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4 Hum. Rts. Dig. 1 (2003)

handle is hein.journals/hurtsdg4 and id is 1 raw text is: VOLUME 4 NUMBER 1

Human Rights Digest

January 2003

Decisions Noted

Welfare Cuts Not Discrimination..... 1
Board Makes New Remedial
O rd ers  .. ... ... .... ... ... ... . 4
Parliamentary Privilege Does
Not Curtail Rights.............. 5

Babysitter Sexually Harassed..... .
Tribunal Orders Complainant
to  Pay  Costs  ................

.6
.6

Sexual Harassment Compensated. . . . 7
Tribunal's Impartiality Challenged . . . . 7
Expert W itnesses Rejected  ......... 8
Workplace Poisoned Because
of  R ace  ......................9
Objectionable Conduct Not
Harassm ent  .................. 9

Alberta Discriminates in Health
Benefits  ... ... ... ... .... ...
Server Fired After Epileptic
Se izu re  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

.10
.10

No Family Status Discrimination . . . . 11
Inside  Page  ...................2
Briefly Noted ...............11
Legislative Notes .............12
Ordering  ....................12

CANADIAN CHARTER OF RIGHTS AND
FREEDOMS - s. 1 (reasonable limits) and
application of Oakes test - s. 7 (security
of the person) - s. 15(1) (equality) -
CONSTITUTIONAL LAW - constitu-
tional remedy of striking down - JURIS-
DICTION   -   authority to determine
whether provision contravenes the Charter
- exclusive jurisdiction
FUNDAMENTAL FREEDOMS -physical
security and dignity - EQUALITY -
equal treatment - equality in the admin-
istration, substance and benefit of the law
AGE DISCRIMINATION - PUBLIC SER-
VICES AND    FACILITIES -    SOCIAL
CONDITION - SOURCE OF INCOME
- social assistance benefits reduced for
age group under 30 - EVIDENCE - ex-
pert evidence
DISCRIMINATION - definition of dis-
crimination - adverse effect discrim-
ination - intention to discriminate -
stereotypes
INTERPRETATION    OF STATUTES -
headings and marginal notes as aids to in-
terpretation - legislative intent - defini-
tion of security of the person  - legisla-
tive context - purposive approach
In a split 5-4 decision the Supreme Court of
Canada ruled that a 1984 Quebec welfare
regulation, which cut welfare rates for sin-
gle employable people between the ages
of 18 and 30 to approximately one-third of
the rate required to meet basic needs, did
not discriminate based on age, contrary to
s. 15(1) of the Canadian Charter of Rights
and Freedoms.
Louise Gosselin filed a class action suit
on behalf of herself and the approximately
85,000 persons in the 18 to 30 age group

whose welfare rates were cut to below sub-
sistence level. Those under 30 could in-
crease the amount of welfare they received
by participating in one of three education
or work experience programs. Depending
on the program, their participation would
permit them to raise their welfare rate,
though not always to an amount equal to
the regular rate. An initial 30,000 places in
these three training programs were made
available.
Louise Gosselin argued that s. 29(a) of
the Social Aid Regulations constituted un-
justifiable age discrimination under s. 15(1)
of the Charter, an infringement under s. 7
of the Charter, and a violation of s. 45 of
the Quebec Charter of Human Rights and
Freedoms. Gosselin sought a declaration of
invalidity and an order that the govern-
ment of Quebec reimburse all affected wel-
fare recipients for benefits lost due to the
age-based distinction.
The Chief Justice, joined by Gonthier,
lacobucci, Major, and Binnie JJ., wrote the
majority judgment on s. 15(1). Justices
L'Heureux-Dube, Bastarache, Arbour and
LeBel each wrote in dissent.
Although there is facial discrimination
on the basis of age in the regulation, the
majority of the Court determined that age
- unlike race or religion - is not historically
strongly associated with discrimination.
Rather, age-based distinctions are a com-
mon and necessary means of ordering our
society. The fact that every individual will
experience being both young and old oper-
ates against the arbitrary marginalization of
a particular age group. The majority deter-
mined therefore that invoking age as a
ground of distinction does not automati-
cally show that there is a pre-existing disad-
vantage that would suggest discrimination.
Moreover, young adults, as a class, do not
seem especially vulnerable or undervalued.

continued on page 3

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