Showing posts with label Canadian Law. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Canadian Law. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 23, 2010

"...A Place Where Both Prostitution and Polygamy are Legal"

Today's snark from Law.com: What Happens in Canada Stays in Canada:
If you are not into the whole "monogamy" thing, Canada may soon be the place for you. If two cases now going through the court system go the right way wrong way the same way, Canada may soon be a place where both prostitution and polygamy are legal.
The Ontario Court of Appeal will rule Saturday on whether to continue a stay of a September 28 Ontario Superior Court decision that struck down Canada's anti-prostitution laws.

And in British Columbia, Canadian Press reports that Supreme Court Justice Robert Bauman has denied an Application by CBC to televise hearings, commenced today, which are considering whether Canada's anti-polygamy laws should be upheld.
- Garry J. Wise, Toronto
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Wednesday, September 29, 2010

“There Will Be No Further Bricks and Mortar Courthouses Built after 2015″

Our friend, David Bilinsky summarizes his Take Aways from the Canadian Forum on Court Technology, held in Ottawa last week.
- Garry J. Wise, Toronto
Visit our Toronto Law Firm website: www.wiselaw.net

Wednesday, September 22, 2010

Quoteworthy: On Joint Custody

National Post's Barbara Kay, arguing for family law reform to establish "equal parenting as the default custody presumption (in the absence of abuse) after separation:"
Decades ago women told men they had to take more responsibility for active parenting. They listened. Fathers have earned the moral right to equality of involvement in their children's lives in post-separation agreements as a matter of social justice. It is now up to our legislatures and judiciary to assume responsibility for establishing an equal-parenting presumption in law,
- Garry J. Wise, Toronto
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Sunday, September 19, 2010

Inaccessible Federal Websites Challenged Under Canada's Charter

Donna Jodhan, a visually-impaired Toronto internet accessibility professional, has brought suit against Canada's federal government. She claims the government's failure to make certain websites usable by the visually impaired constitutes a breach of her Charter equality protections:

“The Internet is something that is liberating to everybody — but not to blind and visually impaired Canadians,” she said in an interview. “Canada used to be at the top when it came to accessibility 10 years ago. It’s way down the list now.”

On Tuesday, Jodhan will argue in federal court that her inability to apply for a position on the federal jobs website or complete the online version of the 2006 Census breached her equality rights under the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms.

She will also argue that this violation and her ongoing inability to access the government’s online information and services constitute a breach against all blind and partially sighted Canadians, said Jodhan’s lawyer David Baker.

- Garry J. Wise, Toronto
Visit our Toronto Law Firm website: www.wiselaw.net

Friday, April 16, 2010

To Ban or Legalize?

Ban or Legalize - an interesting new series that consults Canada's experts on a slew of controversial issues in Canadian law reform.

Here's how this the series introduces itself.

Ban/Legalize: 13 Proposed Changes to Canadian Law

Should Canada ban the niqab? Legalize file-sharing? Ban bars? Decriminalize pot?

A society is shaped by what its laws permit or prohibit. With that in mind, we asked legislators and artists, activists and entrepreneurs to identify one thing that should be banned or legalized but currently is not.

Thanks to Cathy Li of The Mark for bringing it to our attention.

Friday, March 12, 2010

Quotable - Marshall Jones on Jaffer

Marshall Jones, Managing Editor of Kelowna.com, on prosecutorial power, discretion and accountability in Canada:

What we should be talking about in the Jaffer case and many, many more is the immense power of Crown prosecutors. A hundred cases just like this one goes through our courthouse every day.

Want to know why the original charges were dropped? Too bad. How did they come to the plea bargain? Don’t even ask. Why the lighter charge? Drop dead.

They don’t have to tell you or me anything.

Their power rests in the awful word “discretion.” With every case across their desks—and there are way too many—they have to answer two questions. Is prosecution required in the public interest? And is there a substantial likelihood of conviction?

...Crown prosecutors have a very difficult job balancing those factors as well as many different disciplines and interests: victims, their families, the public, news media, police, justice, the accused, their families all under tight timelines and with huge caseloads.

But I have never seen prosecutors criticized for their decisions. Not by the public, not by judges, not by other prosecutors. They don’t have to defend their decisions to anyone and rarely, if ever, do.

So why did Rahim Jaffer get a lucky break in court? We have to deduce that the investigation had fatal flaws because we all know this was in the public interest. It was an opportunity not only for justice to be done but to be seen to be done, to bastardize the old maxim.

- Garry J. Wise, Toronto

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Monday, September 28, 2009

Canadian Mandatory Retirement Dealt 'Fatal Blow' by Ruling

If mandatory retirement is not dead, it was certainly dealt a fatal blow by a Canadian Human Rights Tribunal ruling in two cases decided August 28, 2009.

George Vilven and Robert Kelly are two Air Canada pilots who were forced to retire at age 60. Both Vilven and Kelly felt that being forced to retire when they were clearly able to perform their jobs was obvious discrimination.

S. 15(1)(c) of the Canadian Human Rights Act, however, gave employers in the federally regulated sphere a defence to a complaint of discrimination if they could show there was a “normal retirement age” in a particular industry.

Yet, s. 15(1)(c) of the Canadian Human Rights Act remained anomalous as jurisdictions from British Columbia to Newfoundland abandoned mandatory retirement. As the workforce got older it made less sense to force workers to retire, especially when some wanted or needed to continue working.

It has been a difficult fight for both pilots. The case was first heard at the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal in the summer of 2007. The Tribunal then found that Air Canada had indeed shown there was a normal retirement age of 60 in the airline industry. The Tribunal rejected the notion that s.15(1)(c) was unconstitutional since, they believed, there was no affront to a person’s dignity when a generous pension plan was negotiated between an employer and a union.

The pilots applied to the Federal Court of Canada for judicial review on the grounds that the constitutional question was not properly considered. The Federal Court agreed and haughtily sent the case back to the Tribunal, with step by step notes as to how to properly consider the equality guarantee under the Charter.

The second time around the Tribunal got it right, finding that s.15(1)(c) could not be justified as a reasonable limit on equality rights. The Tribunal therefore ordered the pilots’ reinstatement with full benefits and entitlements.

Before this decision mandatory retirement still affected 10% of the Canadian workforce. Now employers in the federal sphere are scrambling to navigate the implications of this decision – and workers who have been adversely affected by mandatory retirement have finally been vindicated by the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal.

The full text of this ruling is available online. See: George Vilven and Canadian Human Rights Commission and Robert Neil Kelly and Canadian Human Rights Commission, 2009 CHRT 24 (CanLII).

- Stephen Ellis, Toronto

UPDATE: September 29, 2009

Air Canada announced today that it is appealing the recent CHRT decision that ruled that s.15(1)(c) was unconstitutional. Air Canada states that the Tribunal did not apply the proper rules as set out by the Supreme Court of Canada which permit mandatory retirement when such a limit is collectively bargained. The Pilots say the are ready for the fight. Stay tuned, it looks as though there may be one more chapter to this story.
- Stephen Ellis

Stephen Ellis practises Employment Law in Toronto.

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Wednesday, September 23, 2009

B.C. Polygamy Charges Quashed

City News reports that polygamy charges against Winston Blackmore and James Oler have been quashed by the British Columbia Supreme Court:

The men had petitioned the court to stay the charges, arguing that the B.C. attorney general had gone "special prosecutor shopping" until he found someone who would go ahead with charges.

In a decision released Wednesday, B.C. Supreme Court Judge Sunni Stromberg-Stein agreed.

The judge said the province's attorney general did not have the jurisdiction to appoint a second special prosecutor to consider charges against Blackmore and Oler after the first special prosecutor recommended against charging the two men.

She found that the appointment of the second special prosecutor - and therefore the decision to charge the men - was "unlawful."

- Garry J. Wise, Toronto

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Ontario Appeal Court Allows Religious, Conservative Groups to Intervene in Sex Workers' Charter Challenge

The Ontario Cout of Appeal has reversed a July 2009 decision by Superior Court Justice Ted Matlow that refused intervenor status to Christian Legal Fellowship, REAL Women of Canada and the Catholic Civil Rights League in a challenge by Canadian sex-trade activists of the constitutionality of Canada's prostitution laws.

An Ontario judge was wrong to prohibit two religious groups and a conservative women's group from supporting the country's prostitution laws at a coming constitutional challenge, the Ontario Court of Appeal said Tuesday.

In a 3-0 ruling, the appeal court said that the groups have a legitimate contribution to make to an issue that has a clear moral dimension.

It ruled that Mr. Justice Ted Matlow of the Ontario Superior Court misunderstood the case and used flawed reasoning when he concluded that groups would be out of place making moral arguments during the trial.

...Scheduled to begin next month, the challenge was launched by three activists connected to the sex trade – Terri Jean Bedford, Amy Lebovitch and Valerie Scott. They want the court to strike down laws against communicating for the purposes of prostitution, living off the avails of prostitution and keeping a common bawdy house.

The challenge will focus on whether prostitution laws violate a constitutional guarantee to life, liberty and security of the person by exposing sex workers to danger.

...Yesterday's ruling was issued by judges Stephen Goudge, Eleanore Cronk and Gloria Epstein.

See Mr. Justice Matlow's original ruling: Bedford v. Canada (Attorney General), 2009 CanLII 33518 (ON S.C.)

- Garry J. Wise, Toronto

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