manitoba wages chain. First-person demand under The Employment Standards Code (CCSM c.E110). Cites s.7 (min wage $16.00 from Oct 1, 2025 → $16.40 scheduled Oct 1, 2026), ss.10-12 + s.17(1) (overtime 1.5× after 8/day OR 40/week whichever produces more), s.17.1 (banked OT 3-month rule), ss.21-30 (9 general holidays including Louis Riel Day + Orange Shirt Day), ss.34-35 + s.39 (vacation 2wk/4% → 3wk/6% after 5 yrs), s.60 anti-reprisal (NOT s.133), ss.61-62 graduated termination notice, s.67 group termination (50+ in 4 weeks), s.86/s.87 (10 working days pay-period / final pay — same for fire/quit), s.90 (director liability 6 mo wages per employee + FULL unpaid vacation no cap, 2-yr cut-off), s.92 (6-month filing window), s.96(1) Order to Pay, s.96.1 (7-day appeal to Manitoba Labour Board — NOT 14), s.138.1 AMPs tiered. ASYMMETRIC recovery: 6 mo regular/OT; 22 mo vacation/holiday. Filing FREE. UPL-safe under LPA CCSM c.L107.$19 USDManitoba Employment Standards Complaint — Narrative for ESB FilingStage-2 of the Manitoba wages chain. Narrative for filing the Employment Standards Complaint at https://www.gov.mb.ca/labour/standards/claims.html. FREE filing. Requests enforcement (Order to Pay under s.96(1); AMP under s.138.1 tiered schedule; director liability under s.90 — 6 mo wages per employee EXCLUDING vacation + FULL unpaid vacation with NO cap, 2-yr cut-off; reprisal remedy under s.60/s.60(2) with reinstatement + compensation + admin cost; full asymmetric recovery 6 mo wages/22 mo vacation+holiday). Time limit 6 months from last day of work or wages due (s.92). Appeal to Manitoba Labour Board under s.96.1 is 7 days. $9 returning-buyer for stage-1 buyers.$19 USDSaskatchewan Unpaid Wages Demand — The Saskatchewan Employment Act Part II (SS 2013, c.S-15.1)Stage-1 of the Saskatchewan wages chain. First-person demand under The Saskatchewan Employment Act Part II. Cites s.2-12/s.2-13 (overtime 1.5× after 8/day OR 40/week whichever produces more), ss.2-22 to 2-27 (uniquely generous vacation — 3 weeks/5.77% yrs 1-9; 4 weeks/7.69% yr 10+), Part II Div 4 (10 stat holidays — most in Canada), s.2-33 (semi-monthly or 14-day pay periods within 6 days), s.2-60 (graduated termination notice 1/2/4/6/8 weeks after >13 weeks; group termination ≥10 in 4 weeks), s.2-65/s.2-66 (director liability 6 mo wages + 12 mo vacation/pay-in-lieu, due-diligence defence, 2-yr cut-off), s.2-89 (Order to Pay), Part II Div 5 anti-reprisal with REVERSE ONUS (NOT s.3-35 OHS), 2025 Bill 5 (in force 1 Jan 2026 — gratuities = wages, Director reinstatement power, expanded interpersonal-violence leave). Final pay 14 days (same fire/quit). Min wage $15.35 from Oct 1, 2025. Time limit 12 months from wages payable. Filing FREE. UPL-safe under LPA 1990 c.L-10.1 (2025 amendments in force Oct 1, 2025; first limited licences Jan 1, 2026).$19 USDSaskatchewan Employment Standards Complaint — Narrative for ESD FilingStage-2 of the Saskatchewan wages chain. Narrative for filing the Employment Standards Complaint at https://www.saskatchewan.ca/business/employment-standards/. FREE filing. Requests enforcement (Director's Order to Pay under s.2-89; tiered AMP under Part II Div 5 + Employment Standards Regulations; director liability under s.2-65/s.2-66 — 6 mo wages + 12 mo vacation/pay-in-lieu, due-diligence defence, 2-yr cut-off; reprisal remedy with REVERSE ONUS + Bill 5 Director reinstatement+comp from 1 Jan 2026; gratuities-as-wages under Bill 5). Time limit 12 months from wages payable; lookback 12 months. Appeal to Saskatchewan Labour Relations Board within 15 BUSINESS days. $9 returning-buyer for stage-1 buyers.$19 USDManitoba Repair Demand — The Residential Tenancies Act s.59Manitoba stage-1 repair letter. Send this when your landlord is not fixing what they're supposed to fix. Cites RTA CCSM c.R119 s.59(1) (landlord must keep rental in good repair, fit for habitation, and compliant with health/building/maintenance standards), s.59(2) (defeats 'as-is' defence), s.59.1 (auxiliary repair provision), s.92 (tenant termination for landlord's significant breach), s.55(2) + ss.154-155 (claims authority), s.154 (Director's specific-performance power — RTB CAN order actual repairs, unlike AB RTDRS), s.161 (RTC appeal: 14 days non-possession / 7 days possession / 5 days leave). Public Health Act CCSM c.P210 + Dwellings and Buildings Reg M.R. 322/88 R as parallel track. RTB does NOT award personal injury / pain-and-suffering / lost wages / legal fees. NO statutory repair-and-deduct. Form F3 (Application Regarding Repairs or Services), FREE filing. Court of King's Bench Small Claims $15,000. Plain-language wizard; UPL-safe under LPA CCSM c.L107 s.20.$19 USDManitoba RTB Repair Application — Narrative for Director FilingManitoba stage-2 repair narrative. Goes with Form F3 at the Manitoba Residential Tenancies Branch. FREE for tenants. Asks the RTB to (1) order the landlord to do the repairs by a date under s.154 — Manitoba is a specific-performance jurisdiction, the RTB CAN order actual repairs not just money, (2) reduce rent for loss of value (s.55(2) / s.154), (3) reimburse out-of-pocket repair costs, and optionally (4) order rent paid into the Director's trust pending remedy. Public Health Act track runs in parallel. RTB does NOT award personal injury / pain-and-suffering / lost wages / legal fees. RTC appeal 14 days (non-possession) / 7 (possession) / 5 (leave). $9 returning-buyer for stage-1 buyers.$19 USDSaskatchewan Repair Demand — The Residential Tenancies Act, 2006 s.49Saskatchewan stage-1 repair letter. Send this when your landlord is not fixing what they're supposed to fix. Cites RTA 2006 SS 2006 c.R-22.0001 s.49(1)(a) (good state of repair, fit for habitation — defeats 'as-is'), s.49(1)(b) (services & facilities), s.49(4) (wear & tear not exempt), s.49(7) (tenant not required to repair wear & tear), s.43 (no terminating / restricting services or facilities — closest to 'essential services'), s.56(2)+(3) (tenant termination for material breach with reasonable cure period), s.70(6)(a) (ORT COMPLIANCE ORDER — ORT CAN order specific repairs, unlike AB RTDRS), s.70(11)(a) (anti-retaliation for housing-standards complaints), s.71 ($10k cap), s.71.1 (1-year limitation), s.72 (30-day Court of King's Bench appeal on law / jurisdiction), s.77 (enforcement by King's Bench filing — NOT s.70/s.71). Public Health Act 1994 c.P-37.1 parallel track. NO doubled damages. NO statutory repair-and-deduct (s.42(1)). Form 9, $50 fee (waivable). LPA 1990 c.L-10.1 + 2025 limited-licence amendments. Plain-language wizard; UPL-safe.$19 USDSaskatchewan ORT Repair Application — Narrative for Hearing OfficerSaskatchewan stage-2 repair narrative. Goes with Form 9 (Application for Claim) at the Office of Residential Tenancies. $50 fee (waivable). Asks the ORT to (1) order the landlord to do the repairs under s.70(6)(a) — SK is a specific-performance jurisdiction, ORT CAN order actual repairs not just money, (2) award damages and out-of-pocket reimbursement under s.70(6)(c), (3) reduce rent / compensation if services or facilities restricted under s.43(3)(b), and (4) give anti-retaliation relief under s.70(11)(a). Public Health Act 1994 track runs in parallel. ORT cap $10k under s.71; 1-year limit s.71.1. Court of King's Bench appeal 30 days under s.72; enforcement by King's Bench filing under s.77. $9 returning-buyer for stage-1 buyers.$19 USDQuebec CNESST Wage Complaint — Narrative for CNESST FilingQuebec stage-2 wage-claim narrative for filing at cnesst.gouv.qc.ca. FREE filing. Documents LNT (CQLR c.N-1.1) contraventions (s.55 overtime, s.74 vacation, s.82 termination indemnity) and the s.122/s.124 45-day claims where applicable. Preserves the s.115 1-year limitation (runs from each due date — each pay period has its own clock; not 12 months from a single date). Asks CNESST to investigate, issue the 20-day mise en demeure, sue the employer in CNESST's own name under s.39, and apply the 20% s.114 administrative surcharge. CNESST forwards contested s.122/s.124 files to the TAT for de novo hearing. $9 returning-buyer for quebec-cnesst-wages stage-1 buyers.$19 USDQuebec Illegal Deposit Recovery — CCQ art. 1904Quebec stage-1 letter for recovering an illegally collected security deposit. Quebec is the ONLY Canadian province that PROHIBITS residential security deposits — CCQ art. 1904. Demands restitution under art. 1554, additional indemnity under art. 1619, general damages under art. 1863, and punitive damages under art. 1902 (harassment, quantum capped by art. 1621) or Charter art. 49(2) only where threshold met. 3-year prescription under art. 2925. TAL filing fees $59/$70/$92 by monthly rent. Bilingual; UPL-safe under Loi sur le Barreau ss.128-129.$19 USDQuebec TAL Application — Illegal Deposit RecoveryQuebec stage-2 narrative for filing a TAL general application to recover a deposit unlawfully collected under CCQ art. 1904. Restitution + additional indemnity + general damages + punitive (art. 1902/Charter art. 49) where harassment threshold met. TAL fees $59/$70/$92 by monthly rent. 3-year prescription. TAL decisions directly executory. $9 returning-buyer for quebec-ccq-deposit-recovery buyers.$19 USDQuebec Repair Demand — CCQ art. 1854, 1864, 1910Quebec stage-1 repair letter. Cites CCQ art. 1854 (delivery + peaceable enjoyment), art. 1864 (necessary repairs), art. 1910 (residential habitability), art. 1911 (Regulation respecting housing standards + cleanliness). Signals TAL specific-performance application under art. 1863, art. 1867 court-authorized repair + deduction, and art. 1868 urgent self-help. Bill 31 (LQ 2024, c.2; in force 21 Feb 2024) confirms TAL specific-performance for any amount. Public Health Act + municipal property-maintenance run in parallel. Bilingual; UPL-safe.$19 USDQuebec TAL Application — Landlord's Failure to RepairQuebec stage-2 TAL narrative for an order under CCQ art. 1863 requiring the landlord to perform the s.1864 / s.1910 repair duty (TAL specific-performance authority per Bill 31), plus rent reduction, damages, resiliation where substantial, art. 1867 authorisation, art. 1868 self-help. TAL fees $59/$70/$92. 3-year prescription under art. 2925. Public Health Act + municipal bylaws parallel. $9 returning-buyer for quebec-ccq-repair-demand buyers.$19 USDNova Scotia Unpaid Wages Demand — Labour Standards Code (RSNS 1989, c.246)Nova Scotia stage-1 wages demand. Cites Labour Standards Code (RSNS 1989, c.246) s.79 (final pay 5 working days regular wages / 10 days vacation pay — same fire/quit), 1.5× regular-wage overtime after 48/week (general rule), s.32-33 vacation (4% yrs 1-7 / 6% yr 8+), s.72 graduated termination notice (1/2/4/8 weeks), 6 stat holidays (excludes Remembrance Day — separate Act), s.30 anti-reprisal, s.21 6-month complaint filing, s.23 NS Labour Board appeal in 10 days. Min wage $16.75 (Apr 1, 2026) → $17.00 (Oct 1, 2026). FILING FREE. NO statutory director liability (NS outlier — oppression remedy via Companies Act in Supreme Court). Plain-language wizard; UPL-safe under LPA SNS 2004 c.28.$19 USDNova Scotia Labour Standards Complaint — Narrative for Division FilingNova Scotia stage-2 narrative for filing the Labour Standards complaint at novascotia.ca/lae/employmentrights/. FREE filing. Requests Director's Order to Pay (s.21) + reprisal remedy under s.30 (reinstatement + back-pay + record-cleansing). Time limit 6 months. Appeal to NS Labour Board within 10 days under s.23. NS has NO statutory director liability — Supreme Court oppression remedy route flagged. $9 returning-buyer for stage-1 buyers.$19 USDNew Brunswick Unpaid Wages Demand — Employment Standards Act (SNB 1982, c.E-7.2)New Brunswick stage-1 wages demand. Cites Employment Standards Act SNB 1982 c.E-7.2 s.35 (pay intervals not over 16 days), s.37 (final pay = next regular payday + 21 days for remainder; same fire/quit), s.16 (OVERTIME at 1.5× MINIMUM WAGE — not 1.5× regular; floor $23.85 from Apr 1, 2026 — NB quirk), ss.24-25 vacation (4%/6% at 8+ yrs), s.30 graduated termination notice (2/4 weeks), s.32 group termination, s.28 anti-reprisal, s.18 (8 stat holidays incl. Family Day + NB Day). Min wage $15.90 from Apr 1, 2026. FILING FREE; 6-month limit. SNB 2022 c.33 director liability passed but proclamation deferred — verify before pleading. Plain-language wizard; UPL-safe under Law Society Act 1996 c.89.$19 USDNew Brunswick Employment Standards Complaint — Narrative for Branch FilingNew Brunswick stage-2 narrative for filing the Employment Standards complaint at the NB Employment Standards Branch (PO Box 6000, Fredericton; 1-888-452-2687). FREE filing. Requests Order to Pay + administrative penalties + (where SNB 2022 c.33 is proclaimed) director liability + s.28 reprisal remedy. 6-month time limit. Appeal to Labour and Employment Board within 14 days under s.8(3); employer deposit up to $2,000 required. $9 returning-buyer for stage-1 buyers.$19 USDPEI Unpaid Wages Demand — Employment Standards Act (SPEI 2024 c.66)PEI stage-1 wages demand under the NEW Employment Standards Act (SPEI 2024 c.66; in force Sept 2025). Cites overtime threshold >44 hours/week at 1.5× regular rate (NEW — was 48), vacation 4%/6% at 5+ yrs (NEW threshold — was 8 yrs), 7 stat holidays (incl Islander Day), 2-/4-week graduated termination notice. Min wage $17.00 from Apr 1, 2026 (no further increase announced as of audit date — PEI ESB reviews annually). FILING FREE; 6-month limit under s.30(2). Director liability 6 months wages (CBCA-style, new Act). Appeal to Employment Standards Board within 10 working days. Plain-language wizard; UPL-safe under LPA RSPEI 1988 c.L-6.1.$19 USDPEI Employment Standards Complaint — Narrative for Branch FilingPEI stage-2 narrative for filing the Employment Standards complaint at services.princeedwardisland.ca. FREE filing. Requests Inspector's Order to Pay + director liability (6 months wages, joint and several, CBCA-style under new ESA) + reprisal remedy. 6-month limit under s.30(2). Appeal to Employment Standards Board within 10 working days. $9 returning-buyer for stage-1 buyers.$19 USDNewfoundland & Labrador Unpaid Wages Demand — Labour Standards Act (RSNL 1990, c.L-2)Newfoundland & Labrador stage-1 wages demand. Cites Labour Standards Act RSNL 1990 c.L-2 s.33(1) (semi-monthly pay within 7 days), s.33(2) (ALL wages within 1 WEEK of termination — same fire/quit), 1.5× MINIMUM WAGE OT >40/week (NL quirk; floor $24.53 from Apr 1, 2026), s.8(1) (4%/2 wks vacation), s.8(1.1) (6%/3 wks at 15+ yrs — longest threshold in Canada), s.55 graduated termination notice (1/2/3/4/6 wks), s.37.3 (director liability — 2 months wages if employer insolvent), s.43.9 (pregnancy/parental anti-reprisal), s.78 (complaint-based anti-reprisal), 6 stat holidays incl Memorial Day (1 July). Min wage $16.35 from Apr 1, 2026 with mandatory annual CPI indexation. FILING FREE; 6-month limit; appeal to LRB within 14 days. Plain-language wizard; UPL-safe under Law Society Act 1999 c.L-9.1.$19 USDNL Labour Standards Complaint — Narrative for Division FilingNewfoundland & Labrador stage-2 narrative for filing the Labour Standards complaint at the NL Labour Standards Division (1-877-563-1063). FREE filing. Requests Director's Order to Pay (certifiable to Supreme Court of NL) + director liability under s.37.3 (2 months wages if employer insolvent or unpaid after determination) + reprisal remedy under s.43.9/s.78. 6-month limit. Appeal to Labour Relations Board within 14 days. $9 returning-buyer for stage-1 buyers.$19 USDQuebec CNESST Unpaid Wages & Labour Standards Demand LetterFormal demand to a Quebec employer (with copy to CNESST) under the Act Respecting Labour Standards (CQLR c. N-1.1) for unpaid wages, overtime at 150% (s.55), vacation indemnity (s.74 at 4% or 6%), and termination indemnity (s.82). Preserves the twelve-month limitation (s.115) and, where applicable, the 45-day limits for s.122 and s.124 recourses.$19 USDSecurity Deposit Demand Letter (Canada)Demand the return of your security deposit from a landlord in Canada. Includes your province's specific statute, deadline, and penalty provisions.$19 USDCredit Card Chargeback Dispute Letter (Canada)Dispute a credit card charge under applicable Canadian provincial consumer protection legislation.$19 USDDemand for Refund (Lost Shipment)Force an online merchant to provide a full refund for an order that was lost in transit or never delivered, citing your provincial Consumer Protection Act.$19 USDIdentity Theft Dispute Letter (Canada)Dispute fraudulent accounts and request blocking of identity theft information under PIPEDA. Includes Canadian credit bureau addresses and fraud alert guidance.$19 USD