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While the Robertson Settlement saga is still trucking along here (and the deadline to submit claims under second settlement is approaching), our freelancing friends south of the border are getting nowhere fast with their class-action suit against against numerous publishers. Just this month, an appeals court rejected a settlement struck in 2005, based on an opinion that the deal under-compensated many of the claimants. That decision was just one in a long line of reversals and reversals of reversals leading all the way back to 1997, when a first ruling came down in favour of the publishers.

Andrew Albanese writing for Publishers Weekly outlines the ins and outs of the case and says that neither individual writers who are waiting for compensation nor publishers (who may have to fork over way more cash) should be happy about this decision, but groups that represent writers may benefit. He writes:

The organizational plaintiffs, including the Authors Guild and the National Writers Union, fought the objectors all the way and sought to marginalize their concerns. But now that they've lost the battle to have the settlement approved, they stand to win big. "We are currently reviewing our options with our lawyers," states a message on the NWU site, adding  "much has changed. Rights to electronic distribution of written works, including newly published work and archives of work originally published in print form, have proven to be much more valuable than was generally recognized at the time the original settlement was negotiated."
While it's great that freelancers are getting recognized for producing valuable work, it would also be great if they got some cash—and soon. Looking at the history of this case and its endless appeals, though, they probably shouldn't hold their breath.

Read more details of the decision here.

An email reminder from copyright licensing agency Access has reminded us to remind you about the second Robertson Settlement—because sometimes, in late summer, these kinds of things slip our minds, don't they?As a result of the decision that was approved on May 2, 2011  (a separate settlement with CanWest was approved on June 16), writers can…
For better or worse, the ongoing series of "Robertson v. _____" cases continues. On May 2, a final decision was handed down in the case of "Robertson v. Proquest, Cedrom, Toronto Star Newspapers, Rogers and Canwest." (This decision comes after a tentative settlement reached this January.) Heather Robertson and Kirk Baert of the firm Koskie Minsky…
Freelance writers across Canada were raising their glasses to Heather Robertson over the weekend, after cheques started hitting the mail boxes of claimants in the former Globe and Mail freelancer's class action lawsuit against the Thomson Reuters Corporation and others.Robertson v. Thomson, the 2006 decision of the Supreme Court of Canada, found…
A tentative settlement worth approximately $5.5 million was reached on behalf of freelancers with a group of publishers including the Toronto Star Newspapers and Rogers Publishing. The Ontario Superior Court of Justice will consider the tentative settlement in April.Many Canadian freelance writers have heard of Robertson v. Thomson, a 2006…
Toronto writer Derek Finkle’s first feature assignment netted him a cover story in Toronto Life. It all started in 1993 when he became the magazine’s first intern. The story was about a sting operation on a paid hit and it introduced Finkle to key police sources that would prove helpful to his later work. But it was a formative experience in…
A number of magazine veterans have been scratching their heads about the reports circulating that former Globe and Mail freelancers are receiving the maximum allowable payout – $55,000 –  from the Heather Robertson settlement with Thomson Reuters Canada, CTVglobemedia, and the Gale Group. The veterans are wondering how their many…