Newfoundland
(Treasury Board) v. N.A.P.E., [2004] 3 S.C.R. 381, 2004
SCC 66
Newfoundland
and Labrador Association of Public and
Private
Employees Appellant
v.
Her Majesty
The Queen in Right of Newfoundland as represented
by the
Treasury Board and the Minister of Justice Respondent
and
Attorney
General of Quebec, Attorney General of New
Brunswick,
Attorney General of British Columbia, Attorney
General of
Alberta, Canadian Association for Community
Living,
Canadian Hearing Society, Council of Canadians with
Disabilities,
Hospital Employees’ Union, British Columbia
Government
and Service Employees’ Union, Health Sciences
Association,
Women’s Legal Education and Action Fund,
and
Canadian Labour Congress Interveners
Indexed
as: Newfoundland (Treasury Board) v. N.A.P.E.
Neutral
citation: 2004 SCC 66.
File
No.: 29597.
2004:
May 12; 2004: October 28.
Present: McLachlin
C.J. and Major, Bastarache, Binnie, LeBel, Deschamps and Fish JJ.
on appeal from
the court of appeal for newfoundland and labrador
Constitutional law — Charter of Rights — Equality rights — Gender
discrimination — Pay equity — Pay equity agreement signed in favour of female
employees in health care sector — Whether s. 9 of Public Sector Restraint
Act deferring commencement of wage adjustment payments infringes right to
equality — If so, whether infringement justifiable — Canadian Charter of Rights
and Freedoms, ss. 1 , 15(1) — Public Sector Restraint Act, S.N. 1991,
c. 3, s. 9.
Constitutional law — Charter of Rights — Reasonable limits — Oakes
test — Separation of powers — Whether explicit recognition of separation of
powers doctrine should be added to Oakes test — Canadian Charter of Rights and
Freedoms, s. 1 .
In 1988, the government of Newfoundland and Labrador signed a Pay
Equity Agreement in favour of female employees in the health care sector
including those represented in collective bargaining by the appellant union. In
1991, the same government introduced the Public Sector Restraint Act,
which deferred from 1988 to 1991 the commencement of the promised pay equity
increase (s. 9) and extinguished the 1988-91 arrears. The effect of s. 9
was to erase an obligation the Province had for approximately
$24 million. The justification was that the government was experiencing a
financial crisis unprecedented in the Province’s history. The government
adopted other severe measures to reduce the Province’s deficit, including a
freeze on wage scales for public sector employees, a closure of hospital beds,
and a freeze on per capita student grants and equalization grants to school
boards. It also laid off almost two thousand employees and terminated medicare
coverage for certain items. Grievances were filed on behalf of some female
employees affected by the cut to pay equity. The Arbitration Board ordered the
government to comply with the original terms of the Pay Equity Agreement,
holding that s. 9 of the Act infringed s. 15(1) of the Canadian
Charter of Rights and Freedoms and that the infringement could not be saved
under s. 1 . On judicial review, the motions judge quashed the Board’s
decision and dismissed the grievances. He agreed that s. 9 infringed
s. 15(1) but found the infringement justifiable under s. 1 . The
Court of Appeal upheld the motions judge’s decision. In so doing, one appeal
judge suggested that explicit recognition of the separation of powers doctrine
should be added to the s. 1 test.
Held: The appeal should be dismissed. Section 9
of the Public Sector Restraint Act is constitutional.
When the provincial government signed the Pay Equity Agreement in 1988,
it changed the legal landscape by creating enforceable contractual rights to
end pay discrimination by a procedure contractually binding on all of the
parties. This process converted pay equity from a policy argument into an
existing legal obligation for the benefit of the female hospital workers. The
purpose of the Public Sector Restraint Act was to reduce the women’s pay
below this contractual entitlement and its intended effect was to continue to
pay women less than was paid to men for work of equal value. Passage of the
Act on April 18, 1991 put women hospital workers in a worse position than
they were on April 17, 1991.
The contextual factors listed in Law lead to the conclusion that
the targeting of an acquired right to pay equity amounted to discrimination
within the meaning of s. 15(1) of the Charter . First, a
pre-existing disadvantage is shown since “women’s jobs” are chronically
underpaid and the Act perpetuated and reinforced the idea that women could be
paid less for no reason other than the fact that they were women. Second, the
postponement of pay equity did not correspond to the actual needs, capacity or
circumstances of the claimants. Indeed, it did just the opposite. Third, the
Act did not have an ameliorative purpose in relation to the workforce. Fourth,
since work is an important part of life, the interest affected by the Act was
of great importance. In sum, s. 9 of the Act affirmed a policy of gender
discrimination which the provincial government had itself denounced three years
previously.
Section 9 of the Public Sector Restraint Act is justifiable
under s. 1 of the Charter . The need to address the fiscal crisis
was a pressing and substantial legislative objective in the spring of 1991.
The crisis was severe. The cost of putting pay equity into effect according to
the original timetable was a major expenditure. A lower credit rating, and its
impact on the government’s ability to borrow, and the added cost of borrowing
to finance the provincial debt, were matters of great importance. Moreover,
the government was debating not just rights versus dollars, but rights versus
hospital beds, layoffs, jobs, education and social welfare.
Courts will continue to look with strong scepticism at attempts to
justify infringements of Charter rights on the basis of budgetary
constraints. To do otherwise would devalue the Charter because there
are always budgetary constraints and there are always other pressing government
priorities. Nevertheless, the courts cannot close their eyes to the periodic
occurrence of financial emergencies when measures must be taken to juggle
priorities to see a government through the crisis.
The government’s response to its fiscal crisis was also proportional to
its objective. First, as the pay equity payout represented a significant
portion of the budget, its postponement was rationally connected to averting a
serious financial crisis. Second, the government’s response was tailored to
minimally impair rights in the context of the problem it confronted. Despite
the scale of the fiscal crisis, the government proceeded to implement the pay
equity plan, albeit at a slower pace. In addition, the government initiated a
consultation process with the union to find alternative measures. There were
broad cuts to jobs and services. The exceptional financial crisis called for
an exceptional response. In such cases, a legislature must be given reasonable
room to manoeuvre. Third, on a balance of probabilities the detrimental impact
of a delay in achieving pay equity did not outweigh the importance of
preserving the fiscal health of a provincial government through a temporary but
serious financial crisis. The seriousness of the crisis, combined with the
relative size of the $24 million required to bring pay equity in line with
the original schedule, are the compelling factors in that respect. The fiscal
measures adopted by the government did more good than harm, despite the adverse
effects on the women hospital workers.
While the separation of powers is a defining feature of our
constitutional order, it cannot be invoked to undermine the operation of a
specific written provision of the Constitution like s. 1 of the Charter .
Section 1 itself reflects an important aspect of the separation of powers by
defining certain express limits on legislative sovereignty. Judicial review of
governmental action long predates the adoption of the Charter . Since
Confederation, courts have been required by the Constitution to ensure that
legislatures comply with the division of legislative powers. The Charter
has placed new limits on government power in the area of human rights, but
judicial review of those limits involves the courts in the same role in
relation to the separation of powers as they have occupied from the beginning,
that of the constitutionally mandated referee. It is not the courts which
limit the legislatures. It is the Constitution.
The doctrine of separation of powers is an important concern, but the Oakes
test, which is itself based on the text of s. 1 , provides the proper
framework in which to consider what the doctrine requires in situations where
legislative action is alleged to come into conflict with entrenched
constitutional rights. The suggestions that the onus be transferred to an
applicant to show that the exercise of the claimed Charter right is
reasonable, that the Court exempt legislation embodying “policy initiatives”
from Charter review, and that the Court decline to consider what, if
any, less infringing measures were available to the legislature to achieve its
policy objectives, must all be rejected.
Cases Cited
Referred to: R. v. Oakes, [1986]
1 S.C.R. 103; Reference re Canada Assistance Plan (B.C.),
[1991] 2 S.C.R. 525; Ferrel v. Ontario (Attorney General)
(1998), 42 O.R. (3d) 97; Reference re Public Service Employee
Relations Act (Alta.), [1987] 1 S.C.R. 313; Law v. Canada
(Minister of Employment and Immigration), [1999] 1 S.C.R. 497; R.
v. Big M Drug Mart Ltd., [1985] 1 S.C.R. 295; Dagenais v.
Canadian Broadcasting Corp., [1994] 3 S.C.R. 835; R. v. Find,
[2001] 1 S.C.R. 863, 2001 SCC 32; McKinney v. University
of Guelph, [1990] 3 S.C.R. 229; Reference re ss. 193 and
195.1(1)(c) of the Criminal Code (Man.), [1990] 1 S.C.R. 1123; R.
v. Heywood, [1994] 3 S.C.R. 761; Canada (Auditor General) v.
Canada (Minister of Energy, Mines and Resources), [1989]
2 S.C.R. 49; Reference re Remuneration of Judges of the Provincial
Court of Prince Edward Island, [1997] 3 S.C.R. 3; Nova Scotia
(Workers’ Compensation Board) v. Martin, [2003] 2 S.C.R. 504,
2003 SCC 54; Singh v. Minister of Employment and Immigration,
[1985] 1 S.C.R. 177; R. v. Lee, [1989] 2 S.C.R. 1384;
Schachter v. Canada, [1992] 2 S.C.R. 679; Figueroa v.
Canada (Attorney General), [2003] 1 S.C.R. 912,
2003 SCC 37; PSAC v. Canada, [1987] 1 S.C.R. 424; M.
v. H., [1999] 2 S.C.R. 3; Egan v. Canada, [1995]
2 S.C.R. 513; Operation Dismantle Inc. v. The Queen, [1985]
1 S.C.R. 441; Eldridge v. British Columbia (Attorney General),
[1997] 3 S.C.R. 624; R. v. Edwards Books and Art Ltd., [1986]
2 S.C.R. 713; Irwin Toy Ltd. v. Quebec (Attorney General),
[1989] 1 S.C.R. 927; RJR-MacDonald Inc. v. Canada (Attorney
General), [1995] 3 S.C.R. 199; Vriend v. Alberta, [1998]
1 S.C.R. 493.
Statutes
and Regulations Cited
Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms,
ss. 1 , 15(1) .
Public Sector Restraint Act, S.N. 1991,
c. 3 [rep. & sub. 1992, c. P-41.1], ss. 5, 9.
Authors Cited
Abella, Rosalie Silberman.
“Employment Equity” (1987), 16 Man. L.J. 185.
Morgan, Edmund M. “Judicial Notice” (1944),
57 Harv. L. Rev. 269.
Newfoundland. House of Assembly. Preliminary
Report (Hansard), 41st General Assembly, 3rd Sess.,
vol. XLI, No. 11, March 19, 1991.
APPEAL from a judgment of the Newfoundland and Labrador Court of Appeal
(2002), 221 D.L.R. (4th) 513, 220 Nfld. & P.E.I.R. 1,
657 A.P.R. 1, 103 C.R.R. (2d) 1, 2003
CLLC ¶230-019, [2002] N.J. No. 324 (QL), 2002 NLCA 72,
affirming a decision of the Newfoundland Supreme Court, Trial Division (1998),
162 Nfld. & P.E.I.R. 1, 500 A.P.R. 1, 51 C.R.R.
(2d) 323, [1998] N.J. No. 96 (QL). Appeal dismissed.
Sheila H. Greene and Paula M. Schumph,
for the appellant.
Donald H. Burrage, Q.C., and Justin S. C. Mellor,
for the respondent.
Isabelle Harnois, for the intervener the Attorney General
of Quebec.
Written submissions only by Gaétan Migneault, for the
intervener the Attorney General of New Brunswick.
George H. Copley, Q.C., and Neena Sharma,
for the intervener the Attorney General of British Columbia.
Roderick Wiltshire, for the intervener the Attorney General
of Alberta.
William Holder and Lesli Bisgould, for the
interveners the Canadian Association for Community Living, the Canadian Hearing
Society, and the Council of Canadians with Disabilities.
Joseph J. Arvay, Q.C., and Catherine J. Parker,
for the interveners the Hospital Employees’ Union, the British Columbia
Government and Service Employees’ Union, and the Health Sciences Association.
Karen Schucher and Fiona Sampson, for the
intervener the Women’s Legal Education and Action Fund.
Mary Cornish and Fay C. Faraday, for the
intervener the Canadian Labour Congress.
The judgment of the Court was delivered by
1
Binnie J. _ In this
appeal, the Court is required to consider what sort of government fiscal crisis
is sufficient (if any) to justify limiting a right or freedom guaranteed by the
Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms . The appellant union says cost
considerations can never amount to such a justification. Therefore, scheduled
progress towards pay equity should not have been sacrificed as it was in the
Province’s fiscal crisis that arose in the spring of 1991. The respondent
government replies that the Court should not second-guess budgetary allocations
made by the House of Assembly in the severe and unanticipated financial
emergency occurring at that time. Marshall J.A. of the Court of Appeal of Newfoundland
and Labrador was not only persuaded by the government’s position on the facts
but went on to argue that the jurisprudence under s. 1 of the Charter
should be rewritten to explicitly require compliance with the doctrine of the
separation of powers at every step of the way. Thus rewritten, he concluded,
the even greater measure of judicial deference to legislative and executive
choices that he advocates would allow the law at issue in this case to be
justified.
2
In my view, the separation of powers has been a preoccupation of the
s. 1 jurisprudence in general, and it was a pivotal concern in R. v.
Oakes, [1986] 1 S.C.R. 103, in particular, as will be discussed. I do not
agree with Marshall J.A., with respect, that the present s. 1
jurisprudence fails to reflect the words of s. 1 . Accordingly, while I
agree in the result with Marshall J.A., I reach that conclusion by a more
orthodox route.
3
On June 24, 1988, the provincial government signed a Pay Equity
Agreement in favour of female employees in the health care sector including
those represented in collective bargaining by the appellant. Less than three
years later, before any money had actually flowed to the intended recipients,
the same government introduced legislation to defer the commencement of the
promised increase for three years until 1991. The justification was that the
government’s budgetary deficit had unexpectedly ballooned to the point where
the provincial credit rating on international money markets was at risk. The
House of Assembly enacted the bill retroactive to March 31, 1991 as the Public
Sector Restraint Act, S.N. 1991, c. 3 (the “Act”), continued by S.N.L.
1992, c. P-41.1. The appellant union contends that the Act singled out female
hospital workers for budget cuts that amounted to discriminatory treatment
contrary to s. 15(1) of the Charter . The courts in Newfoundland agreed
that the effects of the Act were discriminatory, but that in light of the
fiscal crisis then confronting the provincial government, the measure could be
justified under s. 1 of the Charter . As stated, I agree with that
conclusion and would dismiss the appeal.
I.
Facts
4
The collective agreements that had been in force between the government
and the public sector unions for a number of years included a prohibition
against discrimination on the ground of sex (art. 4.01). Despite this
provision, the parties had negotiated collective agreements from year to year
which, they eventually acknowledged, paid female-dominated work classifications
less than was paid to male-dominated classifications for work of equal value.
There had been in existence, the government agreed on June 24, 1988, systemic
discrimination. The resulting Pay Equity Agreement between the government and
the major public sector unions, including the appellant, did not itself achieve
pay equity, but laid out a process and methodology for its implementation. The
intention was to begin the pay equity process in the hospital sector and in
Newfoundland Hydro, but eventually to “bring in pay equity in all segments” of
the provincial public service (Newfoundland Preliminary Report (Hansard),
Vol. XLI, No. 11, March 19, 1991, at p. 363).
5
Under the scheme of the Pay Equity Agreement, the first wage adjustment
was to be made effective April 1, 1988, and thereafter the adjustments would
come in increments over a period of four years at a rate per year not exceeding
1 percent of the 1987 payroll for each job “grouping” as defined therein.
The full balance to achieve pay equity was to be paid out in the fifth year, on
April 1, 1992. The agreement established a Pay Equity Steering Committee for
the hospital sector with a membership that included equal representation from
the unions and government.
6
The complex task of evaluating work of equal value across different job
classifications, and working out the wage adjustments necessary to achieve
equity, took longer than anticipated. Eventually, on March 20, 1991, the
financial analysis was complete. The government estimated the immediate cost
at that date of implementation of the initial stages of pay equity in the
health care sector at $24 million.
7
At the time these cost estimates were received, the provincial
government was experiencing what the President of the Treasury Board said was a
financial crisis unprecedented in the Province’s history. Existing and
projected budgetary deficits had risen to the point where the Province’s credit
rating in financial markets was seriously at risk. He told the House of
Assembly:
For the first time in our history we are faced with the prospect of
having a limitation on what we can borrow . . . We could not take the chance
that our credit rating would drop one more notch.
.
. .
We were facing a horrendous problem that had to be dealt with for the
sake of the people of the Province.
(Hansard, supra, at pp. 359 and 361)
8
The House of Assembly responded on April 18, 1991 with passage of the Public
Sector Restraint Act, that was made retroactive by about three weeks to the
Province’s fiscal year end, being March 31, 1991.
9
Section 5 of the Act purported to freeze the wage scales of all
public sector employees, from cabinet ministers to hospital workers, for one
year, later extended to March 31, 1993. (An exception was made for
increases to individual wages on account of step progression within a job
classification or reclassification.) Pay equity was in part exempted from the
freeze. It would still be implemented but the first adjustment was delayed to
March 31, 1991 instead of April 1, 1988. It was provided that nothing would be
paid on account of the three-year period from April 1, 1988 through to March
31, 1991. The effect of the Act, according to the President of the Treasury
Board, was that “it erases an obligation we had there of approximately
$24 million” (Hansard, supra, at pp. 362-3 (emphasis added)).
10
Eventually the government and the union (without prejudice to the
union’s position in this litigation) agreed that instead of the contemplated
five-year payout the pay equity objective would be implemented by a series of
adjustments not exceeding 2 percent of individual salaries each year until
pay equity as between male and female employees was achieved.
11
In April 1991, grievances were filed on behalf of some affected
employees in respect of matters including non-payment of the pay equity wage
adjustments. The parties subsequently agreed to proceed only with the
grievances concerning pay equity.
II.
Relevant Legislation
12
Public Sector Restraint Act, S.N. 1991, c. 3
9. (1) Notwithstanding the terms and
conditions of a pay equity agreement contained in a collective agreement or
added by agreement to an existing collective agreement, no pay equity agreement
shall contain a provision which implements that pay equity agreement
retroactively.
(2) Where there is a provision in a pay
equity agreement which provides that the pay equity agreement shall be
implemented retroactively, that provision is void.
(3) Notwithstanding the other provisions of
this Act, a pay equity agreement may be negotiated or implemented, but the 1st
pay equity wage adjustment date shall be the date on which the pay equity wage
adjustment is agreed upon.
(4) This section applies whether the pay
equity agreement is reached or the pay equity wage adjustment date is agreed
upon before or after the date this Act comes into force.
(5) In this section “pay equity agreement”
means an agreement between a public sector employer and a group of public
sector employees to recognize the compensation practice which is based
primarily on the relative value of the work performed, irrespective of the
gender of employees, and includes a requirement that no employer shall
establish or maintain a difference between compensation paid to male and female
employees, employed by that employer, who are performing work of equal or
comparable value.
III.
Judicial History
A. Arbitration Board (D. L. Alcock,
Chair; J. Sack, Q.C., and R. S. Noseworthy, Q.C., Members), April 4
and 14, 1997
13
The Board held that as the Pay Equity Agreement of June 24, 1988 had
been incorporated into the relevant collective agreements, the Board had
jurisdiction to deal with the grievances.
14
The effect of s. 9(1) of the Public Sector Restraint Act was to
eliminate the “retroactive” benefit of three months between the date the Pay
Equity Agreement was signed (June 24, 1988) and the beginning of fiscal year
1988-89 on April 1, 1988. More significantly, the Board noted the date of the
initial adjustment (i.e., increase) would be delayed from April 1, 1988 to
March 31, 1991, and the workers’ entitlement to arrears for the 1988-91 period
was wiped out (or, as the President of the Treasury Board said, “erased”).
15
The Board was unanimous that the Act infringed s. 15(1) of the Charter
because the “government knew that s. 9 would have an adverse economic
impact on females who had been subjected to widely recognized gender
discrimination” (p. 86). The government had undertaken, in the Pay Equity
Agreement, to address what it had agreed was discrimination, and the House of
Assembly could not, without infringing s. 15(1) , nullify by legislation the
agreed-upon remedial plan. The Board wrote, at p. 87:
By curtailing the adjustments required under the Pay Equity Agreement,
s. 9 of the Public Sector Restraint Act disproportionately and
adversely affected female employees working in the public sector by depriving
them of the benefit of pay equity in comparison with employees in
male-dominated job classifications who are paid in accordance with the value of
their work.
16
As to the government’s attempt to justify the infringement of equality
rights, the Board agreed that “the objective of the Public Sector Restraint
Act was to reduce an escalating deficit in circumstances where the
financial health and well-being of the Province was at stake” (p. 96). The
Board stated:
The money sought to be saved would result from the reduction of
expected collective bargaining expenditures. Most would be saved by wage
restraint. The remainder (some $24 million in Mr. Baker’s estimation) would
have to come from a group of women suffering systemic gender discrimination who
were awaiting that amount of money as partial redress for that discrimination.
17
While pay restraint was rationally connected to solving the Province’s
financial dilemma, a majority of the Board found that the Public Sector
Restraint Act could not be saved under s. 1 because the government had
failed to demonstrate it had examined less drastic or less unfair means of
solving its fiscal problems such as unpaid leave, job sharing, early retirement
or reduced employees pension contributions in respect of all public
sector employees. The majority decision of the Arbitration Board therefore
declared s. 9 of the Public Sector Restraint Act to be void and ordered
the government to comply with the original terms of the Pay Equity Agreement.
18
The government nominee, Ronald S. Noseworthy, Q.C., in a partial
dissent, agreed that the Public Sector Restraint Act infringed s. 15(1)
of the Charter because it singled out female-dominated work
classifications for adverse impact by denying them the 1988-91 pay equity
adjustments. However, in his view the Act was legislation “of an emergency
nature” and was saved under s. 1 . It was rationally connected to the pressing
and substantial objective of putting the Province’s finances in order. It also
met the proportionality test. Other measures could have been taken but
a “high degree of deference” is owed to the House of Assembly “when they are
allocating scarce resources amongst competing groups” (p. 132). In his
view, the Public Sector Restraint Act was valid legislation and the
grievances should therefore be dismissed.
B. Newfoundland Supreme Court, Trial
Division (1998), 162 Nfld. & P.E.I.R. 1
19
On judicial review, Mercer J. agreed that s. 9 of the Act infringed
s. 15(1) of the Charter because it “had an adverse economic impact upon
a class of employees which Government had recognized as the victims of systemic
gender discrimination” (para. 55). The impact was particularly significant for
employees who retired, were injured on the job or received severance pay
between April 1, 1988 and March 31, 1991, because they entirely lost the pay
equity benefit to which they were entitled. “Section 9 therefore constituted
the statutory basis for the continuance of gender discrimination past the date
when Government was obliged to eliminate it” (para. 55).
20
With respect to s. 1 of the Charter , Mercer J. considered that in
a period of severe fiscal restraint the objective of reducing expenditures was
sufficiently important to justify a limitation on the s. 15(1) Charter
right. Section 9 of the Act eliminated the payment of pay equity adjustments
for the 1988-90 fiscal years. The necessary rational connection to the
objective had therefore been established.
21
With respect to the proportionality of the legislative response, Mercer
J. held that the courts should accord a measure of deference to the legislature
when that body responds to social problems, including the resolution of
competing rights between different sectors of society. The $24 million saved
by the deferral of the pay equity adjustments was part of a larger $200 million
fiscal problem. To address that problem the government had considered various
alternatives such as borrowing, tax increases, budget freezes and reductions in
government expenditures. The union had agreed from the outset that pay equity
could properly be put into effect by incremental adjustments. The effect of
the Act was to defer, not repudiate, implementation of the Pay Equity
Agreement. In Mercer J.’s view the Act did not have a disproportionately
severe effect upon the affected group of female hospital workers in relation to
the broader benefits achieved by fiscal restraint for the Province as a whole.
22
Mercer J. therefore quashed the majority decision of the Board and
dismissed the grievances.
C. Newfoundland Court of Appeal (2002),
221 D.L.R. (4th) 513, 2002 NLCA 72
23
Marshall J.A. agreed that s. 9 had a discriminatory effect, and
concurred with the motions judge’s conclusion that the Arbitration Board was
correct in its unanimous holding that s. 9 of the Public Sector Restraint
Act infringed equality rights guaranteed under s. 15(1) of the Charter .
Although, in his view, the government was under no constitutional obligation to
have addressed the problem of pay discrimination in the first place, once it
did so it was not open to the government to revoke its commitment without
infringing s. 15(1) .
24
With respect to justification, Marshall J.A. held that s. 1 of the Charter
must be “harmonized with the Separation of Powers Doctrine by foreclosing the
potential for the judiciary to assume the role of final arbitrator of the
correctness of policy initiatives within the purview of the political branches
of government” (para. 351).
25
Since, in his view, the Oakes proportionality requirements
courted a risk of putting the judiciary in the shoes of the other branches of
government as ultimate arbitrator of which policy choices were in the best
interests of the people of the province, Marshall J.A. suggested, at para. 365,
that explicit recognition of the separation of powers doctrine should be added
to the s. 1 test:
There is a need, then, to revisit those three gateways to
proportionality [set out in Oakes], and if not to completely reframe
them, at least to oil their hinges to assure they swing in harmony with the
Separation of Powers.
26
In his view, the sheer magnitude of the severe financial situation
presented by the prospect of burgeoning fiscal deficits in early 1991
demonstrated that the reduction and containment of fiscal deficits was an
urgent, pressing and substantial objective. Fiscal restraint was rationally
connected to that objective. A perusal of the “extended budgetary
explanation” in Hansard provided ample support for the motion judge’s
conclusion that the government had considered various alternatives such as
borrowing, tax increases, budget freezes and reduction in government
expenditures.
27
The fact that the impugned legislation delayed pay equity implementation
rather than eliminating it showed that “reasonable effort” had been made to
minimize the infringement. The deleterious effects of limiting
constitutionally protected equality rights were outweighed by the pressing and
substantial objective of containing and reducing the forecasted budgetary
deficits.
28
“Swinging in harmony” with the separation of powers doctrine required
judicial deference to the policy choices adopted by the elected representatives
to address communal or societal needs.
IV.
Constitutional Questions
29
On October 29, 2003, the Chief Justice stated the following
constitutional questions:
1. Does s. 9 of the Public Sector Restraint
Act, S.N. 1991, c. 3, infringe s. 15(1) of the Canadian Charter of
Rights and Freedoms ?
2. If so, is the infringement a reasonable
limit prescribed by law as can be demonstrably justified in a free and
democratic society under s. 1 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms ?
To which the
appellant adds a supplementary question:
3. Did the Court of Appeal err in adding a
further step to the section 1 analysis, namely a requirement for the Court to
determine explicitly at each stage whether the separation of powers doctrine
has been offended?
V.
Analysis
30
Pay equity has been one of the most difficult and controversial
workplace issues of our times. There is no doubt that in the 1980s women
hospital workers in Newfoundland and Labrador (and elsewhere) were being paid
less than men for work of equal value. By 1988, it had become a significant
collective bargaining issue between the provincial government and the public
sector unions.
31
The Pay Equity Agreement signed on June 24, 1988 was a major
achievement. No doubt it was bought by the public sector unions with
concessions on other fronts. Progress on such an important issue, once
achieved, should not be lightly set aside. Yet, the effect of the Public
Sector Restraint Act was not only to shift the start of the provincial
government’s pay equity adjustments from 1988 to 1991, but to eliminate any
liability for amounts otherwise payable to the underpaid female hospital
workers in respect of the three fiscal years ending March 31, 1991. For those
workers who retired prior to 1991, the Act meant they derived no benefit at all
from the agreement their union had achieved. Nevertheless the provincial
government argues that the Public Sector Restraint Act is entirely valid
on the basis that: (1) there being nothing in the Charter (the
government says) imposing pay equity as a constitutional obligation, there can
be no constitutional impediment to its repeal, let alone a “deferral” of its
effective date; (2) in any event, there is nothing in the Public Sector
Restraint Act that creates a distinction that qualifies as discrimination
within s. 15(1) of the Charter ; and (3) if any such discrimination is
found to exist it is justified under s. 1 of the Charter .
32
I do not believe there is much substance in the first two points. The
battleground in this case is the s. 1 justification. Nevertheless, I propose
to deal with the points in the order presented.
A. Absence of a Constitutional Obligation
33
The respondent says that female workers have no right under s. 15(1) of
the Charter to equal pay for work of equal value. What the government
gave in 1988, the government could take away in 1991. It is true that in the
ordinary course, legislative adoption of a remedial measure does not
“constitutionalize” it so as to fetter its repeal: Reference re Canada
Assistance Plan (B.C.), [1991] 2 S.C.R. 525, at p. 563. Here, however,
the provincial government signed a Pay Equity Agreement on
June 24, 1988 which changed the legal landscape by creating
enforceable contractual rights to end pay discrimination by a procedure
contractually binding on all of the parties. The Pay Equity Agreement was
incorporated into the public sector collective agreements.
34
This process converted pay equity from a policy argument into an existing
legal obligation for the benefit of the female hospital workers. The purpose
of the Public Sector Restraint Act was to reduce the women’s pay below
their contractual entitlement. Its intended effect was to pay them less than
was paid to men for work of equal value. Passage of the Act on April 18, 1991
left women hospital workers worse off than they were on April 17, 1991. The
issue is whether the disadvantage thus imposed on April 18, 1991 amounted to
discrimination within the scope of s. 15(1) of the Charter .
35
The respondent government relies on Ferrel v. Ontario (Attorney
General) (1998), 42 O.R. (3d) 97 (C.A.), which upheld the authority of
Ontario to repeal an affirmative action provision in the Employment Equity
Act, 1993, put in place by the previous government. The repealed provision
authorized regulations to require private employers to adopt employment equity
plans. Such plans could require “numerical goals determined . . .
with reference to percentages approved by the [Employment Equity] Commission
that, in the opinion of the Commission, fairly reflect[ed] the representation
of the designated groups in the population of a geographical area or in any
other group of people” (s. 55(2)). After noting that workplace
discrimination was already prohibited by the Ontario Human Rights Code,
and that the law in question was supplementary “machinery” to promote hiring
practices “under the shield of s. 15(2) of the Charter ” (p. 110),
Morden A.C.J. concluded that the preference of the newly elected legislature
for the “machinery” of the Ontario Human Rights Code over the
“numbers-driven” repealed provision did not violate s. 15(1) . If the
result were otherwise, he noted, the Charter would itself “have an
inhibiting effect on legislatures enacting tentative, experimental legislation
in areas of complex social and economic relations” (p. 110).
36
The argument here is not over the “machinery” of government. On
April 18, 1991 when the Public Sector Restraint Act was
passed, the female hospital workers were not workers in search of machinery to
pursue a claim. They were entitled under their collective agreements to four
years of pay equity adjustments (1988, 1989, 1990 and 1991) which, at that
point, had been ascertained and agreed to by the government and the union. The
debt was payable on April 1, 1991. It was this entitlement, due to an
historically disadvantaged minority in the workforce, that was targeted by the
Act.
37
I do not wish to be taken as agreeing with counsel for the respondent
that there is no direct infringement of s. 15(1) when a government
employer discriminates in the payment of wages for work of equal value on the
basis of the sex of the employee. We do not get to that issue in this case.
For present purposes, it is sufficient to hold that the question whether the
targeting of acquired rights of women hospital workers in this case was
discriminatory is clearly within the ambit of s. 15(1) scrutiny.
B. Does Section 9 of the Public Sector
Restraint Act Breach Section 15(1) of the Charter ?
38
Counsel for the appellant concisely summarized her s. 15(1) argument
against the Public Service Restraint Act:
It repudiates recognition by the state of the undervaluation of work
done by women, it identifies pay inequity for women as acceptable and it
repudiates state responsibility [as employer] for redressing systemic
discrimination for women.
While this
description necessarily sacrifices nuance in the interest of brevity, it
certainly captures the essence of the debate.
39
The provincial government has an uphill battle contesting an
infringement of s. 15(1) in light of the opening clauses of the Pay Equity
Agreement it signed on June 24, 1988:
PURPOSE
1.1 To achieve pay equity by redressing
systemic gender discrimination in compensation for work performed by employees
in female dominated classes within the bargaining units represented by
AAHP, IBEW, CUPE, NAPE and NLNU, and whose members are employees covered by The
Public Service (Collective Bargaining) Act, 1973. [Emphasis added.]
40
The value placed on a person’s work is more than just a matter of
dollars and cents. The female hospital workers were being told that they did
not deserve equal pay despite making a contribution of equal value. As Dickson
C.J. observed in Reference re Public Service Employee Relations Act (Alta.),
[1987] 1 S.C.R. 313, dissenting, at p. 368:
Work is one of the most fundamental aspects in a
person’s life, providing the individual with a means of financial support and,
as importantly, a contributory role in society. A person’s employment is an
essential component of his or her sense of identity, self-worth and emotional
well-being. Accordingly, the conditions in which a person works are highly
significant in shaping the whole compendium of psychological, emotional and
physical elements of a person’s dignity and self-respect. [Emphasis added.]
41
This case thus fits easily within the framework established in Law v.
Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration), [1999] 1 S.C.R. 497, which
identified the affirmation of human dignity and self-worth as a central purpose
of s. 15(1) of the Charter .
42
The effect of the Public Sector Restraint Act in 1991 was to
affirm a policy of gender discrimination which the provincial government had
itself denounced three years previously. The Act draws a clear formal
distinction between those who were entitled to benefit from pay equity, and
everyone else. The appropriate comparator group consists of men in
male-dominated classifications performing work of equal value. That group was
not similarly targeted. They were paid according to their contractual
entitlement. The adverse impact of the legislation therefore fell
disproportionately on women, who were already at a disadvantage relative to
male- dominated jobs as they earned less money. It is true that the Act
targeted an advantage secured to “female dominated classes”, and thus
presumably included some males, but such inclusion does not change the result.
The category of “female dominated classes” was established in the original Pay
Equity Agreement, wherein the government formally acknowledged that in relation
to workers thus defined the pay differential constituted “systemic gender
discrimination”.
43
The differential treatment did not arise merely because of the type of
job but rather because the job is one that is generally held by women. Sex is
a prohibited ground of discrimination.
44
As to the government’s argument that the targeting of an acquired right
to pay equity did not amount to discrimination within the meaning of
s. 15(1) , the contextual factors listed in Law, supra,
provide a useful (though not exhaustive) checklist.
(1) Pre-Existing Disadvantage
45
“Womens’ jobs” are chronically underpaid. As Abella J.A. wrote in a 1987
law journal article:
The existence of a gap between the earnings of men
and women is one of the few facts not in dispute in the “equality” debate.
There are certainly open questions about it, the two main ones being the width
of the gap and the right way to go about closing it. But no one seriously
challenges the reality that women are paid less than men, sometimes for the
same work, sometimes for comparable work.
(R. S. Abella, “Employment Equity” (1987), 16 Man. L.J. 185,
at p. 185)
46
Postponement of pay equity and extinguishment of the 1988-91 arrears
could reasonably be taken by the women, already underpaid, as confirmation that
their work was valued less highly than the work of those in male-dominated
jobs. The Public Sector Restraint Act reinforced an inferior status by
taking away the remedial benefits their unions had negotiated on their behalf.
This perpetuated and reinforced the idea that women could be paid less for no
reason other than the fact they are women: Law, supra, at para.
64.
(2) Correspondence, or Lack Thereof, Between
the Ground or Grounds on Which the Claim Is Based and the Actual Need,
Capacity, or Circumstances of the Claimant
47
The government conceded in the 1988 Pay Equity Agreement that the women’s
existing pay did not do justice to their contribution. The postponement of pay
equity in 1991 therefore did not correspond to the actual needs, capacity or
circumstances of the claimants. Indeed, it did just the opposite. This is not
a situation where the Province can be said to treat employees differently on
the basis of actual personal difference between individuals.
(3) Ameliorative Purpose or Effect
48
This Act did not have an ameliorative purpose in relation to the
workforce. On the contrary, it rolled back the ameliorative effects of the
collective agreements that required pay equity adjustments beginning in 1988.
It “erased” a debt of $24 million to female hospital workers that fell due on
April 1, 1991, prior to passage of the Act.
(4) The Nature and Scope of the Interest
Affected by the Impugned Law
49
Work is an important part of life. For many people what they do for a
living, and the respect (or lack of it) with which their work is regarded by
the community, is a large part of who they are. Low pay often denotes low
status jobs, exacting a price in dignity as well as dollars. As such, the
interest affected by the Act was of great importance.
50
The Act froze wage scales in the male-dominated jobs as well as in the
female-dominated jobs, but the men were already paid money for value whereas
the women were not.
51
I therefore conclude that both the trial judge and the Court of Appeal
were correct to affirm the Board’s unanimous finding of a breach of s. 15(1) .
C. Is Section 9 of the Public Sector
Restraint Act Saved by Section 1 ?
52
It should be stated at the outset that legislation aimed at perpetuating
pay inequity is a very serious matter. Counsel for the respondent acknowledged
at the hearing that this is so, but argued that this is one of those
“exceedingly rare cases” where the issue is not about “administrative
convenience or cost simpliciter or majorit[arian] [p]reference”. It is,
he says, about “the province’s ability to deliver on some of its most basic
social programs, such as education, health and welfare”.
53
Oakes itself cautioned that “rights and freedoms guaranteed by
the Charter are not, however, absolute” (p. 136). Section 1 permits a
law to limit a Charter right provided it is a “reasonable” measure that
“can be demonstrably justified in a free and democratic society”.
Demonstration of a reasonable limit involves consideration of five related
questions with close attention to the factual context:
1. Does the law address a sufficiently
important legislative objective? “It is necessary, at a minimum, that an
objective relate to concerns which are pressing and substantial.” (Oakes,
at pp. 138-39)
2. Is the substance of the law “rationally
connected to the objective”? (Oakes, at p. 139)
3. Does the law impair the right no more than
is reasonably necessary to accomplish the legislative objective,
i.e., impair “as little as possible the right or freedom in question”? (R.
v. Big M Drug Mart Ltd., [1985] 1 S.C.R. 295, at p. 352)
4. Is there proportionality between the effects
of the legislation and the objective which has been identified as of
“sufficient importance”? (Oakes, at p. 139)
5. Even if the importance of the objective
outweighs the adverse effect of the measure on protected rights, do the adverse
effects of the measure outweigh its “actual salutary effects”? (Dagenais v.
Canadian Broadcasting Corp., [1994] 3 S.C.R. 835, at p. 888 (emphasis deleted))
54
Marshall J.A. advocated adding a further question “at the end of each
stage of the appraisal of compliance with the Oakes criteria”, namely
. . . whether the exercise of the judicial power in coming to
those findings was in consonance with the Separation of Powers Doctrine. [para.
372]
(1) The Section 1 Record
55
As with any matter that must be approached with close attention to
context, the evidence led in support of a s. 1 justification is very
important to the outcome. The only evidence before the Board consisted of an
extract from Hansard and some budget documents. The government
witnesses were not employed in the relevant policy group at the time.
56
Ordinarily such a casually introduced s. 1 record would be a matter of
serious concern. However the essential subject matter of the s. 1
justification in this case consists of the public accounts of the Province that
are filed with the House of Assembly, and comments by the Minister of Finance
and the President of the Treasury Board as to what they thought the accounts
disclosed and what they proposed to do about it, which are reported in Hansard.
This is all material of which courts may take judicial notice, as noted in
R. v. Find, [2001] 1 S.C.R. 863, 2001 SCC 32, per McLachlin C.J., at
para. 48:
Judicial notice dispenses with the need for proof of facts that are
clearly uncontroversial or beyond reasonable dispute. Facts judicially noticed
are not proved by evidence under oath. Nor are they tested by
cross-examination. Therefore, the threshold for judicial notice is strict: a
court may properly take judicial notice of facts that are either: (1) so
notorious or generally accepted as not to be the subject of debate among
reasonable persons; or (2) capable of immediate and accurate demonstration
by resort to readily accessible sources of indisputable accuracy
. . . . [Emphasis added.]
I would also
refer to the comment of La Forest J. in McKinney v. University of Guelph,
[1990] 3 S.C.R. 229, at p. 300: “The general objectives of the legislature
. . . are readily apparent from a reading of the debates leading to
their enactment.” See, as well, Reference re ss. 193 and 195.1(1)(c)
of the Criminal Code (Man.), [1990] 1 S.C.R. 1123, at pp. 1137-38, and R.
v. Heywood, [1994] 3 S.C.R. 761, at pp. 788-89.
57
The purpose of judicial notice is not only to dispense with unnecessary
proof but to avoid a situation where a court, on the evidence, reaches a
factual conclusion which contradicts “readily accessible sources of indisputable
accuracy”, and which would therefore bring into question the accuracy of the
court’s own fact-finding processes. A finding on the evidence led by the
parties, for example, that the Newfoundland deficit in 1988 was $5 million
whereas anyone could ascertain from the public accounts that it was $120
million would create a serious anomaly. As Professor Morgan famously wrote:
. . . [the court] cannot adjust legal relations among members
of society and thus fulfill the sole purpose of its creation if it permits the
parties to take issue on, and thus secure results contrary to, what is so
notoriously true as not to be the subject of reasonable dispute
. . . .
(E. M. Morgan, “Judicial Notice” (1944), 57 Harv. L. Rev.
269, at p. 273)
58
The Board was critical of the government in failing to call witnesses
who could describe at first hand what alternatives were examined to secure cost
reductions that might, if adopted, have avoided a deferral of pay equity. I
agree with the Board that the government ought to have called witnesses who
were better placed to explain the government accounts and ministerial
observations. However, in the context of this particular subject matter, I do
not agree that failure to do so was fatal to the government’s s. 1 case. There
are serious limits to how far the courts can penetrate Cabinet privilege in
order to require information about the deliberations of the Executive Council: Canada
(Auditor General) v. Canada (Minister of Energy, Mines and Resources), [1989]
2 S.C.R. 49, at p. 89. What transpires in the budgetary process, of course,
lies at the high end of Cabinet confidences, and here there was no need to
precipitate a confrontation between the courts and the government. In my view,
the material brought to the Board’s attention, and of which we may take
judicial notice, is sufficient for the purposes of disposing of this appeal.
(2) Was There a Pressing and Substantial
Legislative Objective?
59
It cannot reasonably be disputed that the provincial government faced a
severe fiscal crisis in the spring of 1991. In part, this was due to a
reduction of anticipated federal transfer payments by $130 million. Over 45
percent of Newfoundland government spending is financed either through federal equalization
payments or federally established program financing, “money that is transferred
down here”, as it was explained by the President of the Treasury Board (Hansard,
supra, at p. 364).
60
The Minister of Finance advised the House of Assembly that instead of a
modest surplus of $10 million for the fiscal year ending March 31, 1991, there
would be a deficit of $120 million. The prospective deficit for 1991-92,
unless serious expenditure cuts were made, would be “in the vicinity of $200
million” (Hansard, supra, at p. 359). Deficits of this magnitude
could have serious consequences for the Province, not only in borrowing to meet
the current account deficit but in refinancing existing provincial debt as it
fell due:
There is one rating agency that still gives us an A minus rating. The
other rating agencies were in the B category. And if our rating were to drop
one more notch, and we would have a B rating, things would get extremely
difficult. As the Minister of Finance has explained the financial markets are
such that many investors get involved with only A level bonds — many of the
larger investors — so that much less of the market would be available to us and
what was available to us we would have to pay a lot more for.
.
. .
In the past Governments have
allowed the credit rating to drop. When they ran into trouble in 1985, there
was some trouble, there was a downturn, the credit rating dropped. It is easy
— let the credit rating drop. We no longer had that luxury. We could not take
the chance that our credit rating would drop one more notch.
(Hansard, supra, at p. 359)
61
The government’s s. 1 evidence includes its expenditure reduction
program. In addition to the freeze of wage scales for public sector employees
including members of the House of Assembly, Cabinet Ministers, executives,
managers and non-unionized employees, the budgetary measures froze or cut
budgets for government-funded agencies; closed 360 acute care hospital beds;
froze per capita student grants and equalization grants to school boards; made
government-wide reductions in operating budgets; reduced or eliminated a range
of programs; imposed a 10 percent reduction in executive and management
positions; laid off 1,300 permanent, 350 part-time and 350 seasonal employees
and eliminated a further 500 vacant positions in government departments; and
terminated medicare coverage for items such as routine dental surgery in
hospitals and basic vision assessment under the optometry and medicare programs.
62
It seems to me the severity of these measures, including the cut to pay
equity, corroborates the government’s statement that it believed itself, on
reasonable grounds, to be in the middle of a fiscal crisis.
63
The appellant union says that these cost savings should not be
recognized as sufficiently important to justify the limitation of Charter
rights. It relies on the statement of Lamer C.J. in Reference re
Remuneration of Judges of the Provincial Court of Prince Edward Island,
[1997] 3 S.C.R. 3 (“PEI Provincial Court Judges Reference”), at para.
284:
Three main principles emerge from this discussion.
First, a measure whose sole purpose is financial, and which infringes Charter
rights, can never be justified under s. 1 (Singh and Schachter).
Second, financial considerations are relevant to tailoring the standard of
review under minimal impairment (Irwin Toy, McKinney and Egan).
Third, financial considerations are relevant to the exercise of the court’s
remedial discretion, when s. 52 is engaged (Schachter). [Emphasis
added.]
64
It seems to me that these and other similar statements have to be read
in context. It is true, as the Court recently affirmed in Nova Scotia
(Workers’ Compensation Board) v. Martin, [2003] 2 S.C.R. 504, 2003 SCC 54,
that “[b]udgetary considerations in and of themselves cannot normally be
invoked as a free-standing pressing and substantial objective for the purposes
of s. 1 of the Charter ” (para. 109 (emphasis added)). The spring of
1991 was not a “normal” time in the finances of the provincial government. At
some point, a financial crisis can attain a dimension that elected governments
must be accorded significant scope to take remedial measures, even if the
measures taken have an adverse effect on a Charter right, subject, of
course, to the measures being proportional both to the fiscal crisis and to
their impact on the affected Charter interests. In this case, the
fiscal crisis was severe and the cost of putting into effect pay equity
according to the original timetable was a large expenditure ($24 million)
relative even to the size of the fiscal crisis.
65
It is convenient at this point to look more closely at what this Court
has said in the so-called “dollars versus rights” controversy.
66
In Singh v. Minister of Employment and Immigration, [1985] 1
S.C.R. 177, a case dealing with the Charter rights of refugee claimants,
Wilson J. made the following statement about s. 1 , at pp. 218-19:
Seen in this light I have considerable doubt that
the type of utilitarian consideration brought forward by Mr. Bowie can
constitute a justification for a limitation on the rights set out in the Charter .
Certainly the guarantees of the Charter would be illusory if they could
be ignored because it was administratively convenient to do so. No doubt considerable
time and money can be saved by adopting administrative procedures which ignore
the principles of fundamental justice but such an argument, in my view, misses
the point of the exercise under s. 1 . The principles of natural justice
and procedural fairness which have long been espoused by our courts, and the
constitutional entrenchment of the principles of fundamental justice in s. 7 ,
implicitly recognize that a balance of administrative convenience does not
override the need to adhere to these principles. [Emphasis added.]
67
However, this broad statement must be read together with her concluding
observations at p. 220, that “[e]ven if the cost of compliance with fundamental
justice is a factor to which the courts would give considerable weight, I am
not satisfied that the Minister has demonstrated that this cost would be so
prohibitive as to constitute a justification within the meaning of s. 1 .” Singh
certainly cautioned against the limitation of rights to save dollars, but the
scope of the caution was left open for a case where the evidence warranted its
consideration.
68
R. v. Lee, [1989] 2 S.C.R. 1384, dealt with legislation that
denied an accused the right to trial by jury after he or she failed to appear
for trial without a legitimate excuse. Lamer J., for the majority, said that
the legislative objective was the “cost” to potential jurors and to the
criminal justice system of wasted time in terms both of economic loss and of
community disaffection. These objectives went beyond the purely financial
(e.g., “to protect the administration of justice from delay,
inconvenience, expense and abuse, and to secure the respect of the public for
the criminal trial process” (p. 1390 (emphasis deleted))) but on the issue of
cost, Lamer J. observed, at p. 1391:
I do not believe that the importance of the objective can be measured solely
by reference to the amount of money lost as a result of the non-appearance of
accused persons, and the cost of empanelling a second jury. Rather the
cost, and by implication the importance of the objective, must be
measured in terms of the overall “cost”, both in the sense of economic loss and
disruption to lives, and in the sense of confidence and respect for the system,
to the individuals selected for jury duty and to society as a whole. When
viewed in this light, I conclude that the legislative objective is of
sufficient importance to override a constitutionally protected right,
especially where the restriction is limited to those who have abused the system
without a legitimate excuse. [Emphasis added.]
69
It was thus clear from an early date that financial considerations
wrapped up with other public policy considerations could qualify as
sufficiently important objectives under s. 1 .
70
In Schachter v. Canada, [1992] 2 S.C.R. 679, in the course of
discussing remedies under s. 52, Lamer C.J. stated at p. 709:
This Court has held, and rightly so, that budgetary considerations
cannot be used to justify a violation under s. 1 . However, such considerations
are clearly relevant once a violation which does not survive s. 1 has been
established, s. 52 is determined to have been engaged and the Court turns its
attention to what action should be taken thereunder.
71
I do not read this statement as contradicting what Lamer C.J. had
earlier said in Lee regarding the legitimacy of a government response to
mixed financial and non-financial objectives, particularly when read with his
later statement in the PEI Provincial Court Judges Reference, already
quoted, that “a measure whose sole purpose is financial” (para. 284
(emphasis added)) is not a sufficient justification under s. 1 . The “sole
purpose” test accords well with the Court’s statement in Martin, quoted
above, that “[b]udgetary considerations in and of themselves cannot normally
be invoked as a free-standing pressing and substantial objective for the
purposes of s. 1 ” (para. 109 (emphasis added)). This rather qualified
dictum was followed up in Figueroa v. Canada (Attorney General), [2003]
1 S.C.R. 912, 2003 SCC 37, where Iacobucci J. stated, at para. 66:
. . . I do not wish to rule out the possibility that there
might be instances in which the potential impact upon the public purse is of
sufficient magnitude to justify limiting the rights of individual citizens.
72
The result of all this, it seems to me, is that courts will continue to
look with strong scepticism at attempts to justify infringements of Charter
rights on the basis of budgetary constraints. To do otherwise would devalue
the Charter because there are always budgetary constraints and
there are always other pressing government priorities. Nevertheless,
the courts cannot close their eyes to the periodic occurrence of financial
emergencies when measures must be taken to juggle priorities to see a
government through the crisis. It cannot be said that in weighing a delay in
the timetable for implementing pay equity against the closing of hundreds of
hospital beds, as here, a government is engaged in an exercise “whose sole
purpose is financial”. The weighing exercise has as much to do with social
values as it has to do with dollars. In the present case, the “potential
impact” is $24 million, amounting to more than 10 percent of the projected
budgetary deficit for 1991-92. The delayed implementation of pay equity is an
extremely serious matter, but so too (for example) is the layoff of 1,300 permanent,
350 part-time and 350 seasonal employees, and the deprivation to the public of
the services they provided.
73
This is not the first time the Court has been asked to determine the
constitutionality of public sector restraint legislation whose objective is to
remedy a serious financial situation. In PSAC v. Canada, [1987] 1
S.C.R. 424, the union had attacked a federal law which automatically extended
existing collective agreements. PSAC argued that the law interfered with
collective bargaining contrary to freedom of association (s. 2 (d)
of the Charter ). The only judges who found a Charter
infringement, and who therefore had to address s. 1 , were Dickson C.J. and
Wilson J. The Chief Justice accepted that the then need to control inflation
justified the law. Wilson J. accepted that controlling inflation at the time
of passage of the legislation was an object “of sufficient importance”
(p. 455), but considered the government’s response to have been
disproportionate, and therefore unjustified. In this context, Dickson C.J.
made the following comments at pp. 439-40:
In the present case, though there is no explicit indication of
Parliament’s objective in the Act, it is apparent that the general or
overriding purpose for enacting the Public Sector Compensation Restraint Act
was the reduction of inflation. This is, in my view, an objective of
sufficient importance for the purpose of s. 1 . Inflation at the time of the
Act’s passage was a serious problem. The evidence established that wage and
price inflation had reached double digit levels, that Canada’s inflation rate
was exceeding that of the United States, and that the monetary and fiscal
restraint policies of 1979 were not having a significant effect.
. . . The seriousness of inflation underlined by the Court’s decision
in Re Anti-Inflation Act supports the characterization of Parliament’s
objective in the present case as relating to a “pressing and substantial
concern”. I am of the opinion, therefore, that the objective of reducing
inflation was, at the time of passage of the Act, an objective of sufficient
importance for the purpose of s. 1 of the Charter .
See also
Wilson J., dissenting, at p. 455.
74
In my view, the union’s argument that budgetary issues should
effectively be given no weight in these circumstances goes too far. With
respect, the need to address a fiscal crisis such as that described by the
President of the Treasury Board was a pressing and substantial legislative
objective.
75
Loss of credit rating, and its impact on the government’s ability to
borrow, and the added cost of borrowing to finance the provincial debt which,
in the case of Newfoundland, requires “[h]undreds of millions of dollars every
year in interest” (Hansard, supra, at p. 362), are matters of
high importance. The President of the Treasury Board told the House of
Assembly that “the financial health of the Province was at stake” (Hansard,
supra, at p. 359). The Newfoundland Government had already experienced
a period of trusteeship in the 1930s, a fact glumly referred to by the
President of the Treasury Board in his speech. The financial health of the
Province is the golden goose on which all else relies. The government in 1991
was not just debating rights versus dollars but rights versus hospital beds,
rights versus layoffs, rights versus jobs, rights versus education and rights
versus social welfare. The requirement to reduce expenditures, and the
allocation of the necessary cuts, was undertaken to promote other values
of a free and democratic society: Oakes, supra, at p. 136; M.
v. H., [1999] 2 S.C.R. 3, at para. 107. And, as Sopinka J. pointed out in Egan
v. Canada, [1995] 2 S.C.R. 513, at para. 104, “[I]t is not realistic for
the Court to assume that there are unlimited funds to address the needs of
all.”
76
In my view, the evidence establishes a substantial and pressing objective
on the facts of this case. Whether or not this objective was pursued in a
manner that complies with s. 1 of the Charter will now be
addressed.
(3) Was There a Rational Connection Between
the Legislative Measure and the Pressing and Substantial Objective?
77
As the pay equity payout represented a significant portion of the
budget, its postponement was rationally connected to averting a serious fiscal
crisis in Newfoundland and Labrador.
(4) Minimal Impairment
78
Were the Charter rights of the female hospital workers impaired
no more than was reasonably necessary to achieve the pressing and substantial
legislative objective of fiscal viability?
79
In the PEI Provincial Court Judges Reference, supra, a
decision much relied on by the appellant to oppose the relevance of budgetary
constraints, Lamer C.J. stated, at para. 283:
While purely financial considerations are not
sufficient to justify the infringement of Charter rights, they are
relevant to determining the standard of deference for the test of minimal
impairment when reviewing legislation which is enacted for a purpose which
is not financial. [Emphasis added; emphasis in original deleted.]
80
A few preliminary points should be emphasized. Marshall J.A. noted that
the s. 1 case is essentially about budgets and that the making of a budget
is a quintessentially political activity. However, these facts do not immunize
the budget choices from Charter review. The notion that there are
inherently “political” questions beyond the courts’ jurisdiction was
emphatically rejected in Operation Dismantle Inc. v. The Queen, [1985] 1
S.C.R. 441, per Dickson J., at p. 459:
I have no doubt that disputes of a political or foreign policy nature
may be properly cognizable by the courts.
81
If an individual’s Charter right or freedom is violated by the
state, it is no answer to say the violation was driven or is justified for
political reasons. Indeed forms of state discrimination that are undertaken
for political reasons are among the most odious, as the recent history of parts
of the world from South Africa to the Balkans can attest.
82
The second preliminary point is that in framing the Charter ,
Canadian legislators chose to identify certain rights and freedoms as having
special constitutional status and these were placed for protection in a legal
strongbox. As such they have a privileged status, and the appellant is right
to call attention to that fact. However, of course, Charter rights must
yield when the requisites of s. 1 are satisfied.
83
Thirdly, the Oakes test recognizes that in certain types of
decisions there may be no obviously correct or obviously wrong solution, but a
range of options each with its advantages and disadvantages. Governments act
as they think proper within a range of reasonable alternatives, and the Court
acknowledged in M. v. H., supra, at para. 78, that “the role of
the legislature demands deference from the courts to those types of policy
decisions that the legislature is best placed to make”. Thus, for example, in Eldridge
v. British Columbia (Attorney General), [1997] 3 S.C.R. 624, La Forest
J. stated for the Court, at para. 85:
It is also clear that while financial considerations alone may not
justify Charter infringements . . . governments must be
afforded wide latitude to determine the proper distribution of resources in
society . . . This is especially true where Parliament, in providing
specific social benefits, has to choose between disadvantaged groups
. . . .
84
It is therefore recognized that in such cases governments have a large
“margin of appreciation” within which to make choices. It seems evident that
the scope of that “margin” will be influenced, amongst other things, by the
scale of the financial challenge confronting a government and the size of the
expenditure required to avoid a Charter infringement in relation to that
financial challenge. Thus, in Eldridge, supra, it will be
recalled, the cost of providing sign language interpretation in hospitals was
tiny, i.e., “only $150,000, or approximately 0.0025 percent of the
provincial health care budget” (para. 87). It was held that the denial of the
rights of the deaf could have no financial justification in that case.
85
In the present case, I believe the government’s response to its fiscal
crisis was proportional to its objective, and therefore saved under s. 1 .
I do so for a number of reasons, none of which taken in isolation would
necessarily be sufficient, but when added to each other cumulatively signal a
quite exceptional situation.
(a) The Scale of the Fiscal Crisis
86
The only comparable financial justification asserted in the
jurisprudence of this Court was the level of inflation at issue in PSAC,
supra. I will not repeat what has already been quoted from the judgment
of Dickson C.J. at para. 73 of these reasons. Judicial statements made in less
drastic circumstances about the inadequacy of budgetary concerns must be read
in context.
(b) The Cost of Implementing the Remedial
Plan
87
The arrears owing under the Pay Equity Agreement as of April 18, 1991
was $24 million, representing a significant percentage of the threatened
1991-92 deficit. In one sense, the size of the debt illustrates the scale of
discrimination experienced by women hospital workers. Nevertheless, it
provides a contrast with Eldridge, supra, where the cost of
compliance amounted to no more than a matter of administrative convenience.
(c) The Public Sector Restraint Act Affirmed
the Government’s Commitment to Pay Equity
88
No doubt the women hospital workers would say that erasing $24 million
of arrears is a peculiar form of affirmation, but the fact is that despite cuts
to other services and programs the Act not only affirmed pay equity in
principle but required an immediate pay equity wage increase to female
hospital workers (albeit three years behind the original 1988 commitment). In
a very tight budget, $3.5 million was set aside for the immediate payment on
the pay equity account.
(d) The Appellant Union Was Invited to
Participate in a Government Process Examining Alternatives
89
The Board majority condemned the government’s s. 1 case because of
the government’s failure to give adequate consideration to “alternative means”
to combat the deficit. The only “alternative” mentioned to the House by the
President of the Treasury Board was an additional 900 layoffs:
Twenty-four million dollars would have meant another 900 laid off in
the hospital sector — 900 jobs. So we had a choice to make, and we chose to
remove the retroactivity from the pay equity agreement.
(Hansard, supra, at p. 362)
90
The documentary evidence, however, demonstrates that other options were
also considered and rejected including a hiring freeze, layoffs and cuts to
other programs such as social assistance as well as tax increases. In fact, to
avoid additional cuts the government also borrowed approximately $50 million to
finance its current expenses.
91
The criticism of the Board majority that the government failed
adequately to consider alternative measures overlooks the more telling point
that the appellant union, on behalf of the female hospital workers, had been
invited by the government to participate in a process to identify just such
alternative measures. The President of the Treasury Board stated (and the
union led no evidence to the contrary) as follows:
. . . we made it quite clear at that point in time that we
were not looking for compliance, we were not looking for support, we were not
looking for their okay, we just wanted to make sure that if there was any
other method that we had overlooked, that that possibility could be conveyed to
us, so we did that and that first meeting with the four major unions was
held on February 20. Then there was a request from the unions for a joint
meeting — the first meeting was an individual meeting — there was a request for
a joint meeting to clarify the choices we had facing us so that meeting was
held on Sunday, 24th February.
.
. .
. . . And we did get some feedback and some response from a couple of
unions, but by and large we got none. [Emphasis added.]
(Hansard, supra, at p. 361)
92
In most s. 1 cases, the government has moved unilaterally to limit
the Charter right or freedom without consulting with the rightsholders
in advance. The union may not have liked the consultative process but there is
no evidence that it was undertaken in bad faith.
(e) The Government Was
Mediating Claims Between a Number of Important Stakeholders
93
The women hospital workers were a disadvantaged group, but so in reality
were the medical patients who lost access to 360 hospital beds, students of
school boards whose transfers were frozen, and those who relied on other
government programs that were reduced or eliminated (although it is true that
in their case Charter rights were not implicated). As was pointed out
in the House, “there was enough misery to go around”.
94
It is also true that the government here wore two hats potentially in conflict,
firstly as steward of the financial health of the Province and secondly as an
employer who owed a $24 million debt to its female workers. The beneficiaries
of other public programs did not necessarily have a contractual right to the
benefit, as did the women hospital workers. Nevertheless there were numerous
legitimate claims on the public purse by disadvantaged people which the
government was bound to mediate and this provides important context to the
budgetary decisions that were made. This point was made by La Forest J.
in upholding the constitutional validity of the Retail Business Holidays Act
in R. v. Edwards Books and Art Ltd., [1986] 2 S.C.R. 713, at
p. 795:
. . . having accepted the importance of the legislative objective, one
must in the present context recognize that if the legislative goal is to be
achieved, it will inevitably be achieved to the detriment of some.
Moreover, attempts to protect the rights of one group will also inevitably
impose burdens on the rights of other groups. There is no perfect scenario in
which the rights of all can be equally protected.
In seeking to achieve a goal that is demonstrably
justified in a free and democratic society, therefore, a legislature must be
given reasonable room to manoeuvre to meet these conflicting pressures.
[Emphasis added.]
See also Irwin
Toy Ltd. v. Quebec (Attorney General), [1989] 1 S.C.R. 927, at p. 999.
95
In this context, the requirement that the measure impair “as little as
possible” the infringed Charter right cannot be applied in a way that is
blind to the consequences for other social, educational and economic programs.
The provincial government in this case could have thrown other claims
and priorities to the winds and simply paid the $24 million but in its view,
the cuts it would have had to make elsewhere to permit this to happen would
have created even greater grief and social disruption. The budget is simply a
forum for juggling spending priorities of all types. It is not convincing
simply to declare that an expenditure to achieve a s. 15 objective must
necessarily rank ahead of hospital beds or school rooms. To do so would be to
ignore the very difficult context in which these decisions were made.
96
As in most cases, resourceful counsel, with the benefit of hindsight,
can multiply the alternatives. It was suggested, for example, that the
government could have frozen the step progressions (0.5 percent of the
payroll) rather than postponing pay equity and extinguishing the accumulated
1988-91 benefits. This, too, might have been a justifiable approach, but there
is no compelling rule that says step progression should have been denied all
employees, including women, in order to keep to the original schedule of the
pay equity program. The Act might also be criticized for its failure to
recognize the different situations of workers who had retired prior to
March 31, 1991, and who were thus denied altogether the benefits intended
to flow from the Pay Equity Agreement. However, to make a special provision
for these people would have required drawing distinctions within the
class of female hospital workers who were employed in the 1988-91 period,
favouring some and not others. The attempt to solve the problem of inequality
among the larger group of hospital workers would create another inequality
within the smaller group of female hospital workers. I cannot say that the
government’s “line drawing” in this instance is fatal to its s. 1 defence.
97
I believe we should affirm what we said in Martin, supra,
namely that “[b]udgetary considerations in and of themselves cannot normally be
invoked as a free-standing pressing and substantial objective for the purposes
of s. 1 of the Charter ” (para. 109). But we should also affirm
the factual finding by the Newfoundland courts that the spring of 1991 was not
a normal time. It was an exceptional financial crisis that called for an
exceptional response. I agree with the motions judge that the government
response was tailored to minimally impair rights in the context of the problem
it confronted. The government has therefore discharged its onus under this
branch of the Oakes test.
(5) Proportionality of Means to Objective
98
The salutary effects of the legislation were far reaching.
Maintaining the credit rating had a positive effect on interest rates and
lender confidence. The government was better able to finance the provincial
debt and continue to provide essential programs to its residents. The effect
of the Act on the Charter rights of female employees who continued to
work after March 1991, in purely financial terms, was to defer pay equity and
leave the women hospital workers with their traditionally lower wage scales for
a further three years. In light of the exceptional circumstances already
recited, I accept on a balance of probabilities that the detrimental impact of
a delay in achieving pay equity, deeply unfortunate as it was, did not outweigh
the importance of preserving the fiscal health of a provincial government
through a temporary but serious financial crisis. The seriousness of that
crisis, combined with the relative size of the $24 million required to bring
pay equity in line with the original schedule, are the compelling factors in
that respect.
(6) Proportionality of Salutary Effects of
the Act to Deleterious Effects of the Act
99
For the reasons already stated, the evidence shows that taken as a whole
the fiscal measures adopted by the Province did more good than harm, despite
the adverse effects on the women hospital workers, serious and deeply
regrettable though such adverse effects were.
(7) Should Conformity with the Separation of
Powers Doctrine Be Added as an Element of the Section 1 Analysis?
100
As stated, Marshall J.A. proposed that a court should ask itself at each
stage of the s. 1 analysis whether the judicial response to the questions
posed conform to the separation of powers doctrine. He wrote, at para. 362:
. . . it cannot be said that s. 1 endows the judiciary with
licence to stand in the shoes of the other branches of government as ultimate
arbitrator of which policy choices were in the best interests of the governed.
For the foregoing reasons, it would appear that the Oakes proportionality
requirements court such a risk. Accordingly, it seems that some revisitation
of them is in order.
101
The essential propositions advanced by Marshall J.A. were that the Oakes
test does not sufficiently respect the actual wording of s. 1 of the Charter
(para. 262) and that in the result inadequate deference is paid to
legislative and executive choices at each and every stage of the s. 1
justification. It is thus out of step with the doctrine of the separation of
powers. While I respect the care and detail with which Marshall J.A. set out
his concerns in the course of a 231-page judgment, I do not agree with his
analysis.
(a) Fidelity to the Text of Section 1
102
The Oakes test, of course, is itself based on the text of
s. 1 . Thus in Oakes itself, Dickson C.J. observed at p. 137:
It is clear from the text of s. 1 that limits on the rights and
freedoms enumerated in the Charter are exceptions to their general
guarantee. The presumption is that the rights and freedoms are guaranteed
unless the party invoking s. 1 can bring itself within the exceptional
criteria which justify their being limited. This is further substantiated by
the use of the word “demonstrably” which clearly indicates that the onus of
justification is on the party seeking to limit: Hunter v. Southam Inc. .
. .
103
The textual analysis was carried forward by McLachlin J. in RJR-MacDonald
Inc. v. Canada (Attorney General), [1995] 3 S.C.R. 199. Referring to the
words “reasonable limits prescribed by law as can be demonstrably justified in
a free and democratic society”, she wrote at paras. 128 and 136:
The process is not one of mere intuition, nor is it one of deference to
Parliament’s choice. It is a process of demonstration. This reinforces
the notion inherent in the word “reasonable” of rational inference from
evidence or established truths.
.
. .
. . . [C]are must be taken not to extend the notion of deference too
far. Deference must not be carried to the point of relieving the government of
the burden which the Charter places upon it of demonstrating that
the limits it has imposed on guaranteed rights are reasonable and justifiable.
Parliament has its role: to choose the appropriate response to social problems
within the limiting framework of the Constitution. But the courts also have a
role: to determine, objectively and impartially, whether Parliament’s choice
falls within the limiting framework of the Constitution. The courts are no
more permitted to abdicate their responsibility than is Parliament. To
carry judicial deference to the point of accepting Parliament’s view simply on
the basis that the problem is serious and the solution difficult, would be to
diminish the role of the courts in the constitutional process and to weaken the
structure of rights upon which our constitution and our nation is founded.
[Emphasis added.]
No doubt
Parliament and the legislatures, generally speaking, do enact measures
that they, representing the majority view, consider to be reasonable limits
that have been demonstrated to their satisfaction as justifiable.
Deference to the legislative choice to the degree proposed by Marshall J.A.
would largely circumscribe and render superfluous the independent second look
imposed on the courts by s. 1 of the Charter . Deference to the
majority view on that scale would leave little protection to minorities.
Marshall J.A.’s proposal, with respect, is not based on fidelity to the text of
s. 1 but to dilution of the requirement of “demonstrable” justification.
(b) The Separation of
Powers
104
No one doubts that the courts and the legislatures have different roles
to play, and that our system works best when constitutional actors respect the
role and mandate of other constitutional actors, including an “appreciation by
the judiciary of its own position in the constitutional scheme” (Auditor
General, supra, at p. 91, per Dickson C.J.). While the
separation of powers is a defining feature of our constitutional order (PEI Provincial
Court Judges Reference, supra), the separation of powers cannot be
invoked to undermine the operation of a specific written provision of the
Constitution like s. 1 of the Charter . Section 1 itself expresses
an important aspect of the separation of powers by defining, within its terms,
limits on legislative sovereignty.
105
Judicial review of governmental action long predates the adoption of the
Charter . Since Confederation, courts have been required by the
Constitution to ensure that state action complies with the Constitution. The Charter
has placed new limits on government power in the area of human rights, but
judicial review of those limits involves the courts in the same role in
relation to the separation of powers as they have occupied from the beginning,
that of the constitutionally mandated referee. As the Court affirmed in Vriend
v. Alberta, [1998] 1 S.C.R. 493, at para. 56, “. . . it is not the courts
which limit the legislatures. Rather, it is the Constitution, which must be
interpreted by the courts, that limits the legislatures. This is necessarily
true of all constitutional democracies.”
106
It is evident that adoption of the Charter placed new limits on
the sovereignty of Parliament, as Marshall J.A. freely acknowledges in his
decision, at para. 246:
A true perspective of the Charter is that it added another arrow
to the quiver of the individual’s arsenal, broadening the scope of challenge to
laws and actions of the legislative and executive arms of government. This
observation in no way detracts from the importance of the Charter . The
greater protection it accords to basic fundamental rights and freedoms, and its
tempering of the powers of the political branches of government in its
redefining of long-established concepts of parliamentary supremacy, herald
reforms of no insignificant moment. [Emphasis added.]
107
Marshall J.A. makes a number of suggestions as to how this redefinition
of Parliamentary sovereignty can be squared with his view of the Separation of
Powers.
108
Firstly, Marshall J.A. would seemingly impose on a rights claimant not
only the onus of establishing entitlement to the right but also of showing that
its exercise “in the specific circumstances” of the case is reasonable. He
writes at para. 244:
The new constitutional mechanism for enforcing fundamental rights
rather addressed individual impotence in the face of encroachments upon them by
providing a means of their protection through the courts to the extent that
their exercise in the specific circumstances obtaining could be shown
reasonable in a free and democratic society. [Emphasis added.]
109
To the extent Marshall J.A. is advocating a removal of the onus on
government to justify infringement of a Charter right, and to substitute
an onus under s. 1 on the complainant to show that his or her exercise of
the right is reasonable, it would again contradict the text of s. 1 in
which the word “reasonable” modifies “limits” not “rights”. Nowhere in the Charter
is it suggested that the exercise of fundamental rights and freedoms should
be presumed unreasonable unless and until a claimant proves the contrary “in
the specific circumstances”.
110
Secondly, Marshall J.A. would seemingly remove from judicial scrutiny
“policy initiatives within the purview of the political branches of
government”. He writes, at paras. 362 and 351:
It is true that s. 1 effectively invests it [the judiciary] with
responsibility to pass upon the justifiability of policy choices behind Charter
infringements. However, that power is exercisable in the context of
judicial deference to the other branches of government, and in harmony with the
Separation of Powers Doctrine.
.
. .
In the result, s. 1 of the Charter is harmonized with the
Separation of Powers Doctrine by foreclosing the potential for the judiciary to
assume the role of final arbitrator of the correctness of policy initiatives
within the purview of the political branches of government.
111
The “political branches” of government are the legislature and the
executive. Everything that they do by way of legislation and executive action
could properly be called “policy initiatives”. If the “political branches” are
to be the “final arbitrator” of compliance with the Charter of their
“policy initiatives”, it would seem the enactment of the Charter affords
no real protection at all to the rightsholders the Charter , according to
its text, was intended to benefit. Charter rights and freedoms, on this
reading, would offer rights without a remedy.
112
Thirdly, Marshall J.A. would preclude the courts from looking at
alternative measures the “political branches” might have adopted to achieve
their legitimate objectives with minimal impairment to Charter rights
and freedoms. Thus he writes, at para. 424:
A perusal of s. 1 ’s wording reflects intent that the judicial
justification power be rationalized through deference to the adopted policy
choice without inquiry into other options which the judiciary might
consider to have been available. [Emphasis added.]
113
With respect, it is difficult to understand how a court could satisfy
itself that a particular legislative limit is “reasonable” if it is blinkered
from considering whether other less limiting measures were available.
114
Marshall J.A.’s concerns lead back to his fundamental point that in
appropriate cases, courts should defer to legislative and executive choices.
Yet it is not at all necessary to rewrite the Court’s jurisprudence to reflect
this concern. While I do not agree with Marshall J.A. that the courts should
“oil th[e] hinges” of the Oakes test to ensure that it “swing[s] in
harmony with the Separation of Powers” (because in my view such an approach
would contradict the explicit wording of s. 1 ), it is nevertheless clear
that there is built into the Oakes test a healthy respect for
legislative choice in areas of economic and social policy. Marshall J.A.
himself quotes approvingly (at para. 427) from the reasons of Dickson C.J. in PSAC,
supra, on the subject of judicial deference at p. 442:
In my opinion, courts must exercise considerable
caution when confronted with difficult questions of economic policy. It is not
our judicial role to assess the effectiveness or wisdom of various government
strategies for solving pressing economic problems. The question how best to
combat inflation has perplexed economists for several generations. It would be
highly undesirable for the courts to attempt to pronounce on the relative
importance of various suggested causes of inflation, such as the expansion of
the money supply, fiscal deficits, foreign inflation or the built-in
inflationary expectations of individual economic actors. A high degree of
deference ought properly to be accorded to the government’s choice of strategy
in combatting this complex problem.
115
It is difficult to think that when he wrote those words in 1987,
Dickson C.J. overlooked what he had said the previous year in Oakes.
On the contrary, what the Chief Justice wrote in the PSAC case entirely
conforms to what he had said in the Oakes test. He saw no need to amend
the Oakes test on this point at that time and, with respect, I do not
believe Marshall J.A. has made out a persuasive case for its modification in
the present appeal.
116
In summary, whenever there are boundaries to the legal exercise of state
power such boundaries have to be refereed. Canadian courts have undertaken
this role in relation to the division of powers between Parliament and the
provincial legislatures since Confederation. The boundary between an individual’s
protected right or freedom and state power must also be refereed. The framers
of the Charter identified the courts as the referee. While I recognize
that the separation of powers is an important constitutional principle, I
believe that the s. 1 test set out in Oakes and the rest of our
voluminous s. 1 jurisprudence already provides the proper framework in
which to consider what the doctrine of separation of powers requires in
particular situations, as indeed was the case here. To the extent Marshall
J.A. invites a greater level of deference to the will of the legislature, I
believe acceptance of such an invitation would simply be inconsistent with the
clear words of s. 1 and undermine the delicate balance the Charter
was intended to achieve. I would therefore not do as he suggests.
D. Conclusion
117
The constitutional questions should therefore be answered as follows:
1. Does s. 9 of the Public Sector Restraint
Act, S.N. 1991, c. 3, infringe s. 15(1) of the Canadian Charter of
Rights and Freedoms ?
Answer: Yes.
2. If so, is the infringement a reasonable
limit prescribed by law as can be demonstrably justified in a free and
democratic society under s. 1 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms ?
Answer: Yes.
VI.
Disposition
118
The appeal is dismissed with costs.
Appeal dismissed with costs to the respondent.
Solicitor for the appellant: Newfoundland and Labrador
Association of Public and Private Employees, St. John’s, Newfoundland and
Labrador.
Solicitor for the respondent: Department of Justice, St.
John’s, Newfoundland and Labrador.
Solicitor for the intervener the Attorney General of
Quebec: Department of Justice, Sainte-Foy.
Solicitor for the intervener the Attorney General of
New Brunswick: Attorney General of New Brunswick, Fredericton.
Solicitor for the intervener the Attorney General of
British Columbia: Ministry of Attorney General of British
Columbia, Vancouver.
Solicitor for the intervener the Attorney General of
Alberta: Alberta Justice, Edmonton.
Solicitor for the interveners the Canadian Association for Community
Living, the Canadian Hearing Society, and the Council of Canadians with
Disabilities: ARCH, A Legal Resource Centre for Persons with Disabilities,
Toronto.
Solicitors for the interveners the Hospital Employees’ Union, the
British Columbia Government and Service Employees’ Union, and the Health
Sciences Association: Arvay Finlay, Victoria.
Solicitor for the intervener the Women’s Legal Education and Action
Fund: Women’s Legal Education and Action Fund, Toronto.
Solicitors for the intervener the Canadian Labour
Congress: Cavalluzzo Hayes Shilton McIntyre & Cornish, Toronto.