SUPREME
COURT OF CANADA
Citation: NIL/TU,O
Child and Family Services Society v. B.C. Government and Service
Employees’ Union, 2010 SCC 45, [2010] 2 S.C.R. 696
|
Date: 20101104
Docket: 32862
|
Between:
NIL/TU,O
Child and Family Services Society
Appellant
and
B.C.
Government and Service Employees’ Union
Respondent
‑ and ‑
Attorney
General of Canada, Attorney General of Ontario,
Attorney
General of Quebec, Attorney General of New Brunswick,
Attorney
General of Manitoba, Attorney General of British Columbia,
Attorney
General for Saskatchewan, British Columbia Labour Relations Board,
Canadian
Human Rights Commission, Kwumut Lelum Child and Family
Services
Society, Mohawk Council of Akwesasne, Assembly of First Nations
of
Quebec and Labrador, First Nations of Quebec and Labrador Health and
Social
Services Commission, First Nations Summit and Te’Mexw Nations
Interveners
Coram: McLachlin C.J. and Binnie, LeBel, Deschamps, Fish,
Abella, Charron, Rothstein and Cromwell JJ.
Reasons for
Judgment:
(paras. 1 to 47)
Joint Concurring
Reasons:
(paras. 48 to 82)
|
Abella J. (LeBel, Deschamps, Charron, Rothstein and
Cromwell JJ. concurring)
McLachlin C.J. and Fish J. (Binnie J. concurring)
|
______________________________
NIL/TU,O Child and Family Services Society v. B.C. Government
and Service Employees’ Union, 2010 SCC 45, [2010] 2 S.C.R. 696
NIL/TU,O Child and Family Services Society Appellant
v.
B.C. Government and Service Employees’ Union Respondent
and
Attorney
General of Canada, Attorney General of
Ontario,
Attorney General of Quebec, Attorney General
of New
Brunswick, Attorney General of Manitoba,
Attorney
General of British Columbia, Attorney General
for
Saskatchewan, British Columbia Labour Relations
Board,
Canadian Human Rights Commission, Kwumut
Lelum Child
and Family Services Society, Mohawk
Council of
Akwesasne, Assembly of the First Nations of
Quebec and
Labrador, First Nations of Quebec and
Labrador
Health and Social Services Commission, First
Nations Summit and Te’Mexw Nations Interveners
Indexed as: NIL/TU,O Child and Family Services Society v.
B.C. Government and Service Employees’ Union
2010 SCC 45
File No.: 32862.
2009: December 8; 2010: November 4.
Present: McLachlin C.J. and Binnie, LeBel,
Deschamps, Fish, Abella, Charron, Rothstein and Cromwell JJ.
on appeal from the
court of appeal for british columbia
Constitutional law — Division of powers — Labour
relations — Aboriginal peoples — Child welfare agency providing services to
Aboriginal children and families in British Columbia — Union applying to B.C.
Labour Relations Board for certification as bargaining agent for child welfare
agency’s employees — Agency arguing its labour relations within exclusive
federal authority over Indians — Whether agency constitutes a federal
undertaking based on its nature, operations and habitual activities — Whether
Aboriginal aspects of agency’s operations and service delivery displace
presumption of provincial jurisdiction over labour relations — Constitution
Act, 1867, s. 91(24) .
NIL/TU,O Child and Family Services Society provides
child welfare services to the children and families of seven First Nations in
British Columbia. It has a unique institutional structure, combining
provincial accountability, federal funding, and a measure of operational
independence. In 2005, the Union applied to the B.C. Labour Relations Board to
be certified as the bargaining agent for NIL/TU,O’s employees. NIL/TU,O
objected, arguing that its labour relations fell within federal jurisdiction
over “Indians” under s. 91(24) of the Constitution Act, 1867 , because
its services are designed for First Nations children and families. The Board
dismissed NIL/TU,O’s objection and certified the Union. On judicial review,
the Supreme Court of British Columbia overturned the Board’s certification
order, finding that even though NIL/TU,O’s operations served provincial ends,
they did so by uniquely Aboriginal means. The British Columbia Court of
Appeal allowed the Union’s appeal, concluding that NIL/TU,O’s operations — and
therefore its labour relations — fell under provincial jurisdiction.
Held: The appeal should
be dismissed.
Per LeBel, Deschamps,
Abella, Charron, Rothstein and Cromwell JJ.: An application of the well‑established
legal framework for determining the jurisdiction of labour relations on
federalism grounds clearly and conclusively confirms that NIL/TU,O is a
provincial undertaking. Its labour relations therefore fall under provincial
jurisdiction and are subject to the B.C. Labour Relations Code.
Canadian courts have long recognized that labour relations are presumptively a
provincial matter. To displace that presumption, a court must conduct an
inquiry having two distinct steps, the first being the “functional test”, which
examines the nature, operations and habitual activities of the entity to
determine whether it constitutes a federal undertaking. Only when this first
test is inconclusive, should a court proceed to the second step, which is to
ask whether the provincial regulation of that entity’s labour relations would
impair the “core” of the federal head of power at issue. There is no reason
why the jurisdiction of an entity’s labour relations should be approached
differently when dealing with s. 91(24) of the Constitution Act, 1867 .
The fundamental nature of the inquiry is — and should be — the same.
The essential nature of NIL/TU,O’s operation is to
provide child and family services, a matter within the provincial sphere. It
is regulated exclusively by the province, and its employees exercise
exclusively provincial delegated authority. The identity of the designated
beneficiaries may and undoubtedly should affect how those services are
delivered, but they do not change the fact that the delivery of child welfare
services, a provincial undertaking, is what NIL/TU,O essentially does. The
presumption in favour of provincial jurisdiction over labour relations remains
operative in this case. Since the question of whether an entity’s activities
or operations lie at the “core” of a federal undertaking or head of power is
not part of the functional test, and since the functional test is conclusive,
an inquiry into the “core of Indianness” is not required.
Per McLachlin C.J.
and Binnie and Fish JJ.: The central question in this case is whether
the operation falls within the protected “core of Indianness” under
s. 91(24) , defined as matters that go to the status and rights of
Indians. The proposition that the “core of Indianness” should be considered
only if the functional test is inconclusive does not withstand scrutiny because
the essence of the functional test is whether the operation falls within the
core of the federal power. The two‑stage test would mean that labour
jurisdiction would be determined in many cases before consideration of the
power under s. 91(24) is reached. Deciding labour jurisdiction in a case
such as this without scrutiny of the federal power hollows out the functional
test. Conversely, to deem any Aboriginal aspect sufficient to trigger federal
jurisdiction would threaten to swallow the presumption that labour relations
fall under provincial jurisdiction. The proper approach is simply to ask, as
the cases consistently have, whether the Indian operation at issue, viewed
functionally in terms of its normal and habitual activities, falls within the
core of s. 91(24) . The functional analysis of the operation’s activities
is not a preliminary step; rather it provides the answer to whether the
activity falls within the protected core.
In the labour relations context, only if the operation’s
normal and habitual activities relate directly to what makes Indians federal
persons by virtue of their status or rights, can the presumption that
provincial labour legislation applies be ousted. This is a narrow test. It
recognizes that Indians are members of the broader population and, in their day‑to‑day
activities, they are subject to provincial laws of general application. Only
where the activity is so integrally related to what makes Indians and lands
reserved for Indians a fundamental federal responsibility does it become an
intrinsic part of the exclusive federal jurisdiction, such that provincial
legislative power is excluded. In this case, the function or operation of
NIL/TU,O is the provision of child welfare services under the umbrella of the
province‑wide network of agencies providing similar services. The fact
that NIL/TU,O employs Indians and works for the welfare of Indian children in a
culturally sensitive way that seeks to enhance Aboriginal identity and preserve
Aboriginal values does not alter that essential function. Moreover, NIL/TU,O’s
ordinary and habitual activities do not touch on issues of Indian status or
rights. As such, the child welfare services cannot be considered federal
activities. This conclusion is not negated by the fact that the federal
government has entered into an intergovernmental agreement with the province of
British Columbia and NIL/TU,O, or because it agreed to partially fund the
delivery of child welfare services on reserves. NIL/TU,O, as the deliverer of
those services, is therefore bound by the applicable provincial legislation.
Applied: Northern
Telecom Ltd. v. Communications Workers of Canada, [1980] 1 S.C.R. 115; Four
B Manufacturing Ltd. v. United Garment Workers of America, [1980] 1 S.C.R.
1031; referred to: Consolidated Fastfrate Inc. v. Western Canada
Council of Teamsters, 2009 SCC 53, [2009] 3 S.C.R. 407; Toronto Electric
Commissioners v. Snider, [1925] A.C. 396; Reference re Industrial
Relations and Disputes Investigation Act, [1955] S.C.R. 529; Reference
re Minimum Wage Act of Saskatchewan, [1948] S.C.R. 248; Commission du
salaire minimum v. Bell Telephone Co. of Canada, [1966] S.C.R. 767; Agence
Maritime Inc. v. Conseil canadien des relations ouvrières, [1969] S.C.R.
851; Letter Carriers’ Union of Canada v. Canadian Union of Postal Workers,
[1975] 1 S.C.R. 178; Canada Labour Relations Board v. City of Yellowknife,
[1977] 2 S.C.R. 729; Construction Montcalm Inc. v. Minimum Wage Commission,
[1979] 1 S.C.R. 754; Bell Canada v. Quebec (Commission de la santé et de la
sécurité du travail), [1988] 1 S.C.R. 749; Ontario Hydro v. Ontario
(Labour Relations Board), [1993] 3 S.C.R. 327; Sappier v. Tobique Indian
Band (Council) (1988), 87 N.R. 1; Qu’Appelle Indian Residential School
Council v. Canada (Canadian Human Rights Tribunal), [1988] 2 F.C. 226; Sagkeeng
Alcohol Rehab Centre Inc. v. Abraham, [1994] 3 F.C. 449; Canadian
Western Bank v. Alberta, 2007 SCC 22, [2007] 2 S.C.R. 3; Husky Oil
Operations Ltd. v. Minister of National Revenue, [1995] 3 S.C.R. 453; Multiple
Access Ltd. v. McCutcheon, [1982] 2 S.C.R. 161; Reference re Firearms
Act, 2000 SCC 31, [2000] 1 S.C.R. 783; Kitkatla Band v. British Columbia
(Minister of Small Business, Tourism and Culture), 2002 SCC 31, [2002] 2
S.C.R. 146; Fédération des producteurs de volailles du Québec v. Pelland,
2005 SCC 20, [2005] 1 S.C.R. 292.
By McLachlin C.J. and Fish J.
Referred to: Construction
Montcalm Inc. v. Minimum Wage Commission, [1979] 1 S.C.R. 754; Four B
Manufacturing Ltd. v. United Garment Workers of America, [1980] 1 S.C.R.
1031; Northern Telecom Ltd. v. Communications Workers of Canada, [1980]
1 S.C.R. 115; Paul v. British Columbia (Forest Appeals Commission), 2003
SCC 55, [2003] 2 S.C.R. 585; Dick v. The Queen, [1985] 2 S.C.R. 309; Delgamuukw
v. British Columbia, [1997] 3 S.C.R. 1010; Consolidated
Fastfrate Inc. v. Western Canada Council of Teamsters, 2009 SCC 53, [2009]
3 S.C.R. 407; Canadian Western Bank v. Alberta, 2007 SCC 22, [2007] 2
S.C.R. 3; Sagkeeng Alcohol Rehab Centre Inc. v. Abraham, [1994] 3 F.C.
449; Shubenacadie Band Council v. Canada (Human Rights Commission)
(2000), 37 C.H.R.R. D/466; Sappier v. Tobique Indian Band (Council)
(1988), 87 N.R. 1; Qu’Appelle Indian Residential School Council v. Canada
(Canadian Human Rights Tribunal), [1988] 2 F.C. 226; Westbank First
Nation v. British Columbia (Labour Relations Board) (1997), 39 C.L.R.B.R.
(2d) 227; Commission de transport de la Communauté urbaine de Québec v.
Canada (National Battlefields Commission), [1990] 2 S.C.R. 838; Natural
Parents v. Superintendent of Child Welfare, [1976] 2 S.C.R. 751; Paul v.
Paul, [1986] 1 S.C.R. 306; Derrickson v. Derrickson, [1986] 1 S.C.R.
285; Kitkatla Band v. British Columbia (Minister of Small Business, Tourism
and Culture), 2002 SCC 31, [2002] 2 S.C.R. 146.
Statutes and Regulations Cited
Canada Labour Code,
R.S.C. 1985, c. L‑2 .
Child, Family and Community Service Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 46, ss. 2, 3, 4, 71(3), 91,
93(1)(g)(iii).
Constitution Act, 1867,
ss. 91 , 92 .
Indian Act, R.S.C.
1985, c. I‑5, s. 88 .
Labour Relations Code,
R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 244.
Society Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 433.
APPEAL from a judgment of the British Columbia Court of
Appeal (Finch C.J.B.C. and Frankel and Groberman JJ.A.), 2008 BCCA 333, 81
B.C.L.R. (4th) 318, 258 B.C.A.C. 244, 434 W.A.C. 244, 296 D.L.R. (4th) 364, 155
C.L.R.B.R. (2d) 1, 80 Admin. L.R. (4th) 282, [2008] 10 W.W.R. 388, 2009
C.L.L.C. ¶220‑011, [2008] 4 C.N.L.R. 57, [2008] B.C.J. No. 1611
(QL), 2008 CarswellBC 1773, reversing a decision of Cullen J., 2007 BCSC
1080, 76 B.C.L.R. (4th) 322, 284 D.L.R. (4th) 42, 147 C.L.R.B.R. (2d) 289,
[2008] 4 W.W.R. 287, 2007 C.L.L.C. ¶220‑044, [2007] B.C.J. No. 1609
(QL), 2007 CarswellBC 1671. Appeal dismissed.
Walter G. Rilkoff,
Lisa A. Peters and Nicole K. Skuggedal, for the appellant.
Kenneth R. Curry and
Catherine Ann Sullivan, for the respondent.
Peter Southey and Sean
Gaudet, for the intervener the Attorney General of Canada.
Sean Hanley and Bruce
Ellis, for the intervener the Attorney General of Ontario.
Sylvain Leboeuf
and Monique Rousseau, for the intervener the Attorney General of Quebec.
Gaétan Migneault,
for the intervener the Attorney General of New Brunswick.
Cynthia Devine,
for the intervener the Attorney General of Manitoba.
Paul E. Yearwood,
for the intervener the Attorney General of British Columbia.
R. James Fyfe,
for the intervener the Attorney General for Saskatchewan.
Elena Miller, for
the intervener the British Columbia Labour Relations Board.
Philippe Dufresne
and Valerie Phillips, for the intervener the Canadian Human Rights
Commission.
John W. Gailus
and Christopher G. Devlin, for the intervener the Kwumut Lelum
Child and Family Services Society.
Jacques A. Emond
and Colleen Dunlop, for the intervener the Mohawk Council of Akwesasne.
David Schulze and Barbara
Cuber, for the interveners the Assembly of the First Nations of Quebec and
Labrador and the First Nations of Quebec and Labrador Health and Social
Services Commission.
Arthur C. Pape
and Richard B. Salter, for the intervener the First Nations Summit.
Robert J. M. Janes
and Karey M. Brooks, for the intervener the Te’Mexw Nations.
The judgment of LeBel, Deschamps, Abella, Charron,
Rothstein and Cromwell JJ. was delivered by
[1]
Abella J. — NIL/TU,O Child
and Family Services Society (“NIL/TU,O”) provides child welfare services to
certain First Nations children and families in British Columbia. It has a unique
institutional structure, combining provincial accountability, federal funding,
and a measure of operational independence.
[2]
None of the parties dispute that child welfare is a matter within
provincial legislative competence under the Constitution Act, 1867 .
NIL/TU,O does not challenge the constitutional validity of the Child, Family
and Community Service Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 46, as it applies to
Aboriginal people. Nor is the issue whether the federal government can enact
labour relations legislation dealing with “Indians”. It clearly can. The
issue in this appeal is whether NIL/TU,O’s labour relations nonetheless fall
within federal jurisdiction over Indians under s. 91(24) because its services
are designed for First Nations children and families.
[3]
For the last 85 years, this Court has consistently endorsed and applied
a distinct legal test for determining the jurisdiction of labour relations on
federalism grounds. This legal framework, set out most comprehensively in Northern
Telecom Ltd. v. Communications Workers of Canada, [1980] 1 S.C.R. 115 and
Four B Manufacturing Ltd. v. United Garment Workers of America, [1980]
1 S.C.R. 1031, and applied most recently in Consolidated Fastfrate
Inc. v. Western Canada Council of Teamsters, 2009 SCC 53, [2009] 3 S.C.R.
407, is used regardless of the specific head of federal power engaged in a
particular case. It calls for an inquiry into the nature, habitual activities
and daily operations of the entity in question to determine whether it constitutes
a federal undertaking. This inquiry is known as the “functional test”. Only
if this test is inconclusive as to whether a particular undertaking is
“federal”, does the court go on to consider whether provincial regulation of
that entity’s labour relations would impair the “core” of the federal head of
power.
[4]
The “core” of whatever federal head of power happens to be at issue in a
particular labour relations case has never been used by this Court to determine
whether an entity is a “federal undertaking” for the purposes of triggering the
jurisdiction of the Canada Labour Code, R.S.C. 1985, c. L-2 . Since in
my view the functional test conclusively establishes that NIL/TU,O is a
provincial undertaking, I do not see this case as being the first to require an
examination of the “core” of s. 91(24) .
Background
[5]
In 1997, seven First Nations collectively incorporated NIL/TU,O under
British Columbia’s Society Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 433, to establish a
child welfare agency that would provide “culturally appropriate” services to
their children and families. NIL/TU,O operates out of offices on the Tsawout
reserve and provides its services to the members of the “Collective First
Nations”, currently comprised of the Beecher Bay, Pacheedaht, Pauquachin,
Songhees, T’Sou‑ke, Tsartlip and Tsawout First Nations.
[6]
In 2005, the British Columbia Government and Service Employees’ Union
applied to the British Columbia Labour Relations Board to be certified as the
bargaining agent for all employees of NIL/TU,O, excluding the executive
director. NIL/TU,O objected, arguing that its labour relations fell under
federal jurisdiction.
[7]
The Board dismissed NIL/TU,O’s objection. NIL/TU,O was, in the Board’s
view, an “‘Indian’ organization” ((2006), 122 C.L.R.B.R. (2d) 174, at para.
47). However, without some connection to the exercise of federal legislative
power, that “‘Indian’ content” did not attract federal jurisdiction over labour
relations (para. 47). The Board accordingly certified the Union under the B.C.
Labour Relations Code, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 244. A three-member
panel of the Board subsequently dismissed NIL/TU,O’s request for
reconsideration ((2006), 127 C.L.R.B.R. (2d) 137).
[8]
On judicial review, Cullen J. of the Supreme Court of British Columbia
granted the application on the grounds that NIL/TU,O’s labour relations fell
under federal jurisdiction and were therefore not within the Board’s authority
(2007 BCSC 1080, 76 B.C.L.R. (4th) 322). He found that NIL/TU,O’s operations
and activities had a federal dimension and, even though those operations served
provincial ends, they did so by uniquely Aboriginal means. Cullen J.
accordingly overturned the Board’s certification order.
[9]
The Union then sought and obtained certification from the Canada
Industrial Relations Board under the Canada Labour Code . Despite its
federal certification, the Union appealed Cullen J.’s decision to the British
Columbia Court of Appeal where Groberman J.A., writing for a unanimous court,
concluded that NIL/TU,O’s operations — and therefore its labour relations —
fell under provincial jurisdiction (2008 BCCA 333, 81 B.C.L.R. (4th) 318). In
his view, nothing in the Child, Family and Community Service Act, the
design of NIL/TU,O’s operations or the nature of NIL/TU,O’s services took
NIL/TU,O outside provincial jurisdiction. Primary provincial jurisdiction over
labour relations was not “ousted” simply because NIL/TU,O’s operations
“engage[d] the interests of [A]boriginal groups” or because NIL/TU,O provided
services in a “culturally sensitive” manner (para. 62).
[10] For
somewhat different reasons, I agree with the conclusion of the British
Columbia Court of Appeal and the British Columbia Labour Relations Board that
NIL/TU,O’s labour relations fall under provincial jurisdiction and are
therefore subject to the British Columbia Labour Relations Code. I
would therefore dismiss the appeal.
Analysis
[11] Jurisdiction
over labour relations is not delegated to either the provincial or federal
governments under s. 91 or s. 92 of the Constitution Act, 1867 . But
since Toronto Electric Commissioners v. Snider, [1925] A.C. 396 (P.C.),
Canadian courts have recognized that labour relations are presumptively a
provincial matter, and that the federal government has jurisdiction over labour
relations only by way of exception. This exception has always been narrowly
interpreted (Snider; Reference re Industrial Relations and Disputes
Investigation Act, [1955] S.C.R. 529 (the “Stevedoring case”); Reference
re Minimum Wage Act of Saskatchewan, [1948] S.C.R. 248; Commission du
salaire minimum v. Bell Telephone Co. of Canada, [1966] S.C.R. 767; Agence
Maritime Inc. v. Conseil canadien des relations ouvrières, [1969] S.C.R.
851; Letter Carriers’ Union of Canada v. Canadian Union of Postal Workers,
[1975] 1 S.C.R. 178; Canada Labour Relations Board v. City of Yellowknife,
[1977] 2 S.C.R. 729; Construction Montcalm Inc. v. Minimum Wage Commission,
[1979] 1 S.C.R. 754; Northern Telecom; Four B; Bell Canada v.
Quebec (Commission de la santé et de la sécurité du travail), [1988] 1
S.C.R. 749; Ontario Hydro v. Ontario (Labour Relations Board), [1993] 3
S.C.R. 327; Consolidated Fastfrate, at paras. 27-28).
[12] The
approach to determining whether an entity’s labour relations are federally or
provincially regulated is a distinct one and, notably, entails a completely
different analysis from that used to determine whether a particular statute is
intra or ultra vires the constitutional authority of the enabling
government. Because the regulation of labour relations falls presumptively
within the jurisdiction of the provinces, the narrow question when dealing with
cases raising the jurisdiction of labour relations is whether a particular
entity is a “federal work, undertaking or business” for purposes of triggering
the jurisdiction of the Canada Labour Code .
[13] The
principles underpinning this Court’s well-established approach to labour
relations jurisdiction are set out by Dickson J., writing for a unanimous
Court, in Northern Telecom. The case dealt with the jurisdiction of the
labour relations of a subsidiary of a telecommunications company which was
itself unquestionably a federal “work, undertaking or business” under s.
92(10) (a) of the Constitution Act, 1867 . Adopting Beetz
J.’s majority judgment in Construction Montcalm, Dickson J. described
the relationship between the division of powers and labour relations as follows:
(1) Parliament
has no authority over labour relations as such nor over the terms of a contract
of employment; exclusive provincial competence is the rule.
(2) By way
of exception, however, Parliament may assert exclusive jurisdiction over these
matters if it is shown that such jurisdiction is an integral part of its
primary competence over some other single federal subject.
(3) Primary
federal competence over a given subject can prevent the application of
provincial law relating to labour relations and the conditions of employment
but only if it is demonstrated that federal authority over these matters is an
integral element of such federal competence.
(4) Thus, the regulation of wages to be paid by an undertaking, service
or business, and the regulation of its labour relations, being related to an
integral part of the operation of the undertaking, service or business, are
removed from provincial jurisdiction and immune from the effect of provincial
law if the undertaking, service or business is a federal one. [p. 132]
[14] He
then set out a “functional test” for determining whether an entity is “federal”
for purposes of triggering federal labour relations jurisdiction.
Significantly, the “core” of the telecommunications head of power was not used
to determine, as part of the functional analysis, the nature of the
subsidiary’s operations:
(5) The
question whether an undertaking, service or business is a federal one depends
on the nature of its operation.
(6) In order to determine the nature of the operation, one must look
at the normal or habitual activities of the business as those of “a going
concern”, without regard for exceptional or casual factors; otherwise, the
Constitution could not be applied with any degree of continuity and regularity.
[Emphasis added; p. 132.]
[15] Four
B, decided the same year as Northern Telecom, also adopted the
principles from Construction Montcalm, and again found the
functional test, which examined the “normal or habitual activities” of the
entity, to be determinative. The issue in Four B was whether provincial
labour legislation applied to a provincially incorporated manufacturing
operation that was owned by four Aboriginal band members, employed mostly band
members, and operated on reserve land pursuant to a federal permit. Beetz J.,
for the majority, set out the governing principles and concluded that the
“operational nature” of the business was provincial:
In my view the established principles relevant to this issue can be
summarized very briefly. With respect to labour relations, exclusive provincial
legislative competence is the rule, exclusive federal competence is the
exception. The exception comprises, in the main, labour relations in undertakings,
services and businesses which, having regard to the functional test of the
nature of their operations and their normal activities, can be characterized as
federal undertakings, services or businesses . . . .
There is nothing about the business or operation of Four
B which might allow it to be considered as a federal business: the sewing
of uppers on sport shoes is an ordinary industrial activity which clearly comes
under provincial legislative authority for the purposes of labour relations.
Neither the ownership of the business by Indian shareholders, nor the
employment by that business of a majority of Indian employees, nor the carrying
on of that business on an Indian reserve under a federal permit, nor the federal
loan and subsidies, taken separately or together, can have any effect on the
operational nature of that business. By the traditional and functional
test, therefore, The Labour Relations Act applies to the facts of
this case, and the Board has jurisdiction. [Emphasis added;
pp. 1045-46.]
Beetz J. was
satisfied that the functional test was conclusive and that Four B was a
provincial undertaking.
[16] At no
point, in discussing the functional test, does Beetz J. mention the “core” of
s. 91(24) or its content. In fact, he makes it clear that only if the
functional test is inconclusive as to whether a particular undertaking is
“federal”, should a court consider whether provincial regulation of labour
relations would impair the “core” of whatever federal regulation governed the
entity.
[17] He
went on to discuss, in obiter, whether this conclusion would have been
different if the functional test had been inconclusive:
The functional test is a particular method of applying a more general
rule namely, that exclusive federal jurisdiction over labour relations arises
only if it can be shown that such jurisdiction forms an integral part of
primary federal jurisdiction over some other federal object: the Stevedoring
case.
Given this general rule, and assuming for the sake
of argument that the functional test is not conclusive for the purposes of this
case, the first question which must be answered . . . is whether the
power to regulate the labour relations in issue forms an integral part of
primary federal jurisdiction over Indians and Lands reserved for the Indians.
The second question is whether Parliament has occupied the field by the
provisions of the Canada Labour Code . [Emphasis added; p. 1047.]
[18] In
other words, in determining whether an entity’s labour relations will be
federally regulated, thereby displacing the operative presumption of provincial
jurisdiction, Four B requires that a court first apply the functional
test, that is, examine the nature, operations and habitual activities of the entity
to see if it is a federal undertaking. If so, its labour relations will be
federally regulated. Only if this inquiry is inconclusive should a court
proceed to an examination of whether provincial regulation of the entity’s labour
relations would impair the core of the federal head of power at issue.
[19] Notwithstanding
this Court’s long-standing approach, a different line of authority has uniquely
emerged when courts are dealing with s. 91(24) (see Sappier v. Tobique
Indian Band (Council) (1988), 87 N.R. 1 (F.C.A.); Qu’Appelle Indian
Residential School Council v. Canada (Canadian Human Rights Tribunal),
[1988] 2 F.C. 226 (T.D.), at p. 239; Sagkeeng Alcohol Rehab Centre Inc. v.
Abraham, [1994] 3 F.C. 449 (T.D.), at pp. 459-60). This divergent
analysis proceeds, contrary to Four B, directly to the question of
whether the “core” of the head of power is impaired, without applying the
functional test first. Moreover, rather than considering whether the regulation
of the entity’s labour relations would impair the “core” of a federal
head of power, these decisions have examined instead whether the nature of the
entity’s operations lay at the “core” and therefore displaced the
presumption that labour relations are provincially regulated.
[20]
There is no reason why, as a matter of principle, the
jurisdiction of an entity’s labour relations should be approached differently
when s. 91(24) is at issue. The fundamental nature of the inquiry is — and
should be — the same as for any other head of power. It is an inquiry with
two distinct steps, the first being the functional test. A court should
proceed to the second step only when this first test is inconclusive. If it
is, the question is not whether the entity’s operations lie at the
“core” of the federal head of power; it is whether the provincial regulation of
that entity’s labour relations would impair the “core” of that head of
power. Collapsing the two steps into a single inquiry, as the trial judge and
the Court of Appeal did, and as the Chief Justice and Fish J. do in their
concurring reasons, transforms the traditional labour relations test into a
different test: the one used for determining
whether a statute is “inapplicable” under the traditional interjurisdictional immunity
doctrine. The two-step inquiry preserves the integrity of the unique
labour relations test; the single-step approach extinguishes it.
[21] With
great respect, therefore, to the contrary views of the Chief Justice and Fish
J., I do not agree that consideration of the “core” of a federal head of power
is part of the functional test, the first step of the analysis. Whether an
activity lies at the “core” of a federal undertaking or head of power is an
analysis carried out in the narrow confines of interjurisdictional immunity:
see Canadian Western Bank v. Alberta, 2007 SCC 22, [2007] 2 S.C.R. 3.
The functional test is not an alternate method of determining whether an
activity lies at the “core”; rather, the functional test looks to whether the
“undertaking, service or business is a federal one” (Northern Telecom,
at p. 132).
[22] The
difference between these two approaches is significant. The “core” of a
federal head of power might not capture the scope or potential reach of federal
legislative jurisdiction, as the Court held in Canadian Western Bank.
Additionally, it is possible for an entity to be federally regulated in part
and provincially regulated in part. To the extent that the functional test is
inconclusive as to jurisdiction over the labour relations of an entity, the
presumption of provincial jurisdiction will apply in such a case unless the
core of the federal head of power would be impaired by provincial regulation of
the entity’s labour relations. It is only in this circumstance of an
inconclusive finding about the application of the functional test that this
narrow analysis of the “core” of the federal power will be engaged.
[23] This
brings us to the application of the Four B test to the circumstances of
this case. The delivery of child welfare services in British Columbia is
governed by the Child, Family and Community Service Act. The Act sets
out a detailed child protection regime for the province that is administered by
“directors” appointed by the Minister for Child and Family Development (s. 91).
[24] The
province of British Columbia (represented by a director appointed under the
Act), the federal government (represented by the Minister of Indian Affairs)
and NIL/TU,O (representing the Collective First Nations) are parties to a
tripartite delegation agreement, first signed in 1999 and later confirmed in
2004 (“2004 Agreement”). Under this agreement, the provincial government, as
the keeper of constitutional authority over child welfare, delegated some of
its statutory powers and responsibilities over the delivery of child welfare
services to the Collective First Nations to NIL/TU,O. This delegation is
anticipated by s. 93(1)(g)(iii) of the Act, which permits a provincial director
to make agreements for the delivery of statutory child welfare services with
legal entities representing Aboriginal communities. The federal government’s
role in the arrangement is limited to financing NIL/TU,O’s provision of certain
services to certain children.
[25] The
2004 Agreement established NIL/TU,O’s responsibility for delivering services
provided for in the Act to the Collective First Nations’ children and their
families and confirmed the rights of those children to be connected to their
culture and to receive “culturally appropriate” services from NIL/TU,O (arts.
2.1(a) and (d)). It provides that the province of British Columbia has
legislative authority in respect of child welfare and that the director is
responsible for administering the Act (Preamble, art. D). The 2004 Agreement
also provides, however, that NIL/TU,O has the right to “care for and protect
NIL/TU,O Children and to preserve their connection to their culture and
heritage through the delivery of culturally appropriate Services” (Preamble,
art. G).
[26] When
providing delegated statutory services, NIL/TU,O’s employees are always
accountable to the directors appointed under the Act (2004 Agreement, arts.
5.1 and 5.2), and NIL/TU,O is required, at all times, to deliver its delegated
services in accordance with the Act (2004 Agreement, arts. 3.1 and 4.2). In
providing these statutory services, NIL/TU,O must uphold the Act’s paramount
considerations, namely, the safety and well-being of children, and must comply
with the following principles (s. 2):
(a) children are entitled to be protected from abuse, neglect and
harm or threat of harm;
(b) a family is the preferred environment for the care and
upbringing of children and the responsibility for the protection of children
rests primarily with the parents;
(c) if, with available support services, a family can provide a safe
and nurturing environment for a child, support services should be provided;
(d) the child’s views should be taken into account when decisions
relating to a child are made;
(e) kinship ties and a child’s attachment to the extended family should
be preserved if possible;
(f) the cultural identity of [A]boriginal children should be
preserved;
(g) decisions relating to children should be made
and implemented in a timely manner.
[27] NIL/TU,O
must also provide its statutory services in accordance with the service
delivery principles listed in s. 3 of the Act:
(a) families and children should be informed of the services
available to them and encouraged to participate in decisions that affect them;
(b) [A]boriginal people should be involved in the planning and
delivery of services to [A]boriginal families and their children;
(c) services should be planned and provided in ways that are
sensitive to the needs and the cultural, racial and religious heritage of those
receiving the services;
(d) services should be integrated, wherever possible and
appropriate, with services provided by government ministries, community
agencies and Community Living British Columbia established under the Community
Living Authority Act;
(e) the community should be involved, wherever
possible and appropriate, in the planning and delivery of services, including
preventive and support services to families and children.
[28] In
addition, NIL/TU,O is bound by the factors that, according to the Act, define
the “best interests of a child”, namely the child’s safety, physical and
emotional needs, level of development, cultural, racial, linguistic and
religious heritage; the importance of continuity in the child’s care; the
quality of the relationship between the child and his or her parent or other
person; the effect of maintaining that relationship; the child’s views; and the
effect on the child in the event of a delayed decision (s. 4(1)). If a child
is Aboriginal, the importance of preserving the child’s cultural identity must
also be considered when determining what is in his or her best interests (s.
4(2)). It is of note that under s. 71(3) of the Act, when an Aboriginal child
is in care, priority must be given to placing the child with the child’s
extended family, a family within the child’s Aboriginal cultural community, or
another Aboriginal family. Alternative placement options are considered only
if these parameters cannot be met.
[29] The
specific statutory powers delegated to NIL/TU,O by the province are set out in
a “Delegation Matrix” appended to the 2004 Agreement. There are several
categories of delegated authority. Most of the NIL/TU,O employees exercising
delegated authority operate at the lower category, category 12, which means
that they can provide support services for families, administer voluntary care
and special needs agreements, and establish residential resources for children
in care. Some employees have category 13 authority, which gives them the
responsibility for guardianship of children and youth in continuing custody in
addition to the lower category powers.
[30] None
of NIL/TU,O’s employees have category 14 or 15 authority, which are the
highest levels contemplated by the regime. Practitioners with category 15
authority are the only ones who are authorized to provide the full range of
child protection services set out in the Act, including the apprehension of
children in need of protection. Category 14 is reserved for new child
protection workers who operate under the supervision of a category 15
practitioner. Therefore, when a child in NIL/TU,O’s care is in need of
protection, an issue that exists in approximately 20 to 30 percent of
NIL/TU,O’s files, NIL/TU,O employees have no authority to provide the
necessary services.
[31] In
all cases, a director under the Act can intervene to ensure NIL/TU,O’s
compliance with the Act (2004 Agreement, art. 4.3). When a director and
NIL/TU,O disagree as to a child’s safety or placement or as to the provision of
services, the director’s decision is paramount (2004 Agreement, art. 14.2).
The director is also empowered to revoke, unilaterally, NIL/TU,O’s delegated
authority upon written notice (2004 Agreement, art. 18.5).
[32] The
2004 Agreement requires that, in addition to delivering delegated services in
accordance with the Act, NIL/TU,O must comply with the Aboriginal Operational
and Practice Standards and Indicators (“AOPSI”) (2004 Agreement, arts. 4.2 and
4.5). The AOPSI were developed collaboratively by the Executive Directors of
Aboriginal child and family service agencies, the Department of Indian Affairs
and Northern Development, British Columbia’s Ministry for Children and
Families, and the Caring for First Nations Children Society. They prescribe
the “readiness criteria” that must be met before an Aboriginal child and family
services agency receives delegated authority under the Act, and set out
practice standards that govern the provision of services by Aboriginal
agencies, some of which address the unique circumstances of Aboriginal children
(see standards 4, 11 and 15).
[33] In
addition to its delegated powers, NIL/TU,O’s goals include the delivery of
services that are not provided for in the Act. These non-statutory services
include after-school programs designed to increase children’s appreciation of
First Nations’ culture, a camp where youth learn traditional practices, youth
justice initiatives that pair troubled youth with mentors and elders, and
school support programs that provide mentors to children who encounter racism
and discrimination. The record does not, as the Court of Appeal pointed out,
establish the extent to which these activities form part of NIL/TU,O’s day-to-day
operations.
[34] NIL/TU,O
receives both provincial and federal funding. Before the province delegated to
NIL/TU,O some of its authority to provide child welfare services to the
Collective First Nations, the federal funds now paid to NIL/TU,O were allocated
to the province pursuant to a memorandum of understanding between the federal
and provincial governments. The memorandum did not, as the Chief Justice and
Fish J. suggest, delegate regulatory or legislative power from the federal to
provincial government. Rather, it simply confirmed that the province is
responsible for administering the Act for the benefit of “Indian” children
under nineteen, and affirmed the parties’ understanding that the federal
government would reimburse the province for the cost of providing certain
services to certain “Indian” children (Memorandum of Understanding, arts. 1.1
and 4.1). The province currently pays NIL/TU,O for those services that are
ineligible for federal funding (2004 Agreement, art. 15.6).
[35] Indeed,
65 percent of NIL/TU,O’s funding now comes directly from the federal
government. Pursuant to federal Program Directives 20‑1, the federal
government pays for the statutory services NIL/TU,O provides to eligible
children in accordance with the following principles:
6.1 The [Department of Indian Affairs] is committed to the
expansion of First Nations Child and Family Services on reserve to a level
comparable to the services provided off reserve in similar circumstances. . . .
6.2 The department will support the creation of Indian designed,
controlled and managed services.
6.3 The department will support the development of Indian
standards for those services, and will work with Indian organizations to
encourage their adoption by provinces/territor[ies].
6.4 This expansion of First Nations Child and Family Services
(FNCFS) will be gradual as funds become available and First Nations are
prepared to negotiate the establishment of new services or the takeover of
existing services.
6.5 Provincial child and family services
legislation is applicable on reserves and will form the basis for this
expansion. It is the intention of the department to include the provinces in
the process and as party to agreements. [Emphasis added.]
[36]
What, then, does all this tell us about the nature of NIL/TU,O’s
operations? Clearly NIL/TU,O is regulated exclusively by the province, and its
employees exercise exclusively provincial delegated authority. This complex
operational scheme was undoubtedly created for the benefit of the Collective
First Nations. The child welfare services that NIL/TU,O offers are provided
primarily by Aboriginal employees to Aboriginal clients and are designed to
protect, preserve and benefit the distinct cultural, physical and emotional
needs of the children and families of the Collective First Nations. NIL/TU,O
serves as the child welfare agency for this community.
[37]
NIL/TU,O argues that this distinctively Aboriginal component of its
service delivery methodology alters the nature of its operations and
activities such that it is a federal undertaking, service or business for the
purpose of allocating labour relations jurisdiction. In my view, it does not.
[38]
Provincial competence over child welfare is exercised in British
Columbia through the Child, Family and Community Service Act, and
NIL/TU,O’s operations are wholly regulated by it. NIL/TU,O is a fully
integrated part of this provincial regulatory regime, pursuant to authority
that is delegated, circumscribed and supervised by provincial officials. As an
organization, it is directly subject to the province’s oversight, and
NIL/TU,O’s employees are directly accountable to the provincial directors, who
are empowered to intervene when necessary to ensure statutory compliance.
Provincial child welfare workers are, in fact, required to step in when one of
NIL/TU,O’s cases involves child protection issues since NIL/TU,O’s employees
are not authorized to provide protection services. Moreover, NIL/TU,O’s
Constitution and the 2004 Agreement recognize the Act as the statutory
authority governing the Society’s primary task, namely providing statutory
child welfare services. When fulfilling this task, NIL/TU,O must always
operate with the Act’s two paramount considerations in mind — the safety and
well‑being of children — and must always comply with the Act as a
whole. The province, therefore, retains ultimate decision-making control over
NIL/TU,O’s operations.
[39]
None of this detracts from NIL/TU,O’s distinct character as a child
welfare organization for Aboriginal communities. But the fact that it serves
these communities cannot take away from its essential character as a child
welfare agency that is in all respects regulated by the province. Neither the
cultural identity of NIL/TU,O’s clients and employees, nor its mandate to
provide culturally‑appropriate services to Aboriginal clients, displaces
the operating presumption that labour relations are provincially regulated. As
the Court of Appeal pointed out, social services must, in order to be
effective, be geared to the target clientele. This attempt to provide
meaningful services to a particular community, however, cannot oust primary
provincial jurisdiction over the service providers’ labour relations.
NIL/TU,O’s function is unquestionably a provincial one.
[40]
And while it is true that NIL/TU,O receives federal funds pursuant to a
federal funding directive, an intergovernmental memorandum of understanding and
the 2004 Agreement, this does not rise to the level of federal operational
involvement necessary to demonstrate that NIL/TU,O is a federal undertaking,
service or business. As in Four B, where the Court found that federal
loans and subsidies did not convert the shoe manufacturing business into a
federal activity, federal funding in this case does not change the nature of
NIL/TU,O’s operations from provincial to federal hands.
[41]
In my view, British Columbia’s Child, Family and Community Service
Act, by expressly recognizing, affirming and giving practical meaning to
the unique rights and status of Aboriginal people in the child welfare context,
and by expressly respecting Aboriginal culture and heritage, represents a
commendable, constitutionally mandated exercise of legislative power. The very
fact that the delivery of child welfare services is delegated to First Nations
agencies marks, significantly and positively, public recognition of the
particular needs of Aboriginal children and families. It seems to me that
this is a development to be encouraged in the provincial sphere, not
obstructed.
[42]
Today’s constitutional landscape is painted with the brush of
co-operative federalism (Husky Oil Operations Ltd. v. Minister of National
Revenue, [1995] 3 S.C.R. 453, at para. 162, per Iacobucci J.; Multiple
Access Ltd. v. McCutcheon, [1982] 2 S.C.R. 161; Reference re Firearms
Act, 2000 SCC 31, [2000] 1 S.C.R. 783; Kitkatla Band v. British Columbia
(Minister of Small Business, Tourism and Culture), 2002 SCC 31, [2002] 2
S.C.R. 146; Fédération des producteurs de volailles du Québec v. Pelland,
2005 SCC 20, [2005] 1 S.C.R. 292; Canadian Western Bank, at
paras. 21-24; Consolidated Fastfrate, at paras. 29-30). A
co-operative approach accepts the inevitability of overlap between the exercise
of federal and provincial competencies.
[43]
NIL/TU,O’s operational features are painted with the same co-operative
brush. The agency exists because of a sophisticated and collaborative effort
by the Collective First Nations, the government of British Columbia and the
federal government to respond to the particular needs of the Collective First
Nations’ children and families. This effort has resulted in a detailed and
integrated operational matrix comprised of NIL/TU,O’s Constitution and by-laws,
a tripartite delegation agreement, an intergovernmental memorandum of
understanding, a set of Aboriginal practice standards, a federal funding
directive and provincial legislation, all of which govern the provision of
child welfare services by NIL/TU,O in a manner that respects and protects the
Collective First Nations’ traditional values.
[44]
By virtue of the memorandum of understanding and the tripartite
agreement, the federal government actively endorsed the province’s oversight of
the delivery of child welfare services to Aboriginal children in the province,
including those services provided by NIL/TU,O to the Collective First Nations.
I see this neither as an abdication of regulatory responsibility by the federal
government nor an inappropriate usurpation by the provincial one. It is,
instead, an example of flexible and co-operative federalism at work and at its
best.
[45]
The essential nature of NIL/TU,O’s operation is to provide child and
family services, a matter within the provincial sphere. Neither the presence
of federal funding, nor the fact that NIL/TU,O’s services are provided in a
culturally sensitive manner, in my respectful view, displaces the overridingly
provincial nature of this entity. The community for whom NIL/TU,O operates as
a child welfare agency does not change what it does, namely, deliver
child welfare services. The designated beneficiaries may and undoubtedly
should affect how those services are delivered, but they do not change the fact
that the delivery of child welfare services, a provincial undertaking, is what
it essentially does.
[46]
And neither the nature of NIL/TU,O’s operation nor the jurisprudence
calls for an inquiry into the “core of Indianness” in this appeal. The Northern
Telecom/Four B principles clearly and conclusively confirm that NIL/TU,O is
a provincial undertaking. The past 85 years of labour jurisprudence confirms
that no further or alternate analysis is required. The presumption in favour
of provincial jurisdiction over labour relations, therefore, remains operative
in this case.
[47]
I would therefore dismiss the appeal with costs.
The reasons of McLachlin C.J. and Binnie and Fish JJ. were delivered by
[48]
The Chief Justice and
Fish J. — The appellant provides child welfare services to Aboriginal
children and families in British Columbia. The issue before the Court is
whether the labour relations of the society are governed by provincial or
federal labour legislation. Normally the provinces have jurisdiction over
labour relations under s. 92(16) of the Constitution Act, 1867 .
However, the federal government has jurisdiction over matters relating to
Indians and lands reserved for Indians under s. 91(24) .
[49]
The courts and the Labour Relations Board below disagreed on whether the
Indian content of NIL/TU,O’s operations attracted federal jurisdiction over
labour relations. The British Columbia Labour Relations Board found that it
did not ((2006), 122 C.L.R.B.R. (2d) 174), certifying the British Columbia
Government and Service Employees’ Union as the bargaining agent of NIL/TU,O
under the Labour Relations Code, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 244. Upon review, the
Supreme Court of British Columbia found that it did (2007 BCSC 1080, 76
B.C.L.R. (4th) 322). On appeal, the British Columbia Court of Appeal concluded
that nothing in the design of NIL/TU,O’s operation, services, or constitutive
legislation ousted the provincial jurisdiction over labour relations (2008 BCCA
333, 81 B.C.L.R. (4th) 318). It therefore resolved the jurisdictional conflict
in favour of the province.
[50]
We agree with Justice Abella that provincial labour law applies
to the appellant and that the appeal should be dismissed. However,
we arrive at this conclusion by a somewhat different route.
[51]
The starting point is the general rule that “Parliament has no authority
over labour relations as such nor over the terms of a contract of employment;
exclusive provincial competence is the rule”: Construction Montcalm Inc. v.
Minimum Wage Commission, [1979] 1 S.C.R. 754, per Beetz J., at p.
768.
[52]
To this general rule there is an exception for operations that are “an
integral part of [the federal government’s] primary competence over some other
single federal subject”: Construction Montcalm, at p. 768.
[53]
Justice Beetz in Construction Montcalm explained that one
approaches the question of a possible exception from provincial jurisdiction by
asking whether “the normal or habitual activities of the [operation] as . . .
‘a going concern’” fall within the primary competence of the federal government
over a particular matter (p. 769). This is called the functional test.
[54]
The purpose of the functional test is thus to determine whether the
federal government has exclusive labour relations jurisdiction over a specific
activity. As the Court explained in Four B Manufacturing Ltd. v. United
Garment Workers of America, [1980] 1 S.C.R. 1031, at p. 1047:
The functional test is a particular method of applying
a more general rule namely, that exclusive federal jurisdiction over labour
relations arises only if it can be shown that such jurisdiction forms an
integral part of primary federal jurisdiction over some other federal object .
. . .
When the test
looks at the “normal or habitual” activities of an entity, it looks to whether
those activities implicate the protected core of a federal head of power under
the Constitution Act, 1867 . As Dickson J. (as he then was) stated in Northern
Telecom Ltd. v. Communications Workers of Canada, [1980] 1 S.C.R. 115, at
p. 133, the focus is on the “practical and functional relationship of [the
activity] to the core federal undertaking”.
[55]
There is no dispute the power over Indians under s. 91(24) has
been held to contain a protected core of federal competency that provincial
legislation cannot touch: see Paul v. British Columbia (Forest Appeals
Commission), 2003 SCC 55, [2003] 2 S.C.R. 585, and Dick v. The Queen,
[1985] 2 S.C.R. 309. As Lamer C.J. wrote for the majority in Delgamuukw v. British Columbia,
[1997] 3 S.C.R. 1010, at para. 181:
. . . as I mentioned earlier, s. 91(24) protects a core
of federal jurisdiction even from provincial laws of general application,
through the operation of the doctrine of interjurisdictional immunity. That
core has been described as matters touching on “Indianness” or the “core of
Indianness” (Dick, supra, at pp. 326 and 315; also see Four B,
supra, at p. 1047 and Francis, supra, at pp. 1028‑29).
[56]
Unlike Abella J., we conclude the central question is whether the
operation at issue falls within the protected “core of Indianness” under s.
91(24) of the Constitution Act, 1867 , and hence under federal
jurisdiction. The starting point is the general rule that labour issues fall
within provincial jurisdiction. The only question is whether this case falls
within the exception to this rule, i.e., whether applying a functional test,
the activity falls within the core of a federal power that is protected from
provincial legislation. As Dickson J. summarized the matter in Northern
Telecom, at p. 133:
. . . the first step is to determine whether a core
federal undertaking is present and the extent of that core undertaking. Once
that is settled, it is necessary to look at the particular subsidiary operation
. . . to look at the “normal or habitual activities” of that department as “a
going concern”, and the practical and functional relationship of those
activities to the core federal undertaking.
[57]
In Four B, the Court, per Beetz J., affirmed that the functional
test is merely a particular method of applying the more general rule that
“exclusive federal jurisdiction over labour relations arises only if it can be
shown that such jurisdiction forms an integral part of primary federal
jurisdiction over some other federal object” (p. 1047). However, Beetz J.’s
reasons in another passage suggest that the functional test might be a
preliminary step to determining whether the activity forms an integral part of
primary federal jurisdiction:
Given this general rule, and assuming for the sake of
argument that the functional test is not conclusive for the purposes of this
case, the first question which must be answered in order to deal with
appellant’s submissions is whether the power to regulate the labour relations
in issue forms an integral part of primary federal jurisdiction over Indians
and Lands reserved for the Indians. [p. 1047]
In application,
however, Beetz J. went directly to a discussion of the scope of the “core of
Indianness” and whether the activity at issue fell within that core. He
concluded that it did not. He stated that “it is an oversimplification to say
that the matter . . . is the civil rights of Indians”. He went on: “[N]either
Indian status is at stake nor rights so closely connected with Indian status
that they should be regarded as necessary incidents of status” (pp. 1047-48).
[58]
Reading Construction Montcalm (1979), Northern Telecom
(1980), Four B (1980), and Consolidated Fastfrate Inc. v. Western
Canada Council of Teamsters, 2009 SCC 53, [2009] 3 S.C.R. 407, together, we
see no reason to depart from the view that the central question is whether the
operation, viewed functionally in terms of its normal and habitual activities,
falls within the core of a federal head of power, in this case s. 91(24) of the
Constitution Act, 1867 .
[59]
In our view, the alternative does not withstand scrutiny. Justice
Abella concludes that the core of Indianness should be considered only if the
functional test is inconclusive. But the essence of the functional test,
described by the authorities since Construction Montcalm, is whether the
function falls within the core of a federal power; only this can displace the
presumption of provincial jurisdiction in labour matters. The two-stage test
proposed by our colleague would mean that labour jurisdiction would be
determined in many cases before consideration of the power under s. 91(24) is
reached. With respect, deciding labour jurisdiction in a case such as this
without scrutiny of the federal power hollows out the functional test as
conceived on the authorities. If a court were satisfied that the operation’s
normal activities look provincial on their face, it would not need to go
further.
[60]
To exclude consideration of s. 91(24) would negate the federal power.
Conversely, to deem any Aboriginal aspect sufficient to trigger federal
jurisdiction would threaten to swallow the presumption that labour relations
fall under provincial jurisdiction. The proper approach is simply to ask, as
the cases consistently have, whether the Indian operation at issue, viewed
functionally in terms of its normal and habitual activities, falls within the
core of s. 91(24) of the Constitution Act, 1867 .
[61]
The functional analysis of the operation’s activities is not a
preliminary step; rather it provides the answer to whether the activity falls
within the protected core. Although the Court in Canadian Western Bank v.
Alberta, 2007 SCC 22, [2007] 2 S.C.R. 3, cautioned against getting mired in
“a rather abstract discussion of ‘cores’ and ‘vital and essential’ parts”
where to do so would be “to little practical effect”, the Court nevertheless
pointed out that such a discussion might prove necessary “for situations
already covered by precedent” and, in particular, in relation to “those heads
of power that deal with federal things, persons or undertakings” (para. 77).
In these circumstances, following the template advanced by Dickson J. in Northern
Telecom, the first step is to determine the extent of the core federal
undertaking or power. Having done this, one asks whether, viewed functionally,
the operation’s activities fall within that power.
I. Scope of the Core of Section 91(24)
[62]
Following the framework proposed by Dickson J. in Northern Telecom,
the first issue is the scope of the protected core federal power implicated.
In this case, it is the federal power over Indians under s. 91(24) of the Constitution
Act, 1867 .
[63]
The basic test has been set out in a number of authorities. The
essential question is whether the undertaking, service or enterprise to which
the provincial labour legislation would apply is a federal one, viewed
functionally in terms of the nature of the operation: Northern Telecom.
[64]
In Four B, this Court held that the
Indian operation of a business and its economic impact on the community was
insufficient to characterize the operation as a federal business and bring it
within the protected core of s. 91(24) . The majority held that for
federal labour law to apply the operations must be “so closely connected with
Indian status that they should be regarded as necessary incidents of status”
(p. 1048). Applying this test — which may be referred to as the “status” test
— the majority of the Court rejected the view that a shoe uppers manufacturer
owned and operated by Indians on a reserve constituted a federal business
falling within the core of s. 91(24) , so as to displace the presumption that
provincial labour law applies. Beetz J. wrote for the majority:
There is nothing about the business or operation of Four
B which might allow it to be considered as a federal business: the
sewing of uppers on sport shoes is an ordinary industrial activity which
clearly comes under provincial legislative authority for the purposes of labour
relations. Neither the ownership of the business by Indian shareholders,
nor the employment by that business of a majority of Indian employees, nor the
carrying on of that business on an Indian reserve under a federal permit, nor
the federal loan and subsidies, taken separately or together, can have any
effect on the operational nature of that business. By the traditional
and functional test, therefore, The Labour Relations Act [of Ontario]
applies to the facts of this case, and the [Ontario Labour Relations] Board has
jurisdiction.
.
. .
Section 108 of the [Canada Labour] Code ,
by its language, is directed at federal activities, operations or functions and
not at the position of individuals [such as Indians], who might be considered
to be “federal” persons or at their relationships.
.
. .
. . . neither Indian status is at stake
nor rights so closely connected with Indian status that they should be regarded
as necessary incidents of status such for instance as registrability,
membership in a band, the right to participate in the election of Chiefs and
Band Councils, reserve privileges, etc. For this reason, I come to the
conclusion that the power to regulate the labour relations in issue does not
form an integral part of primary federal jurisdiction over Indians or Lands
reserved for the Indians. [Emphasis added; pp. 1046-51.]
In emphasizing the operational nature and function of the business,
Beetz J. went on to explicitly exclude a number of considerations as
determinative: Aboriginal ownership; the ratio of Aboriginal to non-Aboriginal
employees; the location of the business on reserve lands; operation pursuant to
federal permit; and federal loans or subsidies.
[65]
The appellant argues that the test in Four B has been displaced
by this Court’s decision in Delgamuukw. We do not agree. Nothing said
in Delgamuukw negates the application of the functional test based on
the federal nature of the undertaking, service, or enterprise. Citing both the
positive and negative descriptions of s. 91(24) ’s core, Lamer C.J., for the
majority in Delgamuukw, wrote:
The core of Indianness at the heart of s. 91(24) has been defined in both
negative and positive terms. Negatively, it has been held to not include
labour relations (Four B) and the driving of motor vehicles (Francis).
The only positive formulation of Indianness was offered in Dick.
Speaking for the Court, Beetz J. assumed, but did not decide, that a provincial
hunting law did not apply proprio vigore to the members of an Indian
band to hunt and because those activities were “at the centre of what they
do and what they are” ([Dick] at p. 320). [Emphasis added; para.
181.]
The reference to
Four B in this passage is simply a factual statement about the
conclusion reached in that case. It is not an assertion that Indian
undertakings or businesses can never be federal matters governed by federal
labour law.
[66]
This returns us to the “status” test proposed in Four B. On this
test, for an operation, judged by its normal and habitual activities, to fall
within the core of s. 91(24) so as to oust provincial labour law, the activity
or operation must go to the status and rights of Indians. It must be “at the
centre of what they do and what they are”.
[67]
On its face, this test appears straightforward. However, some cases
have taken a broader interpretation, viewing the “normal or habitual”
activities of the operation in terms of their cultural impact on Indians as the
test for what falls within the protected core of Indianness in s. 91(24) . For
example, in Sagkeeng Alcohol Rehab Centre Inc. v. Abraham, [1994] 3 F.C.
449 (T.D.), the court asked whether the nature of the operation had “inherent
‘Indianness’” (p. 460). In Shubenacadie Band Council v. Canada (Human Rights
Commission) (2000), 37 C.H.R.R. D/466 (F.C.A.), at para. 60, it was enough
to “promote Indianness” or enhance the status of Indian people and their
families; as was the case in Sappier v. Tobique Indian Band (Council)
(1988), 87 N.R. 1 (F.C.A.), Qu’Appelle Indian Residential School Council v.
Canada (Canadian Human Rights Tribunal), [1988] 2 F.C. 226 (T.D.), and Westbank
First Nation v. British Columbia (Labour Relations Board) (1997), 39
C.L.R.B.R. (2d) 227 (B.C.S.C.).
[68]
Thus, in the court below, Groberman J.A. described two distinct lines of
authority on the question of when Indian operations are governed by federal
labour legislation. The first line, consisting almost entirely of cases decided
by the federal courts, holds that where an enterprise is important to a First
Nation or its members, or its operations are influenced by First Nations culture,
its labour relations fall within federal jurisdiction. The second line, mainly
from provincial superior courts, takes a more restrictive approach, confining
protected federal jurisdiction to cases where the ordinary and habitual
activities of the operation affect core aspects of Indian status, or are
conducted pursuant to federal delegated authority.
[69]
We prefer the narrower view of when operations
are federal and fall within the core so as to attract federal labour
legislation. First, this view more accurately reflects the test in Four B.
Second, it best comports to broader jurisprudence on what aspects of
Indianness warrant federal exclusivity. In dealing with labour issues, it is
desirable to stay within the historic parameters of Indianness, as suggested in
Canadian Western Bank, at para. 61. In defining these parameters, the
words of Justice Gonthier in Commission de transport de la Communauté
urbaine de Québec v. Canada (National Battlefields Commission), [1990] 2
S.C.R. 838, at p. 853, are helpful:
It is the fundamental federal
responsibility for a thing or person that determines its specifically federal
aspects, those which form an integral part of the exclusive federal
jurisdiction over that thing or person . . . . For example, the specifically
federal nature of Indians has been described by the expressions “Indianness” or
“status and rights of Indians”, which reflect the fundamental federal
responsibility for Indians in the Canadian constitutional and historical
context. For example, a provincial statute on hunting cannot apply to
Indians to the extent that it affects their status as Indians . . ., whereas
provincial labour relations law may apply to Indians in so far as it does not
affect Indianness. [Emphasis added.]
[70]
We may therefore conclude that the core, or “basic, minimum and
unassailable content” of the federal power over “Indians” in s. 91(24) is
defined as matters that go to the status and rights of Indians. Where their
status and rights are concerned, Indians are federal “persons”, regulated by
federal law: see Canadian Western Bank, at para. 60.
[71]
It follows that a provincial law of general application will extend to
Indian undertakings, businesses or enterprises, whether on or off a reserve, ex
proprio vigore and by virtue of s. 88 of the Indian Act,
R.S.C. 1985, c. I-5 , except when the law impairs those functions of the
enterprise which are intimately bound up with the status and rights of Indians.
The cases illustrate matters that may go to the status and rights of Indians.
These include, inter alia:
· Indian status: Natural Parents
v. Superintendent of Child Welfare, [1976] 2 S.C.R. 751, per
Laskin C.J., writing for himself and three other Justices, at pp. 760-61, and per
Beetz J., writing for himself and Pigeon J., at p. 787;
· The “relationships within Indian
families and reserve communities”: Canadian Western Bank, at para.
61;
· “[R]ights so closely connected
with Indian status that they should be regarded as necessary incidents of
status such for instance as registrability, membership in a band, the right to
participate in the election of Chiefs and Band Councils, reserve privileges,
etc.”: Four B, at p. 1048;
· The disposition of the
matrimonial home on a reserve: Paul v. Paul, [1986] 1 S.C.R. 306;
· The right to possession of lands
on a reserve and, therefore, the division of family property on reserve lands: Derrickson
v. Derrickson, [1986] 1 S.C.R. 285, at p. 296;
· Sustenance hunting pursuant to
Aboriginal and treaty rights, such as the killing of deer for food: Dick;
· The right to advance a claim for
the existence or extent of Aboriginal rights or title in respect of a contested
resource or lands: Delgamuukw and Kitkatla Band v. British Columbia
(Minister of Small Business, Tourism and Culture), 2002 SCC 31, [2002] 2
S.C.R. 146; and
· The operation of constitutional
and federal rules respecting Aboriginal rights: Paul v. British Columbia,
among others.
[72]
These examples make it clear that the focus of the analysis rests
squarely on whether the nature of the operation and its normal activities, as
distinguished from the people who are involved in running it or the cultural
identity of those who may be affected by it, relate to what makes Indians
federal persons as defined by what they do and what they are: Dick;
Delgamuukw.
[73]
The scope of the core of s. 91(24) is admittedly narrow. That, however,
is as it should be. A narrow test for when activities fall within the core of
Indianness reserved to the federal government is consistent with the dominant
tenor of jurisprudence since Four B, as well as the restrained approach
to interjurisdictional immunity adopted by this Court in recent cases. It
recognizes that Indians are members of the broader population and, therefore,
in their day-to-day activities, they are subject to provincial laws of general
application: Canadian Western Bank, at para. 61. Only where the activity
is so integrally related to what makes Indians and lands reserved for Indians a
fundamental federal responsibility does it become an intrinsic part of the
exclusive federal jurisdiction, such that provincial legislative power is
excluded.
II. The Normal or Habitual Activities of
NIL/TU,O
[74]
The question is whether the normal and habitual activities of the Indian
operation at issue go to the status and rights of Indians, which reflect the
fundamental federal responsibility for Indians in the Canadian constitutional
and historical context. Only if the operation’s normal and habitual activities
relate directly to what makes Indians federal persons by virtue of their status
or rights can provincial labour legislation be ousted, provided the impact of
the provincial legislation would be to impair this essentially federal
undertaking.
[75]
Here, the question is whether the appellant’s child welfare services
operation, viewed in terms of its normal and habitual activities, lies at the
center of the status and rights of Indians, so as to bring it within the
federal core power over Indians. If the operation’s normal and habitual
activities are not intimately bound up with the essential capacities and rights
inherent in Indian status, Aboriginal and treaty rights, or a delegated federal
power over Indians, it remains subject to provincial jurisdiction,
notwithstanding that it impacts on Indians, their culture and their values.
[76]
The function of NIL/TU,O is the provision of child welfare services
under the umbrella of the province-wide network of agencies providing similar
services. The ordinary and habitual activities of NIL/TU,O do not touch on
issues of Indian status or rights. The child welfare services therefore cannot
be considered federal activities.
[77]
This conclusion is not negated by the fact that the federal government
has entered into an intergovernmental agreement with the province of British
Columbia and NIL/TU,O, which requires the province, in exchange for funding and
reimbursement and acting through NIL/TU,O, to extend child welfare services on
reserves. The federal government has ceded its responsibility for the
provision of child welfare services on reserve to the province and has agreed
to partially fund their delivery, provided that they would be subject to provincial
law. NIL/TU,O, as the deliverer of those services, is therefore bound by the
applicable provincial legislation.
[78]
In the absence of NIL/TU,O’s services touching on any of the facets of
Indianness which might draw it within federal jurisdiction, NIL/TU,O’s
operations cannot be said to be federal operations. The fact that NIL/TU,O’s
services are delivered in a way that is culturally sensitive to Aboriginal
identity and values does not change the basic functions of the enterprise. In
this, we agree with Justice Abella.
[79]
It is argued that because the appellant’s services are directed
at preserving the cultural identity of Indian children and confirming their
Aboriginal traditions and values, the operations go to the core of what it is
to be Indian, and that Four B, where the activity was making leather
shoe uppers, is distinguishable on this basis. However, this is to look at the
incidental effect of the activity instead of the operational nature of the
business itself. Four B is clear that one looks not to the purpose or
effects of the enterprise, but to the activity it carries out.
[80]
The fact that NIL/TU,O employs Indians and works for the welfare of
Indian children in a culturally sensitive way that seeks to enhance Aboriginal
identity and preserve Aboriginal values does not alter its essential function —
the provision of child welfare services. As stated by Justice Abella, the
organization is subject to provincial oversight, regulation, funding and
governance. The provision of child welfare services constitutes its normal and
principal operation. The rule that Indian operations within a province are
subject to generally applicable provincial law is not displaced by the doctrine
of interjurisdictional immunity because the operations, viewed from a
functional perspective, do not fall within the protected core of s. 91(24) .
[81]
Nor does the fact that NIL/TU,O’s services impact on the Aboriginal
family relationship make its operations a federal matter. Natural Parents,
which is relied on for this proposition, dealt with provincial adoption
legislation that had the potential to strip Indian children of their Indian
status. It finds no application here, as Indian status is not affected by
NIL/TU,O’s operations.
III. Conclusion
[82]
We would affirm the judgment of the British Columbia Court
of Appeal and dismiss the appeal.
Appeal dismissed with costs.
Solicitors for the appellant: Lawson Lundell, Vancouver.
Solicitor for the respondent: British Columbia Government
and Service Employees’ Union, Burnaby.
Solicitor for the intervener the Attorney General of
Canada: Attorney General of Canada, Toronto.
Solicitor for the intervener the Attorney General of Ontario: Attorney
General of Ontario, Toronto.
Solicitor for the intervener the Attorney General of
Quebec: Attorney General of Quebec, Québec.
Solicitor for the intervener the Attorney General of New
Brunswick: Attorney General of New Brunswick, Fredericton.
Solicitor for the intervener the Attorney General of
Manitoba: Attorney General of Manitoba, Winnipeg.
Solicitor for the intervener the Attorney General of British
Columbia: Attorney General of British Columbia, Victoria.
Solicitor for the intervener the Attorney General for
Saskatchewan: Attorney General for Saskatchewan, Regina.
Solicitor for the intervener the British Columbia Labour Relations
Board: British Columbia Labour Relations Board, Vancouver.
Solicitor for the intervener the Canadian Human Rights
Commission: Canadian Human Rights Commission, Ottawa.
Solicitors for the intervener the Kwumut Lelum Child and Family
Services Society: Devlin Gailus, Victoria.
Solicitors for the intervener the Mohawk Council of
Akwesasne: Emond Harnden, Ottawa.
Solicitors for the interveners the Assembly of the First Nations of
Quebec and Labrador and the First Nations of Quebec and Labrador Health and
Social Services Commission: Dionne Schulze, Montréal.
Solicitors for the intervener the First Nations
Summit: Pape Salter Teillet, Vancouver.
Solicitors for the intervener the Te’Mexw Nations: Janes
Freedman Kyle Law Corporation, Victoria.