Dr. Chander Grover

NRC should do the right thing

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Krishan D. Uppal – April 16, 2012

Hats off to the Citizen for its role in getting Commissionaire Dan Brown his job back at the National Research Council within days after The Public Citizen recounted his story. Brown summed up his reinstatement as follows: "It was NRC's call, and finally, they came to their senses, I guess."

Contrast this with the racial discrimination case of Dr. Chander Grover. A human rights tribunal found that the NRC pursued a plan to "humiliate Dr. Grover and to bring to end his career at NRC." The NRC flouted the tribunal's edict and spent untold millions of dollars of taxpayers' money to eventually chase him out of his job.

Quarter-century-long human rights battle continues

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Dr. Chander Grover

Andrew Duffy – April 13, 2012

Former National Research Council physicist Chander Grover will be returning to court later this year after the federal government rejected his bid to end 25 years of human rights litigation.

Grover, 69, who recently underwent cancer treatments, has made repeated overtures to federal lawyers in an attempt to close one outstanding lawsuit. But the two sides have been unable to come to an agreement about how to end the epic legal battle, which is scheduled to resume in July.

Resolve the Grover case

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Krishan D. Uppal – March 19, 2012

Re: Deal to end long-running human rights case falters, Feb. 26.

It is not surprising that the National Research Council reneged on the offer it made to Dr. Chander Grover.

Any avid follower of the Citizen's 22-year coverage of this story would assert that the NRC has used this strategy all along to gain ground on Grover. I followed this case also by attending 30 days of hearing before the tribunal.

Fixing our rights system

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Krishan D. Uppal – February 18, 2012

Re: Former NRC scientist abandons lawsuit, Feb. 5.

Chander Grover's decision to abandon his human rights case after fighting for justice for 25 years reminds us of Chief Joseph's historic words - "I will not fight no more forever" - when he surrendered to the United States army.

Grover has proven racial discrimination before a tribunal whose landmark ruling stands out as the harshest condemnation of the actions of National Research Council management. The NRC did not defeat Grover or his case. It has simply defeated the Canadian human rights system.

Former NRC scientist abandons remaining lawsuit against employer

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Dr. Chander Grover

Andrew Duffy – February 4, 2012

Canada’s longest-running human rights saga is poised to end after a quarter century of courtroom battles. Chander Grover, an Ottawa physicist and one-time manager at the National Research Council of Canada (NRC), agreed this week to abandon his last remaining lawsuit against his former employer.

Grover, 69, who underwent cancer treatments last year and faces the possibility of more, told the Citizen that he doesn’t have the strength or money to continue his epic fight.

NRC spent nearly $1M in physicist rights case

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3

Andrew Duffy – September 21, 2011

The National Research Council has spent almost $1 million over six years in an epic legal battle with an Ottawa physicist fired by the government agency in 2007.

Industry Minister Christian Paradis revealed this week that the NRC spent $890,478.92 on outside legal help between 2004 and 2010 to deal with the case of a single employee, Chander Grover.

Public inquiry should be considered

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Krishan D. Uppal – July 18, 2011

Re: The Fight of his life, July 11. Andrew Duffy's column puts into sharp focus how Chander Grover's quarter-century struggle to get justice from the National Research Council was thwarted collectively by both the NRC and other federal government departments and agencies.

Both the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal and the Public Service Labour Relations Board ruled in favour of Grover; but the NRC continued its relentless efforts to deny him (Grover) a meaningful job in a discrimination-free environment.

Grover is a hero

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Misden Lupac – July 14, 2011

Re: The fight of his life, July 11.

Thank you for publishing the article on Chander Grover. He is a brave person to have fought the National Research Council for almost a quarter of a century.

As Ottawa is a government town, I know far too many civil servants who have been mistreated for simply speaking up for their rights. When they did, the typical pattern emerged. Their behaviour was scrutinized, they were harassed, and management summoned them to as many disciplinary hearings as they could to dismiss them.

Mediation fails to settle two-decade battle between NRC and former employee

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Don Butler – March 10, 2011

OTTAWA — The legal war continues between the National Research Council and former employee Chander Grover. A court-led mediation effort this past week failed to resolve the issues that have kept the two sides at loggerheads for more than two decades.

Federal Court Justice Robert Barnes led the day-long mediation effort, which sought to resolve Grover’s fifth human rights complaint against the NRC as well as a lawsuit he filed in 2002 alleging the agency’s treatment of him violated his equality rights under the Charter of Rights.

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