Medicine Hat News

Law society to hold a hearing into former health minister Tyler Shandro’s conduct

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EDMONTON

The Law Society of Alberta says it will hold a hearing to determine whether former health minister Tyler Shandro breached its code of conduct.

Shandro, a lawyer who’s now labour and immigratio­n minister, faces several complaints.

It’s alleged that he went to the home of a member of the public and behaved inappropri­ately, that he used his position as minister of health to obtain personal cellphone numbers, and that he responded to an email from a member of the public by threatenin­g to refer that person to the authoritie­s.

Shandro’s press secretary, Joseph Dow, says in an email that anyone can make a complaint to the law society and noted an anonymous account on social media encouraged people to file one after all three issues were publicly reported.

Dow says Shandro looks forward to resolving the matter.

A spokeswoma­n for the law society says the hearing has not yet been scheduled.

If the panel finds a lawyer acted unprofessi­onally, that person can face a reprimand, fine, suspension or disbarment. The complaints go back to early 2020 when CBC reported that Shandro had been directly going after critics who accused him and his wife of questionab­le dealings, given his wife runs a supplement­ary healthbene­fits company.

The ethics commission­er ruled Shandro was not violating conflict-of-interest rules. About the same time, Shandro had confronted Dr. Mukarram Zaidi, a Calgary neighbour and acquaintan­ce, after Zaidi shared online a derogatory meme tied to the accusation­s.

Zaidi said at the time that the confrontat­ion happened in front of his house with his family watching from inside.

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Tyler Shandro

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