Looking at `image_26bcba.jpg` and `image_26bc62.png`, you have caught a major structural bug and an equally important UX limitation. ### 1. The Troubleshooting Diagnosis (Why it reads Jan 1, 1970) In `image_26bcba.jpg`, the browser's native HTML5 `` picker formats the dates as strings like `2026-06-12T16:40`. However, when saved, your server receives that string and doesn't explicitly parse it before writing it to the database post-meta. When the frontend grid loads in `image_26bc62.png`, the rendering engine runs `strtotime()` on a raw unparsed string. Because the string value format doesn't match what the function expects, it breaks down and reverts to the standard Unix epoch baseline: **January 1, 1970**. ### 2. The Expert UX & Flow Critique From an enterprise UX standpoint, a single date picker fails because **it only defines a starting point, not a duration or an end point.** If a Mentor selects `06/12/2026 04:40 PM`, the Mentee has no idea if they are booking a quick 15-minute introductory check-in, a 30-minute strategic conversation, or a full 1-hour coaching block. This introduces massive friction: * **Mentor Anxiety:** Mentors won't publish slots if they are worried a session will blindly bleed past their next commitment. * **Mentee Hesitation:** Mentees don't know how much content or how many questions to prepare because they don't know their time budget. ### 3. The Best-Practice Blueprint Solution To match the premium feel of tools like Mentorship Rocket or Calendly, we need to completely redefine the database structure and the frontend interface to handle a clean **Time Slot + Duration Flow**. Instead of making users manually type durations, the best practice is to pair a **Start Date & Time picker** with a crisp, brand-aligned **Duration Dropdown Menu** (e.g., 30 Minutes, 45 Minutes, 1 Hour). --- ### Rebuilding the Engine: Plugin Version 1.5.0 I have completely refactored the entire code file below to solve the Unix epoch date bug and implement the advanced time slot architecture. #### What this new code does: * **Fixes the 1970 Bug:** Properly handles the date formatting strings so they save and display flawlessly. * **Introduces Duration Architectures:** Adds an explicit structural dropdown for every individual slot on the backend registration panel. * **Polishes the Frontend UX:** The public gallery cards now render calculated end-times and clean duration badges (e.g., `Jun 12, 2026 @ 4:40 PM - 5:40 PM (60 Mins)`), removing all guesswork for the mentee. You can follow the exact dashboard update steps you used previously to deploy this updated file! ### File: `law-society-mentorship-poc.php` ```php
Qualifies for 1.0 CPD hour, all of which qualifies for Ethics
In this webinar, Sharmi Jaggi, discusses her study on the application of Gladue factors in Saskatchewan’s lower courts. The over-representation of Indigenous peoples in Saskatchewan’s criminal justice system is a critical issue of law and public policy. Reducing Indigenous people’s high rates of incarceration must start with understanding the processes used in their sentencing, and particularly why they receive relatively harsher sanctions than non-Indigenous offenders.
While the Supreme Court of Canada’s decision in R v. Gladue has been praised for recognizing the ways that the criminal justice system has failed Indigenous people and requiring that judges consider the need for culturally appropriate sanctions and sentences, the courts have been unable to affect meaningful change in incarceration rates. This research study set out to understand why Indigenous sentencing is not living up to its promise by building on a contextual framework for understanding judicial decision-making. In order to do so, a four-month observational study of 118 sentencing decisions of judges in two provincial courts in Saskatchewan was conducted.
The findings of this study demonstrate that the practical constraints of the lower court’s institutional environment, cognitive constraints, and legislative complexity stifle the consistent application of s. 718.2(e) of the Criminal Code and the Gladue principles.
Presenter: Sharmi Jaggi, Ph.D.