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Home » $365,750 fine, foreign worker ban overturned against N.B. lobster processor
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$365,750 fine, foreign worker ban overturned against N.B. lobster processor

By News RoomJanuary 9, 20262 Mins Read
5,750 fine, foreign worker ban overturned against N.B. lobster processor
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5,750 fine, foreign worker ban overturned against N.B. lobster processor

By The Staff


The Canadian Press

Posted January 9, 2026 1:07 pm

1 min read

The Federal Court has overturned sanctions against a New Brunswick lobster processor that had banned the company from using the foreign worker program and had fined it hundreds of thousands of dollars.

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In 2024 the federal government fined LeBreton & Sons Fisheries $365,750 and banned it from both the temporary foreign worker and international mobility programs for two years.

Ottawa had cited a number of infractions for its decision, including around salaries and failing to provide a violence-free workplace.

The company, which operates two lobster processing plants in the province’s Acadian Peninsula, had challenged the decision via a judicial review in Federal Court.

In a December ruling, the court agreed with LeBreton & Sons that some evidence around the violence-free workplace allegation was withheld from the deputy minister who had made the decision, calling it a breach of procedural fairness.

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The government admitted during the court challenge that it had made an “unreasonable” decision when it said the company must make available a guide on temporary foreign worker rights to employees.

The court, however, upheld other parts of the federal government’s decision on the company, involving salary, statutory holidays and record keeping.


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