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Head of Canadian Human Rights Tribunal on Stress Leave Head of Canadian Human Rights Tribunal on Stress Leave The working atmosphere of the CHRT begs the question - if it needs to be investigated for harassment among other things, how can it be in charge of determining "human rights" offenses for the nation? Selection from the Vancouver Sun, April 23 2012: The Ottawa Citizen has also learned that the Office of the Public Sector Integrity Commis... Read more
Did tribunal exceed its authority? Supreme Court of Canada will decide Thursday if human rights decision should be upheld Vancouver Sun, March 21 2012: On Thursday, the Supreme Court of Canada will hear the appeal of Moore v. British Columbia Ministry of Education. Among other things, this case will decide whether the B.C. Human Rights Tribunal has the authority to dictate what services the B.C. government provides. Jeffrey Moore started grade school in... Read more
A right to special treatment Pamela Howson clearly knows how the human rights system works. First, claim membership of a “protected” group. In Ontario, their Human Rights Code includes protection on the basis of “family status”, which has been interpreted by the provincial tribunal as granting privileged status to mothers with children. Ms. Howson has three children... Read more
Press Release Press Release For Immediate Release – November 23, 2011 (Ottawa, ON): Stand Up For Freedom Canada calls on all members of Parliament to support Bill C-304, “An Act to Amend the Human Rights Act”. Last night, Bill C-304 was read and debated in the House of Commons. The bill, introduced by MP Brian Storseth, seeks to ensure greater protection of free... Read more
Support Bill C-304! Use our Easy Mail Technology Today It only takes a few minutes to use this site's Easy Mail technology to send a letter to your MP, along with the Justice Minister, in support of a much-needed law to reform the Canadian Human Rights Act. It is free, customizable, and you won't get any unwanted newsletter or donation requests. We provide this for the sake of FREEDOM. Click ... Read more
Policing Hurt Feelings The various Canadian human rights codes were not necessarily designed to protect hurt feelings of designated groups. The intention was to prevent a situation in which an person  was denied basic goods and services on the basis of some prejudice or another. Yet we hear again and again from editorials critical of the rights racket that... Read more
Non-Muslims Need Not Apply The National Post recently ran a story about housing advertisements in Ontario that are clearly running afoul of the Ontario Human Rights Commission’s policy. Specifically, the reporter was able to find several ads in which it was stated, “non-Muslims need not apply” or some variation thereof. When the reporter called the OHRC to ask abo... Read more
The Absurd is Commonplace at the Tribunal A police officer who smokes crack while on duty. A public-school teacher who calls in sick, works for a private company, and collects both paychecks. What do both of these individuals have in common? They have complaints currently before a human rights tribunal in which they are trying to escape the natural consequences of their reprehens... Read more
Human Rights Laws are Eroding our Democracy By John Carpay Should a man be forced to pay $17,500 to four individuals who felt offended by the flyers he distributed? The Supreme Court of Canada will decide this question in October, when it hears the case of Saskatchewan Human Rights Commission versus William Whatcott. In 2001 and 2002, Whatcott peacefully distributed flyers in ... Read more
Freedom from Discrimination: A not-so-universal Human Right A "human right" is generally understood to be a claim or entitlement that every human being posesses against his fellow man. The right to life, for example, should not apply differently to people on the basis of their age, race, sex, or marital status. Yet many so-called rights under the federal Human Rights Act do indeed apply differentl... Read more
Saskatchewan Eliminates Their Human Rights Tribunal A little while ago, we informed our readership of Saskatchewan's push to abolish their Human Rights Tribunal and refer all human rights complaints to real courts, heard by real judges. This is a step in the right direction, but there are cons to this approach as well. Derek From, from the Canadian Constitution Foundation (CCF) explains th... Read more
Dodging Precedent It is already well known that the human rights tribunals take liberties with definitions to suit their own ends. For the most egregious example of this, I refer to a previous post that highlighted the OHRC’s approach to definitions: 1) Definitions should be interpreted as broadly as possible when establishing that discrimination has take... Read more

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Home Redefining Truth, Emplyment, and Other Important Terms
Redefining Truth, Emplyment, and Other Important Terms PDF Print E-mail
Friday, 22 April 2011 22:31

Comedian Guy Earle has never been one to pull his punches. In fact, invective and innuendo is almost indispensable to a comic’s repertoire. It is especially necessary for the inevitable moment when the comic must “put down a heckler”. But one evening, at Zesty’s Restaurant in Vancouver, he put down the wrong heckler, a lesbian by the name of Lorna Pardy. She launched a human rights complaint, and has recently won an order of $15,000 from Earle and another $7000 from the restaurant.

The details of what exactly happened on the night that Ms. Pardy claimed to have been so traumatized are murky. Yet I hesitate to give the readers even a brief summary of the events, for fear of retribution by the Tribunal. Why? Earle had posted a YouTube video of his side of the story prior to the hearing, and was slapped by the Tribunal for “publicly [making] false and inflammatory statements about Ms. Pardy’s conduct”. Who decided that the statements were false and inflammatory? A judge?

No, this all-knowing seer is Murray Geiger-Adams, a labour lawyer who works for the BC Teachers’ Federation, which strongly supports the type of activism we are seeing at the Tribunals. Recall that Earle’s well-respected lawyer, James Millar, walked out of a preliminary hearing when Geiger-Adams refused to consider whether he had jurisdiction. Millar then filed an application in BC Supreme Court to find the Tribunal in contempt.

Geiger-Adams has authored a string of decisions that have drastically expanded the definitions of the Code, always for the benefit of complainants. Only weeks ago, he sent the legal profession into a quandary by redefining “employee” to include law partners. In the Earle case, the definition of “employee” was also expanded to include volunteer stand-up comics. After all, if Earle wasn’t an employee, the Code provisions on the delivery of service, under which Ms. Pardy based her complaint, wouldn’t apply. Under Mr. Geiger-Adams’ new definition of employment, I would be an employee of a musical instrument retailer if I sat down and plunked away at a piano with permission from the owner.

This redefinition is based on a common understanding among all of Canada’s Human Rights Tribunals:

1) Definitions should be interpreted as broadly as possible when establishing that discrimination has taken place, and

2) Defences for discrimination (like fundamental Charter rights to freedom of expression and freedom of religion) should be interpreted as narrowly as possible.

Our fundamental freedoms are being eroded at an alarming pace by these Human Rights institutions. The framework is in place to ensure that this erosion continues, whether it is by gradually expanding precedents like this one, or the built-in mechanisms of Human Rights Codes that justify an ever-expanding scope. This is why tinkering around the edges is not going to solve the problem.

 
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