Chamberlain v. Surrey School District No. 36, [2002] 4 S.C.R.
710, 2002 SCC 86
James Chamberlain, Murray Warren, Diane Willcott,
Blaine Cook, by his Guardian Ad Litem,
Sue Cook, and Rosamund Elwin Appellants
v.
The Board of Trustees of School District No. 36 (Surrey) Respondent
and
EGALE Canada Inc., the British Columbia Civil Liberties
Association, Families in Partnership, the Board of Trustees of
School District No. 34 (Abbotsford), the Elementary Teachers’
Federation of Ontario, the Canadian Civil Liberties Association,
the Evangelical Fellowship of Canada, the Archdiocese of Vancouver,
the Catholic Civil Rights League and the Canadian Alliance for
Social Justice and Family Values Association Interveners
Indexed as: Chamberlain v. Surrey School District
No. 36
Neutral citation: 2002 SCC
86.
File No.: 28654.
2002: June 12; 2002: December 20.
Present: McLachlin C.J. and L’Heureux‑Dubé,
Gonthier, Iacobucci, Major, Bastarache, Binnie, Arbour and LeBel JJ.
on appeal from the court of appeal for british columbia
Administrative law — Judicial review — Standard of
review — School boards — Selection of books for use in classrooms — School
Board passing resolution declining to approve three books depicting same‑sex
parented families as supplementary learning resources for use in Kindergarten‑Grade
One classrooms — Standard of review applicable to Board’s decision — Whether
Board’s decision reasonable — School Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 412,
s. 76.
Schools — School boards — Powers and duties —
Selection of books for use in classrooms — School Board passing resolution
declining to approve three books depicting same‑sex parented families as
supplementary learning resources for use in Kindergarten‑Grade One classrooms
— Whether Board applied criteria required by School Act, curriculum and its own
regulation for approving supplementary learning resources — School Act,
R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 412, ss. 76, 85.
Schools — School boards — Powers and duties —
Selection of books for use in classrooms — Meaning of secularism and non‑sectarianism
in School Act — School Board passing resolution declining to approve three
books depicting same‑sex parented families as supplementary learning
resources for use in Kindergarten‑Grade One classrooms — Whether Board
acted in manner that accorded with secular mandate of School Act — Whether
requirements of secularism and non‑sectarianism preclude Board making
decisions based on religious considerations — School Act, R.S.B.C. 1996,
c. 412, ss. 76, 85.
The B.C. School Act confers on the Minister of
Education the power to approve basic educational resource materials to be used
in teaching the curriculum in public schools, and confers on school boards the
authority to approve supplementary educational resource material, subject to
Ministerial direction. A Kindergarten‑Grade One (“K‑1")
teacher asked the Surrey School Board to approve three books as supplementary
learning resources, for use in teaching the family life education curriculum.
The books depicted families in which both parents were either women or men —
same‑sex parented families. The Board passed a resolution declining
to approve the books. The Board’s overarching concern, as found by the
trial judge, was that the books would engender controversy in light of some
parents’ religious objections to the morality of same‑sex
relationships. The Board also felt that children at the K‑1 level
should not be exposed to ideas that might conflict with the beliefs of their
parents; that children of this age were too young to learn about same‑sex
parented families; and that the material was not necessary to achieve the
learning outcomes in the curriculum.
The British Columbia Supreme Court quashed the Board’s
resolution, finding the decision offended s. 76 of the School Act,
because members of the Board who had voted in favour of the resolution were
significantly influenced by religious considerations. The Court of Appeal
set aside the decision on the basis that the resolution was within the Board’s
jurisdiction.
Held (Gonthier and
Bastarache JJ. dissenting): The appeal should be allowed. The School Board’s
decision was unreasonable in the context of the educational scheme laid down by
the legislature. The question of whether the books should be approved as
supplementary learning resources is remanded to the Board, to be considered
according to the criteria laid out in the curriculum guidelines and the broad
principles of tolerance and non‑sectarianism underlying the School Act.
Per McLachlin C.J. and
L’Heureux‑Dubé, Iacobucci, Major, Binnie and Arbour JJ.: The pragmatic
and functional approach points to reasonableness as the appropriate standard of
review. The School Board is an elected body and a proxy for parents and local
community members, which suggests that some deference is owed. However, the
absence of a privative clause, the clear commitment of the School Act
and the Minister to promoting tolerance and respect for diversity, and the fact
that the problem before the Board has a human rights dimension, all militate in
favour of a stricter standard of review.
The School Act’s insistence on secularism and
non‑discrimination lies at the heart of this case. The Act’s requirement
of secularism in s. 76 does not preclude decisions motivated in whole or
in part by religious considerations, provided they are otherwise within the
Board’s powers. But the Board must act in a way that promotes respect and
tolerance for all the diverse groups that it represents and serves.
The Board’s decision is unreasonable because the
process through which it was made took the Board outside its mandate under the School
Act. First, the Board violated the principles of secularism and tolerance
in s. 76 of the Act. Instead of proceeding on the basis of respect for
all types of families, the Board proceeded on an exclusionary philosophy,
acting on the concern of certain parents about the morality of same‑sex
relationships, without considering the interest of same‑sex parented
families and the children who belong to them in receiving equal recognition and
respect in the school system. Second, the Board departed from its own
regulation with respect to how decisions on supplementary resources should be
made, which required it to consider the relevance of the proposed material to
curriculum objectives and the needs of children of same‑sex parented
families. Third, the Board applied the wrong criteria. It failed to
consider the curriculum’s goal that children at the K‑1 level be able to
discuss their family models, and that all children be made aware of the
diversity of family models in our society. Instead, the Board applied a
criterion of necessity, which was inconsistent with the function of
supplementary resources in enriching children’s experience through the use of
extra materials of local relevance. The Board erred in relying on concerns
about cognitive dissonance and age‑appropriateness which were foreclosed
by the curriculum in this case. In the result, the question of whether to
approve the books is remanded to the Board.
Per LeBel J.: The
pragmatic and functional approach has proven a useful tool in reviewing
adjudicative or quasi‑judicial decisions made by administrative
tribunals. There are, however, limits to the usefulness of applying this
framework to its full extent in a different context. When the administrative
body whose decision is challenged is not a tribunal, but an elected body with
delegated power to make policy decisions, the primary function of judicial
review is to determine whether that body acted within the bounds of the
authority conferred on it. The preliminary question is whether the Board acted
legally; it could not validly exercise a power it did not have. Although the
issue is not directly raised by this appeal, as long as the Board’s educational
policy decisions are made validly pursuant to its powers, they would be
entitled to a very high level of deference. In this case, the Board’s decision
could not be upheld even on the most deferential standard of review, because it
was patently unreasonable. It is, therefore, unnecessary to go through the
full analysis of the various factors used to determine the appropriate standard
of judicial review.
The Board was authorized to approve or not to approve
books for classroom use. But its authority is limited by the requirements in
s. 76 of the School Act to conduct schools on “strictly secular and
non‑sectarian principles” and to inculcate “the highest morality” while
avoiding the teaching of any “religious dogma or creed”. The words “secular”
and “non‑sectarian” in the Act imply that no single conception of
morality can be allowed to deny or exclude opposed points of view.
Disagreement with the practices and beliefs of others, while certainly
permissible and perhaps inevitable in a pluralist society, does not justify
denying others the opportunity for their views to be represented, or refusing
to acknowledge their existence. Whatever the personal views of the Board
members might have been, their responsibility to carry out their public duties
in accordance with strictly secular and non‑sectarian principles included
an obligation to avoid making policy decisions on the basis of exclusionary
beliefs. Section 76 does not prohibit decisions about schools
governance that are informed by religious belief. The section is aimed at
fostering tolerance and diversity of views, not at shutting religion out of the
arena. It does not limit in any way the freedom of parents and Board members
to adhere to a religious doctrine that condemns homosexuality but it does
prohibit the translation of such doctrine into policy decisions by the Board,
to the extent that they reflect a denial of the validity of other points of
view.
In this case, the evidence leads to the conclusion
that the way the Board dealt with the three books was inconsistent with the School
Act’s commitment to secularism and non‑sectarianism. The overarching
concern motivating the Board to decide as it did was accommodation of the moral
and religious belief of some parents that homosexuality is wrong, which led
them to object to their children being exposed to story books in which same‑sex
parented families appear. The Board allowed itself to be decisively influenced
by certain parents’ unwillingness to countenance an opposed point of view and a
different way of life. Pedagogical policy shaped by such beliefs cannot be
secular or non‑sectarian within the meaning of the School Act.
The Board reached its decision in a way that was so clearly contrary to an
obligation set out in its constitutive statute as to be not just unreasonable
but illegal. As a result, the decision amounts to a breach of statute, is
patently unreasonable, and should be quashed.
Per Gonthier and
Bastarache JJ. (dissenting): Based on the nature of the decision being
reviewed, the appropriate standard of review for such a decision, and an
examination of the totality of the context, the School Board’s decision should
be affirmed. The decision is consistent with the Charter, the School
Act and the Ministerial directives. It was made within the ambit of
the discretion granted by the Act.
The appropriate standard of review in this case is
reasonableness. First, the absence of a privative clause should be
considered in light of the corresponding absence of a clause expressly allowing
the decisions of the Board to be appealed before the courts and of the non‑adjudicative
nature of the School Board. Second, the decision to approve the books or not
requires the Board to balance the interests of different groups, a function
which falls within its core area of expertise as a locally elected
representative body. While the decision also has a significant human rights
dimension, here the Board made a largely factual determination with a view to
balancing local parental concerns against the broad objective of promoting Charter
values. The decision should thus attract greater deference than when
administrative tribunals make general determinations of law concerning basic
human rights issues affecting numerous future cases. Third, the purpose
for which the legislature granted the Board authority to approve supplementary
learning materials was to allow for local input in choosing such
materials. Fourth, the nature of the problem does not involve the strict
application of legal rules or the interpretation of law, but a highly
contextual and polycentric analysis.
Charter values are to
be respected in the school context generally. That context, however, involves
a need to respect both the right of homosexual persons to be free from
discrimination and parental rights to make the decisions they deem necessary to
ensure the well‑being and moral education of their children. The
privileged role of parents to determine what is in their children’s well‑being,
including their moral upbringing, and their right to raise their children in
accordance with their conscience, religious or otherwise, is central to
analyzing the reasonableness of the School Board’s decision. The common law
has long recognized that parents are in the best position to take care of their
children and make all the decisions necessary to ensure their well‑being
providing they act in accordance with the best interests of their children.
This Court has reiterated the paramount parental role by construing the nature
of the authority schools and teachers have over children as a delegated
authority. The notion of a school’s authority being delegated, if it allows
parents to remove their children from the public school system, must also
guarantee to parents the role of having input with regard to the values which
their children will receive in school. This is generally brought about by
electing representatives to school boards who will develop consensus and govern
on matters pertaining to public education. These local school boards are
empowered by the School Act to approve or not approve complementary
educational resource materials. They do not, however, have an unfettered
discretion. They must act in a manner consistent with the School Act
and the evaluation, selection criteria and procedures adopted by the Board.
Here, the Board’s criteria for approving complementary educational resource
materials contained reference to concepts such as “age‑appropriateness”
and envisaged that the existence of parental concern in the community would be
a factor to be considered.
A school board is a branch of government and thus
subject to the Charter by operation of s. 32. It is not
appropriate, however, in this case, to embark upon a complete s. 15
analysis to establish a direct breach of the Charter by the School
Board. The s. 15 issues and those concerning standing were not addressed
by the courts below, and none of the appellants are same‑sex parents or
children of such parents, who could allege having been exposed to differential
treatment based on their personal characteristics by not being represented
alongside other family types in Surrey K‑1 classrooms. The relevant
Charter values are nevertheless incorporated in the requirements of the School
Act. Therefore, approaching this case as one of accommodation or balancing
between competing Charter rights adequately addresses the impact of the
Charter. The Charter reflects a commitment to equality and
protects all persons from discrimination. It also protects freedom of religion
and freedom of expression. Where belief claims seem to conflict, s. 15
cannot be used to eliminate beliefs, whether popular or unpopular. An
acceptable resolution is accommodating or balancing. The relationship between
ss. 2 and 15 of the Charter, in a truly free society, must permit
persons who respect the fundamental and inherent dignity of others and who do
not discriminate, to still disagree with others and even disapprove of the
conduct or beliefs of others. Thus, persons who believe, on religious or
non‑religious grounds, that homosexual behaviour, manifest in the conduct
of persons involved in same‑sex relationships is immoral, and those who
believe that homosexual behaviour is morally equivalent to heterosexual
behaviour, are entitled to hold and express their view. Both groups, however,
are not entitled to act in a discriminatory manner. The distinction between
actions and beliefs is present in Canada’s constitutional case law: persons are
entitled to hold such beliefs as they choose, but their ability to act on them,
whether in the private or public sphere, may be narrower. This approach
reflects the fact that ss. 2(a) and 2(b) of the Charter
coexist with s. 15, which extends protection against discrimination to
both religious persons and homosexual persons. Here, there is no evidence
that the parents who felt that the three books were inappropriate for five‑
and six‑year‑old children fostered discrimination against persons
in any way.
The Board’s decision is reasonable. The practice of
approving or not approving books was clearly within the purview of the School
Board’s authority and its decision did not offend the requirement under
s. 76 of the School Act that the “highest morality must be
inculcated”. That notion ought to be defined as a principle that maintains the
allegiance of the whole of society including the plurality of religious
adherents and those who are not religious. The values expressed in the Charter
derive from a wide social consensus and should be considered as principles of
the “highest morality” within the meaning of s. 76 of the School Act.
The Board’s decision is consistent with the Charter. It reflects a
constitutionally acceptable balance and a position which is respectful of the
views of both sides. The three books will not be employed in the two earliest
grades, but this subject matter, like the issue of homosexuality as a general
topic of human sexuality, is present in later aspects of the curriculum.
Further, the failure to approve these books does not necessarily preclude the
issue of same‑sex parents being discussed in the classroom. While the
best interests of children includes education about “tolerance”, “tolerance”
did not require the mandatory approval of the books. “Tolerance” ought
not be employed as a cloak for the means of obliterating disagreement.
The Board’s decision is also consistent with a proper
understanding of “strictly secular and non‑sectarian principles” in
s. 76. Section 76 provides general direction as to how all schools are to
be conducted. The assumption that “secular” effectively means non‑religious
is incorrect. The religiously informed conscience should not be placed at a
public disadvantage or disqualification. To do so would be to distort liberal
principles in an illiberal fashion and would provide only a feeble notion of
pluralism. The dual requirements that education be “secular” and “non‑sectarian”
refer to keeping the schools free from inculcation or indoctrination in the
precepts of any religion, and do not prevent persons with religiously based
moral positions on matters of public policy from participating in deliberations
concerning moral education in public schools. Regardless of the personal
convictions of individual members, the reasons invoked by the Board for
refusing to approve the books — that parents in the community held certain
religious and moral views and the need to respect their constitutional right to
freedom of religion and their primary role as educators of their children —
raise secular concerns that could properly be considered by the Board.
Lastly, the considerations taken into account by the
Board were appropriate. The moral status of same‑sex relationships is
controversial and the School Board was caught between two vocal and passionate
sides. While it would not have been unconstitutional to approve the three
books for use as educational resources, it is similarly not unconstitutional to
not approve the books. The Charter does not demand that five‑
and six‑year‑olds be exposed to parents in same‑sex relationships
within a dimension of a school curriculum, especially when there is significant
parental concern that these materials may be confusing for these young
children. The Board’s decision was generally motivated by concerns related to
age‑appropriateness and parental concern. The parental concern to which
the School Board was responding revolves around the nature of the portrayal of
same‑sex parents in the three books and the capacity of Kindergarten and
Grade One age students to interpret this portrayal. It was a difficult
choice between permitting the three books to be taught in K‑1 against the
wishes of some parents and then provide for the exclusion of certain children
from the class, or to teach a general lesson about tolerance and respect for people
by less controversial means and leave the issue of parents in same‑sex
relationships and homosexuality for a time when students are better positioned
to address the issues involved and better positioned to reconcile the
potentially incongruous messages they may be receiving. That choice, however,
was specifically intended to be made locally, as the School Act
envisages. The majority of the trustees were of the view that the three
books were not appropriate for K‑1 students and were unable to conclude,
based on their perception of parental concern and the demands of the
curriculum, that such educational materials ought to be approved for K‑1.
Of particular importance to the Board’s decision was that the recommended K‑1
learning resources set out by the Ministry of Education did not, at that time,
include any other resources expressly dealing with homosexuality or same‑sex
couples or families. The family life education curriculum suborganizer
refers to students being expected to identify a variety of models for family
organization but does not indicate that parents in a same‑sex
relationship are to be addressed in K‑1. The prescribed learning
outcomes for the K‑1 family life curriculum suborganizer include having
children draw and write about their own families, and having children talk
about each others’ families. In a situation where there is a child in the
classroom that has same‑sex parents, these activities and others would
raise the issue of same‑sex parented families and teachers may feel it necessary
to discuss it. Even in such a situation it is not necessary that educational
resource materials which portray same‑sex parents be generally approved
for use in all classrooms in a particular school district. Other options
exist. Furthermore, the School Board has a stringent anti‑discrimination
policy, one that is taken seriously. The totality of the context tends,
therefore, towards a conclusion that the Charter values of equality and
non‑discrimination are being fostered by the School Board.
Cases Cited
By McLachlin C.J.
Referred to: Canadian
Union of Public Employees Local 963 v. New Brunswick Liquor Corp., [1979] 2
S.C.R. 227; Canada (Director of Investigation and Research) v. Southam Inc.,
[1997] 1 S.C.R. 748; Baker v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), [1999] 2 S.C.R. 817; Pezim v. British Columbia
(Superintendent of Brokers), [1994] 2 S.C.R. 557; Pushpanathan v. Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), [1998] 1 S.C.R. 982; Nanaimo
(City) v. Rascal Trucking Ltd., [2000] 1 S.C.R. 342, 2000 SCC 13; Ross
v. New Brunswick School District No. 15, [1996] 1 S.C.R. 825; Trinity
Western University v. British Columbia College of Teachers, [2001]
1 S.C.R. 772, 2001 SCC 31; Canada (Attorney General) v. Mossop,
[1993] 1 S.C.R. 554.
By LeBel J.
Referred to: Shell
Canada Products Ltd. v. Vancouver (City), [1994] 1
S.C.R. 231; Nanaimo (City) v. Rascal Trucking Ltd., [2000] 1 S.C.R. 342,
2000 SCC 13; 114957 Canada Ltée (Spraytech, Société d’arrosage) v. Hudson
(Town), [2001] 2 S.C.R. 241, 2001 SCC 40; Public School Boards’ Assn. of
Alberta v. Alberta (Attorney General), [2000] 2 S.C.R. 409, 2000 SCC 45; R.
v. Sharma, [1993] 1 S.C.R. 650; Canada (Director of Investigation and
Research) v. Southam Inc., [1997] 1 S.C.R. 748; Reference re
Remuneration of Judges of the Provincial Court of Prince Edward Island,
[1997] 3 S.C.R. 3.
By Gonthier J. (dissenting)
B. (R.) v. Children’s Aid Society of Metropolitan
Toronto, [1995] 1 S.C.R. 315; Young v. Young,
[1993] 4 S.C.R. 3; P. (D.) v. S. (C.), [1993] 4 S.C.R. 141; R.
v. Jones, [1986] 2 S.C.R. 284; Meyer v. Nebraska, 262 U.S. 390
(1923); Pierce v. Society of Sisters, 268 U.S. 510 (1925); Wisconsin
v. Yoder, 406 U.S. 205 (1972); Prince v. Massachusetts, 321
U.S. 158 (1944); R. v. Audet, [1996] 2 S.C.R. 171; R. v.
Forde, [1992] O.J. No. 1698 (QL); Adler v. Ontario, [1996] 3 S.C.R.
609; Ross v. New Brunswick School District No. 15, [1996] 1 S.C.R. 825; McKinney
v. University of Guelph, [1990] 3 S.C.R. 229; Douglas/Kwantlen Faculty
Assn. v. Douglas College, [1990] 3 S.C.R. 570; Godbout v. Longueuil
(City), [1997] 3 S.C.R. 844; Thorson v. Attorney General of Canada,
[1975] 1 S.C.R. 138; Nova Scotia Board of Censors v. McNeil, [1976] 2
S.C.R. 265; Minister of Justice of Canada v. Borowski, [1981] 2 S.C.R.
575; Finlay v. Canada (Minister of Finance), [1986] 2 S.C.R. 607; Law
v. Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration), [1999] 1 S.C.R. 497; Trinity
Western University v. British Columbia College of Teachers, [2001] 1 S.C.R.
772, 2001 SCC 31; Dagenais v. Canadian Broadcasting Corp., [1994]
3 S.C.R. 835; Vriend v. Alberta, [1998] 1 S.C.R. 493; R. v. Big M
Drug Mart Ltd., [1985] 1 S.C.R. 295; Egan v. Canada, [1995] 2 S.C.R.
513; Nanaimo (City) v. Rascal Trucking Ltd., [2000] 1 S.C.R. 342, 2000
SCC 13; Canada (Attorney General) v. Mossop, [1993] 1 S.C.R. 554; Pushpanathan
v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), [1998] 1 S.C.R. 982; Canada
(Director of Investigation and Research) v. Southam Inc., [1997] 1 S.C.R.
748.
Statutes and Regulations Cited
Canadian
Charter of Rights and Freedoms , preamble,
ss. 1 , 2 (a), (b), 7 , 15 , 32 .
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, 999 U.N.T.S. 171.
Ministerial Educational Program
Guide Order, M165/93 [am. M293/95, M405/95 and
M465/95], s. 3.
Ministerial Educational
Resource Materials Order, M143/89 [am. M11/91 and
M167/93], s. 1.
School Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 412, preamble, ss. 65, 76(1), (2), 85(1),
(2)(a), (b), 107, 119 et seq., 168(1)(a), (2)(a), (c) [am. 1997, c. 52,
s. 22], (e).
School District No. 36 (Surrey)
Policy B 64‑95/96.
School District No. 36 (Surrey)
Policy 8425.
School District No. 36 (Surrey)
Policy 10900.
School District No. 36 (Surrey)
Regulation 8800.1.
Authors Cited
Benson, Iain T. “Notes
Towards a (Re)Definition of the ‘Secular’” (2000), 33 U.B.C. L. Rev.
519.
British Columbia. Ministry of
Education. Evaluating, Selecting, and Managing Learning Resources: A Guide.
Victoria: Learning Resources Branch, 1996.
British Columbia. Ministry of
Education. Personal Planning K to 7: Integrated Resource Package 1995.
Victoria: Learning Resources Branch, 1995.
Elwin, Rosamund, and Michele
Paulse. Asha’s Mums. Toronto: Women’s Press, 1990.
Hogg, Peter W.
Constitutional Law of Canada, vol. 2, loose-leaf ed. Scarborough, Ont.:
Carswell, 1997 (updated 2002, release 1).
Ignatieff, Michael. The Rights
Revolution. Toronto: Anansi, 2000.
Newman, Lesléa. Belinda’s
Bouquet. Boston: Alyson Wonderland, 1991.
Valentine, Johnny. One Dad,
Two Dads, Brown Dad, Blue Dads. Boston: Alyson Wonderland, 1994.
APPEAL from a judgment of the British Columbia Court
of Appeal (2000), 191 D.L.R. (4th) 128, [2000] 10 W.W.R. 393, 143 B.C.A.C. 162,
235 W.A.C. 162, 80 B.C.L.R. (3d) 181, 26 Admin. L.R. (3d) 297, [2000] B.C.J.
No. 1875 (QL), 2000 BCCA 519, reversing a judgment of the British Columbia
Supreme Court (1998), 168 D.L.R. (4th) 222, 60 B.C.L.R. (3d) 311, 12 Admin.
L.R. (3d) 77, 60 C.R.R. (2d) 311, [1998] B.C.J. No. 2923 (QL). Appeal allowed,
Gonthier and Bastarache JJ. dissenting.
Joseph J. Arvay, Q.C.,
and Catherine J. Parker, for the appellants.
John G. Dives and Kevin L.
Boonstra, for the respondent.
Cynthia Petersen and Kenneth W.
Smith, for the intervener EGALE Canada Inc.
Chris W. Sanderson,
Q.C., and Keith B. Bergner, for the intervener the British
Columbia Civil Liberties Association.
Susan Ursel and David A.
Wright, for the intervener Families in Partnership.
Daniel R. Bennett
and Paul A. Craven, for the intervener the Board of Trustees of
School District No. 34 (Abbotsford).
Written submission by Howard Goldblatt, for the
intervener, Elementary Teachers’ Federation of Ontario.
Andrew K. Lokan
and Stephen L. McCammon, for the intervener the Canadian Civil
Liberties Association.
D. Geoffrey G. Cowper, Q.C., and Cindy Silver, for the interveners the
Evangelical Fellowship of Canada, the Archdiocese of Vancouver, the Catholic
Civil Rights League and the Canadian Alliance for Social Justice and Family
Values Association.
The judgment of McLachlin C.J. and L’Heureux-Dubé,
Iacobucci, Major, Binnie and Arbour JJ. was delivered by
The Chief Justice —
I. Introduction
1
The Surrey, British Columbia, School Board passed a resolution refusing
to authorize three books for classroom instruction on the ground that they
depicted families in which both parents were either women or men — “same-sex
parented families”. The question on this appeal is whether that resolution was
valid. The appellants have challenged the resolution on two grounds: first,
that the Board acted outside its mandate under the School Act, R.S.B.C.
1996, c. 412, and second, that the resolution violates the Canadian Charter
of Rights and Freedoms .
2
I conclude that the resolution must be set aside on the first
ground. The Board acted outside the mandate of the School
Act by failing to apply the criteria required by the Act and by the Board’s
own regulation for approval of supplementary material.
3
My colleague, Gonthier J., and I, while differing in the result, agree
on many points in this appeal: that the Board’s decision is subject to review
by the courts; that the appropriate standard of review is reasonableness; that,
as an elected representative body, the Board is accountable to its local
community; that its decisions about which books to approve as supplementary
learning resources may reflect the concerns of particular parents and the distinct
needs of the local community; and finally, that the requirement of secularism
laid out in s. 76 does not prevent religious concerns from being among those
matters of local and parental concern that influence educational policy. We
disagree on whether the Board erred by failing to act in accordance with the
requirements of the School Act. I conclude that the Board failed to
conform to the requirements of the School Act and that this rendered its
decision unreasonable, requiring that the matter be remitted to the Board for
consideration on the proper basis.
II. The Appropriate Standard of Review
4
In order to assess the Board’s decision, we must first determine the
appropriate standard of review. My colleague LeBel J. in effect questions
whether the pragmatic and functional approach should apply to this case,
holding that as an elected body, the Board’s decision should be assessed on the
basis of whether it is contrary to the statute and hence patently
unreasonable. In my view, the usual manner of review under the pragmatic and
functional approach is necessary. It is now settled that all judicial review
of administrative decisions should be premised on a standard of review arrived
at through consideration of the factors stipulated by the functional and
pragmatic approach. This is essential to ensure that the reviewing court
accords the proper degree of deference to the decision-making body. To apply
the analysis that my colleague proposes, is first, to adopt an approach for
which no one argued in this case; and second, to return to the rigid and
sometimes artificial jurisdictional approach which the more flexible functional
and pragmatic approach was designed to remedy.
5
The pragmatic and functional approach applicable to judicial review
allows for three standards of review: correctness, patent unreasonableness and
an intermediate standard of reasonableness.
6
The standard of “correctness” involves minimal deference: where
it applies, there is only one right answer and the administrative body’s
decision must reflect it. “Patent unreasonableness”, the most deferential
standard, permits the decision to stand unless it suffers from a defect that is
immediately apparent or is so obvious that it “demands intervention by the
court upon review”: Canadian Union of Public Employees Local 963 v. New
Brunswick Liquor Corp., [1979] 2 S.C.R. 227, at p. 237. The intermediate
standard of “reasonableness” allows for somewhat more deference: the decision
will not be set aside unless it is based on an error or is “not supported by
any reasons that can stand up to a somewhat probing examination” (Canada
(Director of Investigation and Research) v. Southam Inc., [1997] 1 S.C.R.
748, at para. 56; Baker v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration), [1999] 2 S.C.R. 817, at para. 63).
7
Which of the three standards is appropriate in a given case depends on
the amount of discretion the legislature conferred on the delegate. The
relevant amount of discretion is evidenced by four factors, which often
overlap: (1) whether the legislation contains a privative clause; (2) the
delegate’s relative expertise; (3) the purpose of the particular provision and
the legislation as a whole; and (4) the nature of the problem. (See Pezim
v. British Columbia (Superintendent of Brokers), [1994] 2 S.C.R. 557;
Southam, supra; Pushpanathan v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship
and Immigration), [1998] 1 S.C.R. 982.)
8
In this case, my colleague and I agree that the four factors point to
reasonableness as the appropriate standard of review. First, the School Act contains
no privative clause or a legislative direction to the courts to defer to the
decisions of school boards. This is consistent with a less deferential
standard of review. However, this is only one factor, and does not imply a
high standard of scrutiny where other factors point to greater deference: Pushpanathan,
supra, at para. 30.
9
The second factor, the Board’s relative expertise, raises competing
considerations. It requires us to ask: who is better placed to make the
decision, the Board or the court? To assess this, this Court must characterize
the expertise of the Board and consider its own expertise relative to that of
the Board. And since what matters is expertise relative to the specific
problem before the Board, we must consider the nature of the problem before the
Board: Pushpanathan, supra, at para. 33.
10
The problem before the Board has two aspects. On the one hand, it
requires the Board to balance the interests of different groups, such as
parents with widely differing moral outlooks, and children from many types of
families. On this aspect, the Board has considerable expertise. As elected
representatives, it is their job to bring community views into the educational
decision-making process. The Board is better placed to understand community
concerns than the court: see Nanaimo (City) v. Rascal Trucking Ltd.,
[2000] 1 S.C.R. 342, 2000 SCC 13, at para. 35.
11
On the other hand, the decision of whether to approve the three books
has a human rights dimension. The Board must decide whether to accommodate
certain parents’ concerns about the books at the risk of trumping a broader
tolerance program and denying certain children the chance to have their
families accorded equal recognition and respect in the public school system.
Courts are well placed to resolve human rights issues. Hence, where the
decision to be made by an administrative body has a human rights dimension,
this has generally lessened the amount of deference which the Court is willing
to accord the decision: Ross v. New Brunswick School District No. 15,
[1996] 1 S.C.R. 825, at para. 24; Trinity Western University v.
British Columbia College of Teachers, [2001] 1 S.C.R. 772, 2001 SCC
31, at para. 17; Pezim, supra, at p. 590; Canada (Attorney
General) v. Mossop, [1993] 1 S.C.R. 554, at pp. 584-85, per La
Forest J. Different types of human rights issues do, to be sure, play out
differently. So the extent to which deference is lessened by the presence of a
human rights issue will vary from case to case. The relevant question should
always be whether the courts have an expertise equal to or better than that of
the board, relative to the particular human rights issue that is faced.
12
The third factor is the purpose for which the legislature granted the
Board authority to approve supplementary learning materials. Here the purpose
was to allow for local input on choosing supplementary classroom materials.
Different communities — urban, rural, aboriginal, for example — may benefit
from different material. The Board is in the best position to know what types
of families and children fall within its district and what materials will best
serve their diverse needs, suggesting deference. This deference is tempered,
however, by the School Act’s requirement that the discretion to approve
supplementary materials conform to norms of tolerance, respect for diversity,
mutual understanding and acceptance of all the family models found in British
Columbian society and its schools. Board decisions that undermine these norms
are entitled to little deference. If the purpose of the School Act is
not to be undermined, the courts must exercise a fairly high level of
supervision over decisions involving tolerance and diversity.
13
The fourth factor, the nature of the problem, again negates the
suggestion that the courts should accord high deference to the Board’s
decision. It is true that the issue does not involve the strict application of
legal rules or the interpretation of the law, and that the legislature intended
to let the Board and hence the community have a say in choosing resource
material. However, as discussed, this is not simply a case of the Board balancing
different interests in the community. This is a case requiring the Board to
determine how to accommodate the concerns of some members of the community in
the context of a broader program of tolerance and respect for diversity. This
question attracts court supervision and militates in favour of a stricter
standard.
14
The four factors, taken together, point to the intermediate standard of
reasonableness. The Board is a political body and a proxy for parents and
local community members in making decisions and has been granted a degree of
choice on which the legislature has conferred a circumscribed role in approving
books. However, the deference that might be warranted by these factors,
standing alone, is undercut by clear commitment of the legislature and the
Minister to promoting tolerance and respect for diversity. These goals,
touching on fundamental human rights and constitutional values, suggest the
legislature intended a relatively robust level of court supervision.
15
A decision will be found to be unreasonable if it is based on an error
or is “not supported by any reasons that can stand up to a somewhat probing
examination” (Southam, supra, at para. 56). The court should not
overturn a decision as unreasonable simply because it would have come to a
different conclusion. But it can and should examine the process of decision
making that led the Board to its conclusion, to ensure that it conformed to the
Board’s legislative mandate. If the reviewing court determines that the
Board’s process of decision making took it outside the constraints intended by
the legislature, then it must find the resulting decision unreasonable. Where
an error of this type occurs, the fact that the effects of a decision are
relatively innocuous cannot save it.
16
Having determined the standard of review this Court should adopt, I turn
to the decision at issue in this case.
III. The
Policy of the School Act and Curriculum and the Board’s Role
17
Before turning to the precise requirements imposed on the Board, it may
be useful to discuss more generally three issues which underlie this appeal:
(i) the meaning of the Act’s insistence on strict secularism; (ii) the role of
the Board as representative of the community; and (iii) the role of parents in
choosing materials for classroom use.
A. Secular
Decision Making: The Requirement of Tolerance
18
The School Act’s insistence on secularism and
non-discrimination lies at the heart of this case. Section 76 of the School
Act provides that “[a]ll schools and Provincial schools must be conducted
on strictly secular and non-sectarian principles”. It also emphasizes that “[t]he highest morality must be inculcated, but no religious dogma or
creed is to be taught in a school or Provincial school”.
19
The Act’s insistence on strict secularism does not mean that
religious concerns have no place in the deliberations and decisions of the
Board. Board members are entitled, and indeed required, to bring the views of
the parents and communities they represent to the deliberation process.
Because religion plays an important role in the life of many communities, these
views will often be motivated by religious concerns. Religion is an integral
aspect of people’s lives, and cannot be left at the boardroom door. What
secularism does rule out, however, is any attempt to use the religious views of
one part of the community to exclude from consideration the values of other
members of the community. A requirement of secularism implies that, although
the Board is indeed free to address the religious concerns of parents, it must
be sure to do so in a manner that gives equal recognition and respect to other
members of the community. Religious views that deny equal recognition and
respect to the members of a minority group cannot be used to exclude the
concerns of the minority group. This is fair to both groups, as it ensures
that each group is given as much recognition as it can consistently demand
while giving the same recognition to others.
20
The children attending B.C.’s public schools come from many different
types of families — “traditional” families parented by both biological parents;
“single-parent” families, parented by either a man or a woman; families with
step-parents; families with adopted children; foster families; interracial
families; families with parents of different religious or cultural heritages;
families in which siblings or members of the extended family live together; and
same-sex parented families. Inevitably, some parents will view the cultural
and family practices of certain other family types as morally questionable.
Yet if the school is to function in an atmosphere of tolerance and respect, in
accordance with s. 76, the view that a certain lawful way of living is morally questionable
cannot become the basis of school policy. Parents need not abandon their own
commitments, or their view that the practices of others are undesirable. But
where the school curriculum requires that a broad array of family models be
taught in the classroom, a secular school system cannot exclude certain lawful
family models simply on the ground that one group of parents finds them morally
questionable.
21
The School Act’s emphasis on secularism
reflects the fact that Canada is a diverse and multicultural society, bound
together by the values of accommodation, tolerance and respect for diversity.
These values are reflected in our Constitution’s commitment to equality and
minority rights, and are explicitly incorporated into the British Columbia public
school system by the preamble to the School Act and by the
curriculum established by regulation under the Act.
22
The preamble of the School Act states:
WHEREAS it is the goal of a democratic society to ensure that all
its members receive an education that enables them to become personally
fulfilled and publicly useful, thereby increasing the strength and
contributions to the health and stability of that society;
AND WHEREAS the purpose of the British Columbia school system is to
enable all learners to develop their individual potential and to acquire the
knowledge, skills and attitudes needed to contribute to a healthy, democratic
and pluralistic society and a prosperous and sustainable economy; [Emphasis
added.]
23
The message of the preamble is clear. The British Columbia public school
system is open to all children of all cultures and family backgrounds. All are
to be valued and respected. The British Columbia public school system
therefore reflects the vision of a public school articulated by La Forest J. in
Ross, supra, at para. 42:
A school is a communication centre for a whole
range of values and aspirations of a society. In large part, it defines the
values that transcend society through the educational medium. The school is
an arena for the exchange of ideas and must, therefore, be premised upon
principles of tolerance and impartiality so that all persons within the school
environment feel equally free to participate. As the Board of Inquiry
stated, a school board has a duty to maintain a positive school environment for
all persons served by it. [Emphasis added.]
24
The Cross-Curricular Outlines confirm this conclusion, recognizing that:
. . . British Columbia’s schools include young people of varied
backgrounds, interests, abilities, and needs. In order to meet these needs
and ensure equity and access for all learners, the development of each
component of this document has also been guided by a series of cross-curricular
outlines. It is expected that these principles and cross-curricular
outlines will guide the users of this document as they engage in school and
classroom organization and instructional planning and practice. [Emphasis
added.]
(Province of British Columbia, Ministry of Education, Personal
Planning K to 7: Integrated Resource Package 1995 (“PP Curriculum”), at p.
267)
The gender
equity outline specifies that: “Gender equitable education involves the
inclusion of the experiences, perceptions, and perspectives of girls and
women, as well as boys and men, in all aspects of education” (p. 273 (emphasis
added)). The principles of gender equity in education are listed as (PP
curriculum, at p. 273):
– all students have the right to a learning
environment that is gender equitable
– all education programs and career decisions
should be based on a student’s interest and ability, regardless of gender
– gender equity incorporates a consideration
of social class, culture, ethnicity, religion, sexual orientation, and
age
– gender equity requires sensitivity,
determination, commitment, and vigilance over time
– the foundation of gender equity is
co-operation and collaboration among students, educators, education
organizations, families, and members of communities [Emphasis added.]
25
In summary, the Act’s requirement of strict secularism means that the
Board must conduct its deliberations on all matters, including the approval of
supplementary resources, in a manner that respects the views of all members of
the school community. It cannot prefer the religious views of some people in
its district to the views of other segments of the community. Nor can it
appeal to views that deny the equal validity of the lawful lifestyles of some
in the school community. The Board must act in a way that promotes respect and
tolerance for all the diverse groups that it represents and serves.
B. The
Role of the Board
26
Local community input is essential to an effective public education
system that serves many diverse communities. Local influence over approval and
use of supplementary learning resources is achieved by delegating to boards the
power to approve material and encouraging parents to participate in deciding
which of the approved materials are used in their child’s particular classroom.
27
The school board is the elected proxy of the collective local community,
made up as it typically is of diverse subcommunities. The requirement of
secularism means that the school board must consider the interests of all its
constituents and not permit itself to act as the proxy of a particular
religious view held by some members of the community, even if that group holds
the majority of seats on the board.
28
Here I differ from my colleague, Gonthier J., who maintains that the
Board can function in a manner akin to a municipal council or a legislature.
It is true that, like legislatures and municipal councils, school boards are
elected bodies, endowed with rule-making and decision-making powers through which
they are intended to further the interests of their constituents. However,
school boards possess only those powers their statute confers on them. Here
the Act makes it clear that the Board does not possess the same degree of
autonomy as a legislature or a municipal council. It must act in a strictly
secular manner. It must foster an atmosphere of tolerance and respect. It
must not allow itself to be dominated by one religious or moral point of view,
but must respect a diversity of views. It must adhere to the processes set out
by the Act, which for approval of supplementary materials include acting
according to a general regulation and considering the learning objectives of
the provincial curriculum. Finally, to ensure that it has acted within its allotted
powers, the Board is subject to judicial review in the courts.
C. The
Role of Parents
29
The School Act assigns parents an important role in directing
their children’s education. This includes a role in choosing what materials
are used in their children’s classrooms, in consultation with other parents and
the teacher.
30
The Act recognizes that parents are entitled to play a
central role in their children’s education. Indeed, the province encourages
parents to operate in partnership with public schools and, where they find this
difficult, permits them to homeschool their children or send them to private or
religious schools where their own values and beliefs may be taught. Moreover,
the curriculum at issue in this case emphasizes, through the advice it gives to
teachers in the section on “Planning Your Program”, that “[t]he family is the
primary educator in the development of children’s attitudes and values” (PP
curriculum, at p. 6).
31
The curriculum guidelines also point out the need for partnership
between home and school. In particular, they urge that “teachers recognize the
role of parents”, and that teachers involve parents through regular exchanges
of information, meetings, and participation in lesson activities (PP
curriculum, at p. 6). The guidelines lay out a variety of situations in which
teachers should solicit the help of parents in selecting appropriate material
for their classes from among the materials which the board has approved. They
suggest, for instance, that where “sensitive issues” is concerned, alternatives
may be explored to allow parents to share responsibility for student outcomes
(PP curriculum, at p. 6). And they advise that, before using materials on the
Ministry’s recommended list, teachers should “consider the appropriateness of
any resource from the perspective of the local community” (PP curriculum, at p.
188).
32
This emphasis on parental involvement comes at the stage of selecting
materials to be used in particular classes, after they have been
approved for general use by the board. The curriculum guidelines contemplate
extensive parental involvement at the stage of selecting books for use in a
particular classroom. And indeed, this seems to be the appropriate stage at
which to tailor the materials chosen for use in a particular classroom to the
unique needs that particular parents perceive their children to have. This is
much more easily done by parents in consultation with their children’s teachers
than it is by a school board, which must decide whether a resource can become
available to a large number of children in different situations.
33
Moreover, although parental involvement is important, it cannot come at
the expense of respect for the values and practices of all members of the
school community. The requirement of secularism in s. 76 of the School Act,
the emphasis on tolerance in the preamble, and the insistence of the curriculum
on increasing awareness of a broad array of family types, all show, in my view,
that parental concerns must be accommodated in a way that respects diversity.
Parental views, however important, cannot override the imperative placed upon
the British Columbia public schools to mirror the diversity of the community
and teach tolerance and understanding of difference.
IV. The
Scheme for Approval of Supplementary Resources
34
The School Act confers on the Minister the power to approve basic
educational resource materials to be used in teaching the curriculum, and
confers on school boards the authority to approve supplementary educational
resource material, subject to ministerial direction: School Act,
s. 85(2)(b). Here, the Minister made an order that the Board may use materials
set out in the “Catalogue of Learning Resources, Primary to Graduation”
published by the Ministry of Education; and also materials that “the
board considers are appropriate for individual students or groups of students”
(emphasis added): Ministerial Orders 143/89, s. 1(1)(a) and 165/93, s.
3(1)(e). The resolution at issue was made under the latter power.
35
The purpose of supplementary learning resources is to enrich the
educational experience in ways appropriate to the school community. It should
be emphasized that approved supplementary materials are not required to
be used in every classroom. Rather, the goal is to provide a range of
materials from which teachers may choose to enrich the learning
experience. The “Integrated Resource Package” for the Personal Planning
curriculum states: “It is expected that teachers will select resources . . .
that suit their particular pedagogical needs and audiences” (PP curriculum, at
p. 9). Approval of the three books at issue in this case would therefore not
have meant that all teachers were obliged to use them or even that they were
strongly encouraged to use them. Rather, it would have meant that teachers could
use them if this were required to meet the needs of the particular children in
their classroom. However, without the Board’s approval of these or equivalent
materials, teachers who have students from same-sex parented families might be
left without resources to assist them in having their particular families
discussed and understood.
36
All supplementary materials approved under this power must conform to
procedures for evaluation and selection which Ministerial Order requires a
board to formulate in advance. This ensures that supplementary materials are
approved on a principled basis, not on the basis of ad hoc
personal views of board members. The Surrey School Board passed such a
regulation. Included in the criteria are relevance to prescribed course
content and non-discriminatory content, except as required to further critical
thinking about social groups that might be the object of discrimination:
1. The recommended learning resource is relevant
to the learning outcomes and content of the course or courses.
2. The recommended learning resource is
appropriate in terms of the age, maturity, and learning needs of the student
for whom it is intended.
3. The recommended learning resource is
appropriate for the particular community in which it will be used.
4. The recommended learning resource is fair,
objective, free from gratuitous violence, propaganda and discrimination, except
where a teaching/learning situation requires illustrative material to develop
critical thinking about such issues.
5. The recommended learning resource is
readable, interesting, and manageable in the teaching/learning situation.
[Emphasis added.]
(Regulation 8800.1: Recommended Learning Resources and Library
Resources, A (III) (A)(1) - (5))
37
The need to consider the relevance of proposed supplementary materials
to the curriculum is also reflected in the Ministry’s evaluation criteria
contained in its publication Evaluating, Selecting, and Managing Learning
Resources: A Guide (1996), which is meant to assist school districts with
approving materials. The guide makes multiple references to the fact that
materials should “support the learning outcomes of the curriculum” (p. 4); “be
relevant to the goals and prescribed learning outcomes of the curriculum” (p.
22); “assist the student in achieving the prescribed learning outcomes” (p.
25); and so forth.
38
This brings us to what the curriculum prescribed for the K-1
level. The Personal Planning curriculum established by the Minister for K-1,
or Kindergarten and Grade One students, includes “Family life education” (p.
22). The aim of this part of the program is “[t]o develop
students’ understanding of the role of the family and capacity for responsible
decision-making in their personal relationships” (p. 22). The curriculum
suborganizer suggests that, at the end of the program, teachers “[l]ook for
evidence of each student’s . . . awareness that there are a variety of family
groupings” (p. 23). It further states (at p. 22):
It is expected that students will:
· identify a variety of
models for family organization
· identify the roles and
responsibilities of different family members
· identify the characteristics that make the family environment safe
and nurturing
· identify the physical
characteristics that distinguish males from females
· identify that living
things reproduce
In order to help K-1 students achieve these learning outcomes, the
following instructional strategies are suggested (among others): have students
compare different families and discuss similarities and differences; have
students draw or write about their families; and have students talk
about each other’s families (p. 22).
39
The Minister’s materials did not specify what kinds of families should
be identified. Its general instruction that children talk about their families
requires, however, that the program not be limited to particular families;
teachers were encouraged to promote discussion on whatever family a child
happened to have. This is in keeping with the views of the Minister and
the Director of Curriculum Branch of the Ministry of Education. The Minister,
the Honourable Moe Sihota, stated:
The prescribed curriculum does not itemize the cultural, racial,
disability, or other differences that should be addressed. Rather, it provides
students with the skills and abilities to effectively deal with a wide range of
diversity and to accept and value other cultures, races, genders, orientation,
and points of view. While sexual orientation is not expressly mentioned in the
Prescribed Learning Outcomes or Cross‑Curricular Outlines, the curriculum
allows a teacher to address issues such as sexual orientation within the
context of the classroom environment.
The Director
of the Curriculum Branch recognized same-sex parented families as a family
model that might be discussed in teaching this curriculum.
40
It is therefore clear that the B.C. curriculum for the K-1 level
contemplated discussion of all family types, including same-sex parented
families. The exclusion of any particular type of family was contrary to the
ministerial direction as embodied in the curriculum.
41
In summary, the Board was required to act in accordance with the Act and
its own regulation. This meant that the Board was required to do three things:
(I) to operate in a strictly secular manner, not allowing the concerns
of one group of parents to deny equal recognition to the family models of other
members of the school community;
(ii) to act in accordance with its own general regulation requiring
that supplementary materials be relevant to the learning objectives,
appropriate to the age, maturity and learning needs of the students, fair and
free from discrimination, and readable, interesting and manageable in the
teaching situation; and
(iii) to apply the criteria for supplemental resources indicated by the
curriculum goals for K-1 students, which included the objectives of permitting
all K-1 students to discuss their particular family models in class, and of
making all students aware of the broad array of family models that exist in our
society.
42
Against this background, I turn to the manner in which the Board
proceeded in this case.
V. The
Board’s Decision
43
The story begins in December 1996 and January 1997, when
Mr. James Chamberlain, a Kindergarten teacher in the Surrey School
District, asked for approval of the three books here in question.
44
Mr. Chamberlain knew that, unless the Board approved the three
books as learning resources, he could not use them in the teaching of the
family life education curriculum. In January of 1996, the Board had adopted a
policy stipulating that: “[t]eachers having responsibility for
teaching the family life component of the Career and Personal Planning
curriculum should use resource materials contained in the Ministry recommended
or District approved lists” (District Policy B64-95/96). And on October 23,
1996, the school principal had written to Mr. Chamberlain, directing him to
“use only provincially or district approved learning resources in your
classroom” (emphasis added). Therefore, unless Mr. Chamberlain could succeed
in his request for approval of the books, he would not be able to use them in
the classroom.
45
On April 10, 1997, the Board adopted a resolution stating that resources
from gay and lesbian groups were not approved for use in the Surrey School
District. This resolution has been quashed and is not under appeal. However,
it provides the context of what occurred later. The resolution set out:
THAT WHEREAS the parents delegate their authority to us as trustees of
public education; and
WHEREAS parents have voiced their concern over the use of Gay and
Lesbian Educators of British Columbia (GALE BC) resources in the classroom; and
WHEREAS the Gay and Lesbian Educators of British Columbia (GALE BC)
resources or resource lists have not been approved for use in School District
#36 (Surrey).
THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED THAT all administration, teaching and
counseling staff be informed that resources from gay and lesbian groups such as
GALE or their related resource lists are not approved for use or redistribution
in the Surrey School District.
46
After this resolution was passed, certain resources, including library
books, posters and pamphlets, were removed from schools within the district.
47
The Board’s procedures for approval of supplementary learning resources
required staff to put requests for new materials to the Superintendent of
Schools, who was charged with “general responsibility for seeing that the
approved criteria are known and appropriately applied” (Regulation 8800.1), in
consultation with parents and professional colleagues. The Superintendent’s
recommendation would then be passed on to the Board. Here the Superintendent
passed the request on to the Board with no recommendation, asking only that the
Board “consider” the three books. He expressed his position subsequently as
follows:
. . . I questioned whether the Three Books were appropriate for the
Kindergarten and Grade One level. The PP K-7 curriculum refers to family
models but does not specifically address homosexuality or same-sex couples. In
my view, the Three Books were not necessary to achieve the learning objectives
of the PP K-7 curriculum. I was of the view that if the Ministry had
intended that homosexuality and/or family models involving same-sex couples be
a component of the PP K-7 curriculum for Kindergarten and Grade One, given the
contentious and sensitive nature of the topic, such would have been expressly
included in the Ministry’s PP K-7 Integrated Resource Package (“IRP”). As the
Ministry had not specifically included such in the IRP or included any other
resources on homosexuality or same-sex couples for K-1, I anticipated that
any decision by the District to approve such would be very controversial
amongst parents in the District and a decision in this regard must come from
the Board as elected representatives of the community. I was also concerned
that the right of parents to be the primary educators in the development of
attitudes and values of Kindergarten and Grade One children be maintained.
I found it difficult to conclude that by approving the Three Books for
Kindergarten and Grade One, the school would be providing a supportive role and
maintaining a partnership between home and school. [Emphasis added.]
48
Although the final decision was the Board’s and not the
Superintendent’s, the above passage appears to express the concerns on which
the Board relied. It reveals a particular interpretation of the School Act and
curriculum. First, it equates homosexuality and same-sex parented families and
suggests that because of the controversial nature of these subjects, the
legislature and Minister could not be taken to have intended them to be
discussed, absent express language so requiring. Second, it applies a criterion
of necessity. Third, it expresses a concern with maintaining the right of
parents to be the primary educators of K-1 children. Fourth, it expresses a
concern that approval of the books would engender controversy in light of
parents’ views and might undermine the relationship between home and school.
49
What the Superintendent and the Board did not consider is as telling as
what they did consider. The Superintendent’s statement does not refer to the
absence of restriction on the curriculum’s direction to discuss different
family types. It does not refer to the emphasis in the School Act and
curriculum on tolerance, respect, inclusion and understanding of social and
family diversity. And it does not refer to the secular nature of the public
school system and its mandate to provide a nurturing and validating learning
experience for all children, regardless of the types of families they come
from.
50
On April 24, 1997, the Board passed the resolution here at issue
declining to approve the three books. The resolution provides:
THAT the Board, under Policy #8800 — Recommended Learning Resources
and Library Resources, not approve the use of the following three (3)
learning resources:
Grade Level K‑1 Personal Planning
Elwin, R., & Paulse, M. (1990). Asha’s Mums.
Newman, L. (1991). Belinda’s Bouquet.
Valentine, J. (1994). One Dad, Two Dads, Brown Dad, Blue Dads.
The effect of
this resolution was that the three books could not form part of the family life
education curriculum taught in Kindergarten and Grade One classrooms.
51
The chambers judge found that parental concern over the portrayal of
same-sex parented families in the K-1 classroom was the overarching
consideration in the Board’s decision not to approve the books. She concluded
that the Board’s decision was based on concerns that the books would conflict
with some parents’ views on same-sex relationships:
On review of all the evidence in this case on the
basis of the School Board’s decision, I conclude that when the School Board
passed the Books resolution, some of the trustees who voted in favour of the
resolution were motivated to a significant degree by concern that parents and
others in the School District would consider the books incompatible or
inconsistent with their religious views on the subject of same-sex
relationships.
((1998), 168 D.L.R. (4th) 222, at para. 93)
The Board’s
view was that addressing the subject of same-sex relationships in Kindergarten
and Grade One classes would raise sensitive issues for parents, and weight must
be given to their concerns.
52
More specifically, the Board was concerned that the use of the three
books in the classroom might teach values to children divergent to those taught
at home, confusing the children with inconsistent values. As counsel for the
Board argued:
Very young children cannot assess competing moral views about
homosexual relationships on their own. It is not in their best interest that
they, or their parents, be placed in the predicament of having divergent moral
lessons over sensitive and controversial issues taught at school and at home.
53
This argument, referred to as “cognitive dissonance”, tied in with a
second concern, “age appropriateness”. The Board expressed the view that five-
and six-year-old children in the K-1 classroom do not have the ability to
resolve divergent moral lessons, and that children might be provoked to ask
questions on subjects that parents feel should not be discussed at such a young
age. For this reason, approving the three books would not be keeping with the
best interests of the child.
54
Finally, the Board considered whether the three books were necessary to
achieve the required learning outcomes, in light of the views of senior
district staff that the use of the three books is not necessary to teach the
personal planning curriculum.
55
In summary, the resolution declining to approve the books was made
without inquiring into the relevance of the books to the curriculum, and
without asking whether there was a realistic possibility that there were, or
would soon be, children from same-sex parented families in the school district
whose family models would be discussed under the K-1 curriculum. The Board’s
position was simply that material depicting same-sex parented families should
not be made available to children at the K-1 level. The reasons advanced for
this position were: that the material was not necessary to achieve the
required learning outcomes; that the books were controversial; that objecting
parents’ views must be respected; that children at the K-1 level should not be
exposed to ideas that might conflict with the beliefs of their parents; and,
that children of this age were too young to learn about same-sex parented
families. Behind all these considerations hovered the moral and religious
concerns of some parents and the Board with the morality of homosexual
relationships.
VI. Application
of the Standard to the Impugned Decision
56
Was the Board’s decision not to approve the three books reasonable? As
I discussed, the Board’s decision will be unreasonable if the Board proceeded
in a manner that took it outside the constraints intended by the legislature. In
my view, the Board’s decision was unreasonable in this sense.
57
We have seen that the Board was required to exercise its power to
approve or reject supplementary classroom resources in a manner that accorded
with: (1) the secular mandate of the Act; (2) the regulation which the Board
had put in place pursuant to Ministerial Order; and (3) the factors required to
be considered by the Act, including the desired learning outcome for K-1
students found in the curriculum. While the Board must be given some latitude
in making its decision, and not every error would make its decision
unreasonable, its decision here must be set aside as unreasonable because the
process through which it was made took the Board outside its mandate under the School
Act.
58
The Board’s first error was to violate the principles of secularism and
tolerance in s. 76 of the School Act. Instead of proceeding on the
basis of respect for all types of families, the Superintendent and the Board
proceeded on an exclusionary philosophy. They acted on the concern of certain
parents about the morality of same-sex relationships, without considering the
interest of same-sex parented families and the children who belong to them in
receiving equal recognition and respect in the school system. The Board was
not permitted to reject the books simply because certain parents found the
relationships depicted in them controversial or objectionable.
59
As discussed earlier, the religious origin of the parents’ objections is
not in itself fatal to the Board’s decision. The requirement of secularism in
s. 76 does not preclude decisions motivated in whole or in part by religious
considerations, provided they are otherwise within the Board’s powers. It
simply signals the need for educational decisions and policies, whatever their
motivation, to respect the multiplicity of religious and moral views that are
held by families in the school community. It follows that the fact that some
parents and Board members may have been motivated by religious views is of no
moment. What matters is whether the Board’s decision was unreasonable in the
context of the educational scheme mandated by the legislature.
60
The Board’s second error was to depart from the regulation it had made
pursuant to Ministerial Order as to how decisions on supplementary resources
should be made. The Board’s regulation required it to consider whether a
proposed resource is “appropriate for the particular community in which it will
be used”, and recognized the existence of diverse communities within the School
District and the Board’s duty to approach the needs of each with respect and
tolerance. Contrary to this requirement, the Board gave no consideration to
the needs of children of same-sex parented families and instead based its
decision on the views of a particular group who were opposed to any depiction
of same-sex relationships in K-1 school materials. The Board’s regulation also
required it to consider the relevance of proposed material to curriculum
objectives. Here too, it failed.
61
This brings us to the Board’s third error — its application of the wrong
criteria. The Board either ignored or mistook the requirements of the School
Act and the learning outcomes of the curriculum. The curriculum states
that children at the K-1 level should be able to discuss their family models,
whatever these may be, and that all children should be made aware of the
diversity of family models that exist in our society. The Board did not
consider this objective. Indeed, the Superintendent, whose views appear to
have guided the Board, took the view that unless the curriculum expressly
required that same-sex parented families should be discussed, the Board need
not inquire into the relevance or suitability of the books as learning
resources. This was an erroneous interpretation of the School Act and
the Ministerial Orders, as well as of the Board’s own general regulation on
selection criteria.
62
Instead of applying the proper criteria, the Superintendent and the
Board erroneously applied a criterion of necessity and justified their decision
on the basis that discussion of same-sex parented families would send divergent
messages and thus induce “cognitive dissonance”, and that such discussion was
not age appropriate for K-1 children.
63
I turn first to necessity. To require that supplementary resources be necessary
is to misunderstand their function. If a given resource were necessary, one
would expect to find it among the materials required for use in all
classrooms. The purpose of allowing a school board to approve supplementary
materials is to enable different communities to enrich the learning experience
by bringing in extra materials of relevance, above and beyond the materials
that are strictly necessary for the implementation of the curriculum. Instead
of necessity, the Board should have considered relevance. Indeed, this is the
test which the Board’s own prior regulation on appropriate selection criteria
lays down.
64
The argument based on cognitive dissonance essentially asserts that
children should not be exposed to information and ideas with which their
parents disagree. This claim stands in tension with the curriculum’s objective
of promoting an understanding of all types of families. The curriculum
requires that all children be made aware of the array of family models that
exist in our society, and that all be able to discuss their particular family
model in the classroom.
65
The number of different family models in the community means that some
children will inevitably come from families of which certain parents
disapprove. Giving these children an opportunity to discuss their family
models may expose other children to some cognitive dissonance. But such
dissonance is neither avoidable nor noxious. Children encounter it every day
in the public school system as members of a diverse student body. They see
their classmates, and perhaps also their teachers, eating foods at lunch that
they themselves are not permitted to eat, whether because of their parents’
religious strictures or because of other moral beliefs. They see their classmates
wearing clothing with features or brand labels which their parents have
forbidden them to wear. And they see their classmates engaging in behaviour on
the playground that their parents have told them not to engage in. The
cognitive dissonance that results from such encounters is simply a part of
living in a diverse society. It is also a part of growing up. Through such
experiences, children come to realize that not all of their values are shared
by others.
66
Exposure to some cognitive dissonance is arguably necessary if children
are to be taught what tolerance itself involves. As my colleague points out,
the demand for tolerance cannot be interpreted as the demand to approve of
another person’s beliefs or practices. When we ask people to be tolerant of
others, we do not ask them to abandon their personal convictions. We merely
ask them to respect the rights, values and ways of being of those who may not
share those convictions. The belief that others are entitled to equal respect
depends, not on the belief that their values are right, but on the belief that
they have a claim to equal respect regardless of whether they are right.
Learning about tolerance is therefore learning that other people’s entitlement
to respect from us does not depend on whether their views accord with our own.
Children cannot learn this unless they are exposed to views that differ from
those they are taught at home.
67
The Board’s concern with age-appropriateness was similarly misplaced.
The Board’s regulation on appropriate selection criteria requires it to
consider the age-appropriateness of proposed supplementary materials. However,
here the curriculum itself designated the subject as age-appropriate by stating
that all types of families found in the community should be discussed by
K-1 students, including same-sex parented families. The Board was not entitled
to substitute its contrary view.
68
The Board did not suggest that the manner in which the books
treated the approved subject was age-inappropriate. The chambers judge, at
para. 98, agreed with the Superintendent’s description of the books as showing
that there are alternative family models, that these family models
include models [with] same-sex parents, that these ought to be valued in the
same way as other family models, that they are peopled by caring, thoughtful,
intelligent, loving people who do give the same warmth and love and respect
that other families do.
Without
prejudging the issue, this message of respectful tolerance appears to
correspond to the intended purpose of the K-1 curriculum and does not seem to
venture further into biology and morality than is contemplated by the
curriculum.
69
It is suggested that, while the message of the books may be
unobjectionable, the books will lead children to ask questions of their
parents that may be inappropriate for the K-1 level and difficult for parents
to answer. Yet on the record before us, it is hard to see how the materials
will raise questions which would not in any event be raised by the acknowledged
existence of same-sex parented families in the K-1 parent population, or in the
broader world in which these children live. The only additional message
of the materials appears to be the message of tolerance. Tolerance is always
age-appropriate.
70
The Board’s final argument is that its decision cannot be
attacked because it was not obliged to approve any particular supplementary
materials. It is true that the Board is not obliged to approve every
supplementary resource that it is presented with. It can reject supplementary
materials — even supplementary materials that are relevant to the curriculum —
if it does so on valid grounds, such as excessive level of difficulty,
discriminatory content, inaccuracy, ineffectiveness, or availability of other
materials to achieve the same goals. Had the Board proceeded as required by
the Act, the curriculum and its own general regulation, its decision might have
been unassailable. The difficulty is that the Board did not do so here.
71
I conclude that the Board’s decision is unreasonable. It failed to
proceed as required by the secular mandate of the School Act by letting
the religious views of a certain part of the community trump the need to show
equal respect for the values of other members of the community. It failed to
proceed according to its own Ministry-mandated regulation which required
tolerance and furtherance of prescribed curriculum learning outcomes. Finally,
it failed to apply the appropriate criteria for approving supplementary
learning resources and instead applied inappropriate criteria. The Board did
not consider the relevance of the proposed material to the prescribed learning
outcome of discussing and understanding all family types. Instead, it
proceeded on the erroneous assumption that unless the curriculum explicitly
required consideration of materials on same-sex parented families, it was
entitled to reject them, and relied on considerations of cognitive dissonance
and age-inappropriateness that ran counter to the curriculum for K-1 students.
72
These errors went to the heart of the Board’s decision. It is suggested
that rejection of the materials did not materially lessen the opportunities for
teaching and enforcing tolerance in the classroom, and therefore is of no great
moment. Yet to the appellants, it is a matter of importance. The last word —
indeed the only word that counts — is the word of the legislature and the
curriculum. It stresses tolerance and inclusion, and places high importance on
discussion and understanding of all family groups. The Board’s rejection of
these values must be seen as serious.
VII. Conclusion
73
I conclude that the Board’s decision not to approve the proposed books
depicting same-sex parented families was unreasonable because the Board failed
to act in accordance with the School Act. In light of this conclusion,
it is not necessary to consider the constitutionality of the Board’s decision.
The issues discussed by my colleague concerning whether the appellants have
standing and whether the action raises a serious legal question are not, in my
view, ones which it is necessary or appropriate to comment on, given that this
appeal does not fall to be determined on the basis of the Charter .
VIII. Order
74
I would allow the appeal with costs throughout to the appellants and remand the question of whether the books should be approved to
the Board, to be considered according to the criteria laid out in the Board’s
own regulation, the curriculum guidelines and the broad principles of tolerance
and non-sectarianism underlying the School Act.
The reasons of Gonthier and Bastarache JJ. were
delivered by
Gonthier J. (dissenting) —
I. Introduction
75
This appeal concerns the judicial review of a discretionary educational
policy decision of an elected school board not to approve three books as
complementary “educational resource materials” for a dimension of the
Kindergarten and Grade One (“K-1”) curriculum in the Surrey School District.
The three books in question depict parents in same-sex relationships. The
character or nature of this portrayal will be discussed below in greater
detail. The failure to approve the books is a discretionary educational policy
decision of limited scope: it does not concern whether or not these books are
or could be approved as “library resources”; it concerns only the potential
classroom use of these particular books, since the ultimate discretion
regarding employing materials in the classroom rests with individual teachers;
it concerns only the curriculum for students in the earliest two school grades,
children of five and six years of age; and it addresses only the status of
these books being placed on the complementary local, as distinct from
provincial, “Recommended Learning Resources” list. More general pedagogical
questions of how, and at what age, subject matter portraying parents in a
same-sex relationship ought to be introduced into schools, are also not before
this Court.
76
Based on the nature of the decision being reviewed, the appropriate
standard of review for such a decision and an examination of the totality of
the context, I am of the view that this appeal ought to be dismissed. While I
agree with the Chief Justice as to the applicable standard of review, I
respectfully disagree that the School Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 412, and
the relevant ministerial directives demand that all family types, rather than a
diversity, be represented and, more importantly, that the three specific books
at issue be approved for general classroom use by the School Board despite the
fact that the Minister declined to approve them for province-wide use. I am of
the view that the decision was intra vires the School Board under the School
Act and was clearly reasonable. The practice of approving or not approving
books is clearly within the purview of the School Board’s authority, the
decision is consistent with a proper understanding of s. 76 of that Act (i.e.
the decision accords with a correct understanding of “strictly secular and
non-sectarian principles” and does not offend the requirement that “[t]he
highest morality must be inculcated”), the considerations taken into account by
the School Board were appropriate, and the decision is respectful of ss. 2 (a),
2 (b) and 15 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms .
77
At the outset, it is important to note that there is important common
ground between the parties before this Court: all agree that all persons, as
differentiated from the conduct of persons, are equally deserving of the
respect, concern and consideration that is consonant with their inherent human
dignity; all agree that public schools must provide a learning and working
environment that is safe, supportive and free from discrimination, including
discrimination based on sexual orientation; and all agree that overt
discussions of human sexuality, whether heterosexual or homosexual, and as
distinct from both a basic understanding of the fact that living things,
including humans, reproduce, and from the capacity to identify the physical
characteristics which distinguish males from females, are not appropriate
subject matter for discussion in K‑1 classrooms.
78
The two most significant disagreements between the parties in the courts
below were: whether or not it is valid for a school board to consider, when
approving or not approving books, some expressions of parental concern when
such concern manifests from those parents’ conscience or belief, particularly,
in this case, religious belief; and the nature of what the three books portray,
when viewed from the perspective of K-1 students.
79
The above-mentioned two disagreements between the appellants and
respondent resulted in a more general disagreement about the reasonableness of
the Surrey School Board’s decision. In effect, however, I am of the view that
when one examines the totality of the context, the disagreement is actually
about the appropriate way, in the K-1 classrooms of Surrey, B.C., to teach and
guarantee tolerance and non-discrimination of all persons in a way which
respects the rights of parents to raise their children in accordance with their
conscience, religious or otherwise. In my view, it is obvious that Charter
values are to be respected in the school context generally. That context,
however, involves a need to respect both the right of homosexual persons to be
free from discrimination and parental rights to make the decisions they deem
necessary to ensure the well-being and moral education of their children. As
noted by M. Ignatieff in The Rights Revolution (2000), a system devoted
to the primacy of human rights protection enhances and safeguards what he calls
the two sides of human rights: the right to be equal, and the right to
differ. This case involves a tension between these rights. Given, however,
that there is generally a shared commitment to Charter values and to
actual non-discrimination in the school context more broadly, this case truly
shows itself to be a question of balancing or accommodation, a question of
choosing “ways and means” within policy implementation in a school context.
II. Relevant
Constitutional, Statutory and Non-Statutory Provisions
80
Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms
1. The Canadian Charter of Rights and
Freedoms guarantees the rights and freedoms set out in it subject only to
such reasonable limits prescribed by law as can be demonstrably justified in a
free and democratic society.
2. Everyone has the following fundamental
freedoms:
(a) freedom of conscience and religion;
(b) freedom of thought, belief, opinion and expression,
including freedom of the press and other media of communication;
15. (1) Every individual is equal
before and under the law and has the right to the equal protection and equal
benefit of the law without discrimination and, in particular, without
discrimination based on race, national or ethnic origin, colour, religion, sex,
age or mental or physical disability.
School Act,
R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 412
Preamble
WHEREAS it is the goal of a democratic society to ensure that all its
members receive an education that enables them to become personally fulfilled
and publicly useful, thereby increasing the strength and contributions to the
health and stability of that society;
AND WHEREAS the purpose of the British Columbia school system is to
enable all learners to develop their individual potential and to acquire the
knowledge, skills and attitudes needed to contribute to a healthy, democratic
and pluralistic society and a prosperous and sustainable economy;
THEREFORE HER MAJESTY, by and with the advice and consent of the
Legislative Assembly of the Province of British Columbia, enacts as follows:
. . .
Part 6 — School Boards
Division
1 — Corporate Status and Meetings
Board is a corporation
65 (1) The trustees elected or appointed
under this Act for each school district and their successors in office
constitute a board of school trustees for the district and are a corporation
under the name of “The Board of School Trustees of School District No. 1
(Fernie)” (or as the case may be).
(2) A board may
(a) establish committees and specify the functions
and duties of those committees,
(b) establish a district advisory council
comprised of persons representing parents’ advisory councils and other
organizations in the community, and
(c) delegate specific and general administrative
and management duties to one or more of its employees.
(3) Committees of trustees or individual trustees
may not exercise the rights, duties and powers of the board.
(4) Unless expressly required to be exercised by
bylaw, all powers of a board may be exercised by bylaw or resolution.
(5) A board may exercise a power with respect to
the acquisition or disposal of property owned or administered by the board only
by bylaw.
. . .
Division
2 — Powers and Duties
. . .
Conduct
76 (1) All schools and Provincial schools
must be conducted on strictly secular and non‑sectarian principles.
(2) The highest morality must be inculcated, but
no religious dogma or creed is to be taught in a school or Provincial school.
. . .
Power and capacity
85 (1) For the purposes of carrying out
its powers, functions and duties under this Act and the regulations, a board
has the power and capacity of a natural person of full capacity.
(2) Without limiting subsection (1), a board may,
subject to this Act and the regulations, do all or any of the following:
(a) determine local policy for the effective and
efficient operation of schools in the school district;
(b) subject to the orders of the minister, approve
educational resource materials and other supplies and services for use by
students;
. . .
Part 9 — General
Division
1 — Ministry of Education, Skills and Training
Jurisdiction of minister
168 (1) The minister, subject to this
Act and the regulations,
(a) has charge of the maintenance and management
of all Provincial schools established under this Act,
. . .
(2) The minister may make orders for the purpose
of carrying out any of the minister’s powers, duties or functions under this
Act and, without restriction, may make orders
(a) governing the provision of educational
programs,
. . .
(c) determining the general nature of educational
programs for use in schools and francophone schools and specifying educational
program guides,
. . .
(e) governing educational resource materials in
support of educational programs,
. . .
Ministerial
Educational Resource Materials Order, M143/89, as am. by M11/91 and M167/93
1. (1) In addition to the educational program guides referred
to in Ministerial Order 165/93, the Educational Program Guide Order, a board
may only use the following educational resource materials:
(a) the educational resource materials referred
to as authorized or recommended in the most recent “Catalogue of Learning
Resources, Primary to Graduation”, published from time to time by the Ministry
of Education;
(b) other educational resource materials that,
subsequent to the publication of the Catalogue referred to in paragraph (a),
are designated by the minister as authorized or recommended; and
(c) educational resource materials that the board
considers are appropriate for individual students or groups of students.
(2) Where a board uses educational resource
materials referred to in subsection 1(c), the board shall establish evaluation
and selection criteria and procedures to approve those educational resource
materials.
Ministerial
Educational Program Guide Order, M165/93, as am. by M293/95, M405/95 and
M465/95
3. (1) A board may only use the following educational
resource materials:
(a) resource materials in an educational program
guide specified in section 1 of this Order;
(b) resource materials in a document referred to
in column 1 of Table 1;
(c) the educational resource materials referred
to as authorized or recommended in the most recent “Catalogue of Learning
Resources”, published from time to time by the Ministry of Education;
(d) other educational resource materials that,
subsequent to the publication of the Catalogue referred to in paragraph (a),
are designated by the minister as authorized or recommended; and
(e) educational resource materials that the board
considers are appropriate for individual students or groups of students.
(2) Before a board uses educational resource
materials referred to in subsection (1)(e), the board must approve those
educational resource materials in accordance with evaluation and selection
criteria and procedures established by the board.
School
District No. 36 (Surrey) Regulation 8800.1
A. REGULATIONS AND CRITERIA FOR THE SELECTION
AND APPROVAL OF RECOMMENDED LEARNING RESOURCES AND LIBRARY RESOURCES
I. Definitions
1. Recommended Learning Resources
For the purposes of this regulation, the term “Recommended Learning
Resources” will refer to materials on either the Ministry list or the District
Recommended Learning Resources list.
2. Library Resources
For the purposes of this regulation, the term “Library Resources” will
refer to print and non-print resources that are curriculum-related,
age-appropriate, and/or able to serve a wide range of learning levels and
interests.
II. Procedures
1. Responsibility for selecting and using
recommended learning resources and library resources with the approved criteria
rests with the Superintendent of Schools and the other professional staff
employed by the Board.
2. The Superintendent or designate and
principals are expected to assume general responsibility for seeing that the
approved criteria are known and appropriately applied.
3. In the case of recommended learning
resources or library resources and controversial matters, the Board expects
that good professional judgement will be exercised and that there will be
consultation with others, including parents and professional colleagues where
deemed appropriate.
4. In the case of challenged recommended
learning resources or library resources where resolution has not been possible,
the matter shall be referred to the Board with all documentation.
III. Criteria
. . .
A. Recommended Learning Resources
1. The recommended learning resource is
relevant to the learning outcomes and content of the course or courses.
2. The recommended learning resource is
appropriate in terms of the age, maturity, and learning needs of the student
for whom it is intended.
3. The recommended learning resource is
appropriate for the particular community in which it will be used.
4. The recommended learning resource is fair,
objective, free from gratuitous violence, propaganda and discrimination, except
where a teaching/learning situation requires illustrative material to develop
critical thinking about such issues.
5. The recommended learning resource is
readable, interesting, and manageable in the teaching/learning situation.
B. Library Resources
1. The library resource shall support and be
consistent with the general educational goals of the province, district, and
the aims and objectives of individual schools and specific courses.
2. The library resource shall meet high standards of quality in
factual content and presentation.
3. The library resource shall be appropriate
for the curriculum and for the age, emotional development, ability level,
learning style, and social development of the students for whom the materials
are selected.
4. The library resource shall have aesthetic,
literary, historical, and/or social value.
5. The physical format and appearance of a
library resource shall be suitable for its intended use.
6. The library resource may be chosen to
motivate students and staff to read for the purpose of recreation.
7. The library resource shall be chosen to help
students gain an awareness of our pluralistic society as well as an
understanding of the many important contributions made to our civilization.
8. The library resource shall be chosen to
motivate students and staff to examine their own attitudes and behaviors, and
to comprehend their own duties, responsibilities, rights, and privileges as
participating citizens in our society.
9. The library resource is fair, objective,
free from gratuitous violence, propaganda and discrimination, except where a
teaching/learning situation requires illustrative material to develop critical
thinking about such issues.
School
District No. 36 (Surrey) Policy 8425
PERSONAL PLANNING (K-7) AND CAREER AND PERSONAL PLANNING (8-12)
The prescribed curriculum for Personal Planning (K-7) and Career and
Personal Planning (8-12) is intended to enable all students to acquire the
knowledge, skills and attitudes needed to make healthy life and career choices.
The Board recognizes that this prescribed curriculum is broad in scope
and addresses goals in human, social and career development which are
appropriately shared between the school and the family.
Because of this broad scope and shared responsibility, the Board views
student learning in this area as an ongoing learning process which develops
confidence in meeting life’s challenges through purposeful and responsible
action.
The teaching and learning associated with this curriculum, therefore,
must engage parents and students in active partnership with the school in
program planning and implementation. Furthermore, the teaching and learning
must also reflect positive family values such as honesty, trust, love, empathy
and respect. The Board believes that such values represent our community’s
expectation regarding the education of our students and the development of
citizenship.
The Board expects, therefore, that the prescribed curriculum taught in
Surrey Schools will be consistent in content and delivery throughout the
district and will:
· promote positive family values
· develop student decision-making skills to
help students make responsible healthy life and career choices
· advocate abstinence as a preferred healthy life-style choice
· adhere to topics and learning resources that
are age and developmentally appropriate
· be supported by a comprehensive teacher inservice program.
Finally, the Board recognizes the importance and sensitivity of this
curriculum and calls for leadership at both the district and school level to
ensure that the program is congruent with this policy and refrains from
unwarranted intrusion into families’ privacy through the involvement of:
· parents, students and staff in a school-based
process to review instructional resources
· a school-based committee, with representation
from the Parent Advisory Council, to review school specific issues especially
in sensitive areas
· a district Standing Advisory Committee with
representation from parent, school and broader community.
III. Key Facts
A. Parties to the Proceedings and Surrey,
B.C.
81
The Surrey area is a culturally and religiously diverse community. It
has large Protestant and Catholic Christian communities, including a large
Evangelical Christian community. It also has a Sikh population of over 50,000
persons, the largest Muslim community in British Columbia, and a Hindu
community.
82
The respondent, the Board of Trustees of School District No. 36
(Surrey), is comprised of seven elected school trustees (Mr. Robert Pickering,
Mr. Gary Tymoschuk, Mr. Jim Chisholm, Mr. Ken Hoffmann, Ms. Laurae McNally, Ms.
Heather Stilwell and Ms. Mary Polak). It is charged under the School Act
with the administration of the public schools in the Surrey School District.
83
The appellants, Mr. James Chamberlain and Mr. Murray Warren, are both
teachers. Mr. Chamberlain is a Kindergarten teacher in the Surrey District.
Mr. Warren is an elementary school teacher in the Coquitlam School District
(No. 43). Both belong to the British Columbia Teachers Federation and both are
members of an association known as Gay and Lesbian Educators of B.C. (“GALE”).
84
GALE is an unincorporated organization of educators who advocate change
in the school system to foster a more positive environment for homosexual and
bisexual persons. Since 1991, GALE has developed a list of resources dealing
with the issue of homosexuality, which included the three books (the “Three
Books”) at issue in this case: R. Elwin and M. Paulse, Asha’s Mums
(1990); L. Newman, Belinda’s Bouquet (1991); and J. Valentine, One
Dad, Two Dads, Brown Dad, Blue Dads (1994).
85
The appellant Rosamund Elwin is one of the authors of Asha’s Mums.
The appellant Diane Willcott is the mother of two children who attend Latimer
Road Elementary School in the Surrey School District. She is a member of the
Parent Advisory Council of that school. The appellant Blaine Cook is a
secondary school student in the Surrey School District and Sue Cook is his
mother.
B. Personal
Planning K to 7 Curriculum
86
In September 1995, the Minister of Education implemented a new
curriculum for Personal Planning in grades Kindergarten to seven (“the PP
curriculum”). The PP curriculum is “grounded in the recognition that emotional
and social development are as important to the development of healthy and
active educated citizens as academic achievement and the development of
intellectual and physical skills” (Province of British Columbia, Ministry of
Education, Personal Planning K to 7: Integrated Resource Package 1995,
at p. 2). The PP curriculum complements the rest of the K-7 curriculum by
focussing on students’ personal development and on how their schooling and
extra-curricular activities relate to their future plans and life after school.
87
The PP curriculum is divided into three inter-related components (at pp.
3-5):
[The “Planning Process” component is designed to] help students develop
personal, career and educational goals and work towards realizing them.
[The “Personal Development” component] is designed to help students
acquire the knowledge, attitudes, and skills needed to lead healthy and
productive lives.
[The “Career Development” component is designed to help] students
integrate personal, educational, work, and community learning experiences to
prepare for future career choices.
88
Each of these three components is divided into curriculum
“suborganizers.” For the “Personal Development” component, the “suborganizers”
are: “Healthy living”; “Mental well-being”; “Family life education”; “Child
abuse prevention”; “Substance abuse prevention”; and “Safety and injury
prevention”.
89
In requesting approval for the Three Books, Mr. Chamberlain was seeking
materials to assist in teaching the “Family life education” curriculum
“suborganizer” of the “Personal Development” component of the PP curriculum.
For students in K-7, the “Family life education” curriculum “suborganizer”
“emphasizes the family’s role in teaching moral and behavioral standards.
Students focus on the nature and role of the family and address the basics of
human reproductive biology” (p. 4).
90
For each curriculum “suborganizer”, the Ministry of Education has
identified “prescribed learning outcomes” to be achieved by the students at
each grade level. The “prescribed learning outcomes” of the “Family life
education” “suborganizer” for K-1 are as follows (at p. 22):
To develop students’ understanding of the role of the family and
capacity for responsible decision-making in their personal relationships.
It is expected that students will:
· identify a variety of models for family
organization
· identify the roles and responsibilities of
different family members
· identify the characteristics that make the
family environment safe and nurturing
· identify the physical characteristics that
distinguish males from females
· identify that living things reproduce
91
In order to help K-1 students achieve these “prescribed learning
outcomes”, teachers are encouraged to employ the following instructional
strategies (amongst others): have children compare different families and
discuss similarities and differences; have children draw and write about their
own families; and have children talk about each other’s families.
C. Learning
Resource Material Approval in B.C. Public Schools
92
The publicly funded education system in B.C. is governed by the School
Act. Section 65 of the School Act establishes that each school
district is to be run by a board of elected or appointed trustees, constituting
a corporation. The School Act and related Ministerial Orders
clearly give school boards authority to approve “educational resource
materials”: see s. 85(2)(b) of the School Act. More specifically, Ministerial
Orders M143/89 and M165/93 restrict a board to using only (1)
“educational resource materials” approved by the Minister of Education, or (2)
“educational resource materials” that a school board considers are appropriate
for individual students or groups of students. Thus, it is clear that beyond
the “educational resource materials” recommended by the Ministry, the School
Act and both Ministerial Orders referred to above permit a school board to
play a complementary role and approve additional educational resource materials
which the board considers appropriate.
93
In order to engage in reviewing resource materials for approval at the
school board level, the Ministerial Orders demand that a board must have
established evaluation and selection criteria and procedures. To meet this
requirement, the Surrey Board passed Regulation 8800.1, entitled Recommended
Learning Resources and Library Resources. That regulation established
criteria for selecting “learning resources”:
1. The recommended learning resource is relevant
to the learning outcomes and content of the course or courses.
2. The recommended learning resource is appropriate
in terms of the age, maturity, and learning needs of the student for whom
it is intended.
3. The recommended learning resource is appropriate
for the particular community in which it will be used.
4. The recommended learning resource is fair,
objective, free from gratuitous violence, propaganda and discrimination,
except where a teaching/learning situation requires illustrative material to
develop critical thinking about such issues.
5. The recommended learning resource is readable,
interesting, and manageable in the teaching/learning situation.
[Emphasis added.]
I note that
the selection criteria for “library resources” are different.
94
When a teacher wants to employ a “learning resource” that is neither on
the Ministry Recommended Learning Resources list nor on an existing District
Recommended Learning Resources list, the procedure for obtaining approval is
also set out in Regulation 8800.1:
1. Responsibility for selecting and using
recommended learning resources and library resources with the approved criteria
rests with the Superintendent of Schools and the other professional staff
employed by the Board.
2. The Superintendent or designate and principals
are expected to assume general responsibility for seeing that the approved
criteria are known and appropriately applied.
3. In the case of recommended learning resources
or library resources and controversial matters, the Board expects that good
professional judgement will be exercised and that there will be consultation
with others, including parents and professional colleagues where deemed
appropriate.
4. In the case of challenged recommended learning
resources or library resources where resolution has not been possible, the
matter shall be referred to the Board with all documentation.
95
Specifically with regard to the PP curriculum, the School Board adopted
Policy 8425 at the April 10, 1997 meeting. This policy was prepared in 1996
and early 1997 by the Career and Personal Planning Review Advisory Committee,
composed of three school teachers, eight representatives of the District Parent
Advisory Council, the Surrey Teachers’ Association President, a principal from
the Surrey Administrators’ Association, and District Staff. This policy
generally provides some direction to guide instruction and resource selection
relating to the PP curriculum. With regard to resource selection, the policy
states that the prescribed curriculum will “adhere to topics and learning
resources that are age and developmentally appropriate” and states that to
ensure compliance with the policy, the School Board is committed to the
involvement of “parents, students and staff in a school-based process to review
instructional resources”.
D. Mr. Chamberlain’s Request for Approval
of the Three Books
96
In December 1996 and January 1997, Mr. Chamberlain submitted the Three
Books, drawn from the GALE list, to the office of the Superintendent of Schools
of the respondent School Board for approval as “educational resource material”
at the K-1 level for the Surrey School District. Gaining this status would
mean that the books would be generally approved for use in all K-1 classrooms
in that School District. Their actual use, like all other “educational resource
materials”, whether provincially or locally approved, would remain subject to
the discretion of individual teachers.
97
The Office of the Superintendent of Schools passed Mr. Chamberlain’s
request to the Education Services Committee (“ESC”). The ESC considered the
Three Books at a meeting which was attended by the Superintendent of Schools,
four Assistant Superintendents and four District Principals. The members of
the ESC are clearly highly qualified in light of their academic backgrounds,
their experience and their positions. At that meeting, “[t]here was discussion
and debate as to whether the Three Books were age appropriate for Kindergarten
and Grade One and whether these particular resources were necessary to achieve
the learning objectives of the PP K-7 curriculum”. The ESC ultimately decided,
given the sensitive and contentious nature of the Three Books, and the likely
concern of parents in Surrey if such books were approved, to refer Mr.
Chamberlain’s request to the School Board.
98
In so referring the request to the School Board, the Superintendent of Schools,
Frederick I. Renihan, in an administrative memorandum given to the trustees of
the School Board, decided not to “recommend” the Three Books for approval but
simply requested that the Board “consider” the Three Books.
99
At the April 24, 1997 meeting of the School Board, Mr. Chamberlain’s
request to have the Three Books approved was considered. The meeting was
attended by all the trustees except Chairman Robert Pickering. At this
meeting, the Board heard representations from GALE, the B.C. Civil Liberties
Associations and a parent from Latimer Road Elementary School, all in favour of
approving the books.
100
Following a heated debate at that meeting, the Surrey School Board
passed a resolution, by a vote of 4 to 2, not to approve the Three Books for
use as “learning resources” for the PP curriculum for K-1 (the “Resolution”).
Trustees Stilwell, Hoffmann, Tymoschuk and Polak voted in favour of the
Resolution while Trustees Chisholm and McNally voted against. The Resolution
reads as follows:
THAT the Board, under Policy #8800 — Recommended Learning Resources
and Library Resources, not approve the use of the following three (3)
learning resources:
Grade Level K-1 Personal Planning
Elwin, R., & Paulse, M. (1990). Asha’s Mums.
Newman, L. (1991). Belinda’s Bouquet.
Valentine, J. (1994). One Dad, Two Dads, Brown Dad, Blue Dads.
As stated
above, this Resolution did not concern “library resources” and neither did it
have any relevance to grades other than K-1.
E. Commitment to Non-Discrimination in the
Surrey School District
101
With regard the Surrey School District’s commitment to
non-discrimination, the Court of Appeal noted the following, at paras. 38-39 of
its reasons ((2000), 191 D.L.R. (4th) 128):
The Surrey Superintendent of Schools, with the
concurrence of the Board, sent a directive to the Surrey schools on 9 May 1997
under the heading “Tolerance For Sexual Orientation”. The directive stated in
part:
There has been extensive media coverage regarding recent Board motions
on learning resources and sexual orientation. Let there be no confusion with
regard to the District’s expectation in terms of how we treat the matter of
sexual orientation. The District will not accept any action of intolerance or
discriminatory treatment of students, staff, or parents on the basis of their
sexual orientation. Administrative officers must be vigilant in their
responsibility and must confront instances of intolerance to ensure that they
cease and that appropriate action results.
Board Regulation 10900.1, Multicultural, Anti-Racist and Human Rights,
states, in part:
“. . . any form of discrimination that results in disparagement towards
others based on identifiable group features is unacceptable.”
Our Board is committed to providing a working and learning environment
that is safe, supportive, and free of discrimination based on a person’s sexual
orientation. The promotion of intolerance is unacceptable. (Emphasis in
original.)
This directive was a clear, emphatic, and unambiguous statement of
District policy.
It cannot be ignored, as the Supreme Court stressed
in Vriend, that discrimination against gays and lesbians can range from
insults and ostracism to vicious and violent acts. Schools are not immune and
all those involved in teaching and administration must be vigilant in
prevention of all forms of discrimination and abuse. However, I do not think
that there is any reason not to take this directive at its word or to conclude
that the Board did not stand behind its admonition.
I also note
that Surrey School Board Policy 10900, has been in effect since November of
1982. The version of the policy revised in April of 1996 states:
It is an expectation that all school district programs and operations
will promote the preparation of learners to participate in a just and equitable
manner in society.
The Board is committed:
– to create in the Surrey School District an
environment free of racial and cultural discrimination;
– to hire on the basis of merit and not to
discriminate against persons;
– to prepare students for life in a
multicultural society;
– to eliminate racism and discrimination;
– to reduce language and cultural barriers to
best placement of students;
– to communicate effectively with parents and
the community; and
– to monitor efforts to comply with policy.
I agree with
the Court of Appeal below that there is no reason to doubt the School Board’s
commitment to these policies. The affidavit of Mr. Brian H. Bastien, the
Associate Superintendent of Human Resources for the Board at the relevant
times, outlines the policies and measures adopted by the district to combat
intolerance, harassment and discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation.
IV. The Paramount Role of Parents in the
Education of Children, the Best Interests of Children and the Charter
A. Parental Responsibilities and the Best
Interests of Children
102
While this case specifically concerns the non-approval of particular
books by an elected school board, it more generally raises contextual issues
concerning the right of parents to raise their children in accordance with
their conscience, religious or otherwise. In my view, the general nature of
the interplay of the roles of parents and the state is clear: “The common law
has long recognized that parents are in the best position to take care of their
children and make all the decisions necessary to ensure their well-being”: B.
(R.) v. Children’s Aid Society of Metropolitan Toronto, [1995] 1 S.C.R.
315, at para. 83. Thus, parents are clearly the primary actors, while the
state plays a secondary, complementary role.
103
It is essential to note, however, that when parents exercise this
primary responsibility, they must act in accordance with the “best interests”
of their children: Young v. Young, [1993] 4 S.C.R. 3; P. (D.) v. S.
(C.), [1993] 4 S.C.R. 141. Parents, exercising choice in how to raise
their children, acting on the basis of their conscience, religious or
otherwise, however, will be presumed to be acting in the “best
interests” of their children. Generally, it is only when parental conduct
falls below a “socially acceptable threshold” that the state may properly
intervene: B. (R.), at para. 86. Thus, the role of the state is
properly construed as generally providing assistance to parents to nurture and
educate their children, a good example being public schools, and in extreme
cases intervening to take over the parental function where the parents have
failed to act in their children’s “best interests”.
104
Parental decision making about what is in their children’s “best
interests” concerns the core of the private sphere. In B. (R.), at paras.
104-5, La Forest J., for a majority of the Court, clearly situated the right of
parents to rear their children according to their conscience, religious or
otherwise, as a fundamental aspect of freedom of conscience and religion,
protected by s. 2 (a) of the Charter :
Like the other provisions of the Charter , s.
2 (a) must be given a liberal interpretation with a view to satisfying
its purpose: see Re B.C. Motor Vehicle Act, supra. In R. v.
Big M Drug Mart Ltd., supra, Dickson J. stated, at p. 336:
The essence of the concept of freedom of religion is the right to
entertain such religious beliefs as a person chooses, the right to declare
religious beliefs openly and without fear of hindrance or reprisal, and the
right to manifest religious belief by worship and practice or by teaching and
dissemination. But the concept means more than that.
In R. v. Jones, supra, I observed that
freedom of religion encompassed the right of parents to educate their children
according to their religious beliefs. In P. (D.) v. S. (C.), [1993] 4
S.C.R. 141, a case involving a custody dispute in which one of the parents was
a Jehovah’s Witness, L’Heureux-Dubé J. stated that custody rights included the
right to decide the child’s religious education. It seems to me that the
right of parents to rear their children according to their religious beliefs,
including that of choosing medical and other treatments, is an equally
fundamental aspect of freedom of religion. [Emphasis added.]
105
In that same case, dissenting on other grounds, Iacobucci and Major JJ.,
at para. 223, claimed with regard to s. 2 (a) of the Charter :
That constitutional freedom includes the right to educate and rear
their child in the tenets of their faith. In effect, until the child
reaches an age where she can make an independent decision regarding her own
religious beliefs, her parents may decide on her religion for her and raise her
in accordance with that religion. [Emphasis added.]
106
Beyond clearly rooting the protection of a privileged parental
sphere of authority in s. 2 (a) of the Charter , La Forest J., at
paras. 83 and 85 of B. (R.), supra, with McLachlin J. (as she
then was), L’Heureux-Dubé J., and I concurring, stated the following with
regard to s. 7 of the Charter :
As observed by Dickson J. in R. v. Big M Drug Mart Ltd., supra,
the Charter was not enacted in a vacuum or absent a historical context.
The common law has long recognized that parents are in the best position to
take care of their children and make all the decisions necessary to ensure
their well-being. In Hepton v. Maat, [1957] S.C.R. 606, our Court
stated (at p. 607): “The view of the child’s welfare conceives it to lie,
first, within the warmth and security of the home provided by his parents”.
This recognition was based on the presumption that parents act in the best
interest of their child. The Court did add, however, that “when through a
failure, with or without parental fault, to furnish that protection, that
welfare is threatened, the community, represented by the Sovereign, is, on the
broadest social and national grounds, justified in displacing the parents and
assuming their duties” (pp. 607-8). Although the philosophy underlying state
intervention has changed over time, most contemporary statutes dealing with
child protection matters . . ., while focusing on the best interest
of the child, favour minimal intervention. In recent years, courts have
expressed some reluctance to interfere with parental rights, and state
intervention has been tolerated only when necessity was demonstrated. This only
serves to confirm that the parental interest in bringing up, nurturing and
caring for a child, including medical care and moral upbringing, is an
individual interest of fundamental importance to our society.
While acknowledging that parents bear
responsibilities towards their children, it seems to me that they must enjoy
correlative rights to exercise them. The contrary view would not recognize the
fundamental importance of choice and personal autonomy in our society. As
already stated, the common law has always, in the absence of demonstrated
neglect or unsuitability, presumed that parents should make all significant
choices affecting their children, and has afforded them a general liberty to do
as they choose. This liberty interest is not a parental right tantamount
to a right of property in children. (Fortunately, we have distanced ourselves
from the ancient juridical conception of children as chattels of their
parents.) The state is now actively involved in a number of areas traditionally
conceived of as properly belonging to the private sphere. Nonetheless, our
society is far from having repudiated the privileged role parents exercise in
the upbringing of their children. This role translates into a protected sphere
of parental decision-making which is rooted in the presumption that parents
should make important decisions affecting their children both because parents
are more likely to appreciate the best interests of their children and because
the state is ill-equipped to make such decisions itself. Moreover, individuals
have a deep personal interest as parents in fostering the growth of their own
children. This is not to say that the state cannot intervene when it
considers it necessary to safeguard the child’s autonomy or health. But such
intervention must be justified. In other words, parental decision-making
must receive the protection of the Charter in order for state
interference to be properly monitored by the courts, and be permitted only when
it conforms to the values underlying the Charter . [Emphasis added.]
107
I also generally agree with the following statement made by Wilson J. in
R. v. Jones, [1986] 2 S.C.R. 284, at pp. 319-20, in the context of her
argument that s. 7 of the Charter does include the right to bring up and
educate one’s children in line with one’s conscientious belief:
The relations of affection between an individual and his family and his
assumption of duties and responsibilities towards them are central to the
individual’s sense of self and of his place in the world. The right to educate
his children is one facet of this larger concept. This has been widely
recognized. Article 8(1) of the European Convention for the Protection of
Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms, 213 U.N.T.S. 222 (1950), states in
part “Everyone has the right to respect for his private and family life.
. . .” Particularly relevant to the appellant’s claim is Article 2
of Protocol No. 1 of the Convention:
No person shall be denied the right to education. In the exercise of
any functions which it assumes in relation to education and to teaching, the
State shall respect the right of parents to ensure such education and teaching
in conformity with their own religious and philosophical convictions.
108
I was then, and I am still of the view that the above overview is a
correct statement of the law: parents clearly have the right, whether protected
by s. 7 or s. 2 (a) of the Charter , to nurture, educate and make
decisions for their children, as long as these decisions are in the children’s
“best interests”. Parents will be presumed to be acting in their children’s
“best interests” unless the contrary is shown. That having been said, it is
clear that, whether rooted in s. 2 (a) or s. 7 of the Charter , the
paramount parental right to nurture, make decisions for and direct the moral
education of their children, like all rights protected by the Charter ,
is obviously not absolute: see B. (R.), at paras. 87, 107 and 224; see
also Jones, at pp. 320 and 322.
109
The general approach taken by this Court is consistent with Article
18(4) of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights,
999 U.N.T.S. 171 (entered into force March 23, 1976), which reads as follows:
The States Parties to the present Covenant undertake
to have respect for the liberty of parents . . . to ensure the
religious and moral education of their children in conformity with their own
convictions.
110
The Canadian approach is also loosely analogous to the situation in the
United States, where the notions of parental rights and the integrity of the
family unit have been granted constitutional status as a result of judicial
interpretation of the First and Fourteenth Constitutional Amendments: see Meyer
v. Nebraska, 262 U.S. 390 (1923), Pierce v. Society of Sisters, 268
U.S. 510 (1925), and Wisconsin v. Yoder, 406 U.S. 205 (1972), amongst
numerous others. In Prince v. Massachusetts, 321 U.S. 158 (1944), at p.
166, Rutledge J., speaking for the court, stated: “It is cardinal with us that
the custody, care and nurture of the child reside first in the parents, whose
primary function and freedom include preparation for obligations the state can
neither supply nor hinder.”
111
Other cases of this Court have reiterated the paramount parental role by
construing the nature of the authority schools and teachers have over children
as a “delegated authority”: see R. v. Audet, [1996] 2 S.C.R.
171, at para. 41. In that case, La Forest J., for a majority of the Court,
cited with approval a passage from Cosgrove J. in R. v. Forde,
[1992] O.J. No. 1698 (QL) (Gen. Div.): “In our society the role of the teacher
is second in importance only to the parent.” I note that Saunders J. below
referred to these passages at paras. 72-73 of her reasons ((1998), 168 D.L.R.
(4th) 222). In Adler v. Ontario, [1996] 3 S.C.R. 609, at para. 196,
McLachlin J., in dissent on a different point, reiterated the paramountcy of
the parental role by confirming the right of parents to remove their children
from the public school system and place them in an environment which is more
suited to the belief system which the parents want to impart, whether that be
at home or in a parochial school.
112
The notion of a school’s authority being “delegated”, if it permits the
parental control response of removing a child from the public school system,
also entails that parents must be guaranteed the role of having input with
regard to the values which their children will receive in school. This is
generally brought about by electing representatives who will develop consensus
and govern on matters pertaining to public education, which may occur at the
provincial level and at the local level. As noted above, when consensus is
developed at the provincial level and becomes reflected in a provincial
curriculum and a provincial list of approved resources, any teacher in any
school in the province may employ those resources in teaching the curriculum.
The future development of the general nature of the provincially developed
curriculum may, of course, be modified by results at the provincial ballot box
or by changes in politically developed consensus.
113
At the subsidiary local school board level, parents participate directly
by electing local school board trustees. As noted above, these local school
boards are empowered by the School Act to approve or not approve
complementary “educational resource materials”. It is also clear that a school
board does not have an unfettered discretion when it engages in such approving
or non-approving: it must act in a manner consistent with the School Act,
as well as consistent with the evaluation and selection criteria and procedures
which the Ministerial Orders discussed above demand be adopted. Further, as
well elaborated in the reasons of the Chief Justice, a local school board must,
when approving or not approving materials, act in a manner consistent with the
demands of the provincial curriculum. If a local school board does approve
materials, then in addition to the provincially approved resources, teachers in
that district may employ these complementary materials as well. Similar to the
situation at the provincial level, the future development of these
complementary educational resource materials lists at the local level is also
subject to the results of the ballot box, being the results of local school
trustee elections.
114
Another practical reflection of parental involvement at the local level
is that many schools have parental organizations geared at facilitating
parental involvement, such as the Parent Advisory Council at Latimer Road
Elementary School, one of the schools at which Mr. Chamberlain taught
Kindergarten, and of which appellant Diane Willcott was a member at the time of
trial. A further example of parental involvement is that eight representatives
of the District Parent Advisory Council formed a majority on the Career and
Personal Planning Review Advisory Committee which approved Policy 8425, the
Surrey School Board policy directed at providing some guidance for the
selection of materials for the PP curriculum. Parents may also make
submissions before school boards, as did one parent, in favour of approving the
Three Books Resolution, at the April 24, 1997 Surrey School Board meeting.
115
With regard to the role of “values” in school, I note that this Court
clearly established in Ross v. New Brunswick School District No. 15,
[1996] 1 S.C.R. 825, at para. 42, that:
A school is a communication centre for a whole range
of values and aspirations of a society. In large part, it defines the values
that transcend society through the educational medium. The school is an arena
for the exchange of ideas and must, therefore, be premised upon principles of
tolerance and impartiality so that all persons within the school environment
feel equally free to participate. As the Board of Inquiry stated, a school
board has a duty to maintain a positive school environment for all persons
served by it.
In my saying
that parents do and ought to have input at the local level with regard to the
values which their children receive in school, I want to make it clear that
this does not amount to, as alleged in submissions before this Court, that a
particular parent or group of parents has a “veto” over the local delivery of
the provincial curriculum. This is not the case since the curriculum and the
core “educational resource materials” related to it are developed at the provincial
level. Further, any local school board decision must be consistent with the
demands of the provincial curriculum, and must certainly not directly
contradict the provincial curriculum. What local parent involvement does mean,
however, in the case at bar, is that in the absence of a clear provincial
indication in the curriculum that a particular subject matter be taught,
parents at the local level may exercise, through electing their school
trustees, some control over complementary materials related to the delivery of
the curriculum. Engaging this local evaluation is aimed, to borrow the language
of Ross cited just above, exactly at the objective of “maintain[ing] a
positive school environment for all persons served by it” and is “premised upon
principles of tolerance and impartiality so that all persons within the school
environment feel equally free to participate”. It is also consistent with the
preamble of the School Act, which identifies a purpose of the province’s
school system as developing students with a skill set required in a “democratic
and pluralistic society”.
116
The recognition that primary responsibility for the education of
children resides in parents is, interestingly, also manifest in the PP
curriculum itself. The PP curriculum, when discussing the “Family life
education” “sub-organizer” claims: “this aspect of Personal Development
emphasizes the family’s role in teaching moral and behavioral standards” (p.
4). The PP curriculum also states that “[t]he family is the primary educator
in the development of children’s attitudes and values” (p. 6). Building upon
these points, the Surrey School Board’s Policy 8425 claims: “this prescribed
curriculum is broad in scope and addresses goals in human, social and career
development which are appropriately shared between the school and the family”.
117
Why are parents guaranteed a paramount role in their children’s
education and moral development? As was quoted above from B. (R.), at
para. 85, the primacy of parents is “rooted in the presumption that parents
should make important decisions affecting their children both because parents
are more likely to appreciate the best interests of their children and because
the state is ill-equipped to make such decisions itself”. This reasoning
strikes particularly true with regard to the facts in the case at bar. A
parental determination of what is appropriate subject matter for their
children’s education involves an examination of the psychological age or
maturity of their children, as well as a parental reflection upon what
conscience-based guidance they seek to impart. As one parent’s affidavit puts
it: “As my children’s mother, I feel I am in the best position to determine
their ability to understand and deal with complex and contentious value-based
issues involving human sexuality.” This evaluation is individualized, and, in
my view, preferable, when possible, to assumptions which root child readiness
or capability in an undifferentiated chronological analysis. In many, if not
most, educational policy situations, however, general chronologically based
decisions are unavoidable as a practical matter. Even these general decisions,
however, are still the result of a consensus which has been developed by the
community. In the penumbra which this case concerns, the space permitted for
local school board approval or non-approval of educational resources in the
absence of provincially approved resources, responsiveness to parental concern
allows a school board to react more directly to parental determinations of age
appropriateness. Since this local solution is not only possible, but clearly
envisaged by the operation of the School Act, it is preferable and to be
respected, in that it reflects the clear proposition of law that parents stand
before the state in relation to their children and are in a uniquely privileged
position to be able to gauge their needs and abilities.
118
I have undertaken the above review of the parental role in the moral
education of children and the “best interests” of the child test because, in my
view, the privileged role of parents to determine what serves the well-being of
their children, including, as quoted above, their “moral upbringing”, is
central to analyzing the reasonableness of the School Board’s decision in the
case at bar. This is because the School Board, acting in the capacity of
approving or not-approving “educational resource materials” which are
complementary to the provincially approved materials, is acting as an elected
representative body. As will be discussed below, the School Board’s criteria
for approving complementary “educational resource materials”, not surprisingly,
contained reference to concepts such as “age appropriateness” and envisaged
that the existence of parental concern in the community would be a factor to be
considered. These dimensions of the criteria obviously require the trustees to
canvass local parental views as it is clear, from my discussion above, that
parents are the best arbiters of what is in their children’s best interests.
B. Parental Involvement in the School
System and the Charter
119
As noted above, parents are presumed to have acted in accordance with
their children’s “best interests” unless it is shown to the contrary. In my
view, nothing in the record lends itself to the view that parents who were
concerned about the appropriateness of the Three Books have been shown to have
failed to act in the “best interests” of their children.
120
What of the interaction between what is parentally determined to be in
the “best interests” of their children and the Charter ? In Young,
supra, L’Heureux-Dubé J. stated that custodial parents have a duty to
ensure, protect and promote the “best interests” of their children. With
regard to the content of that duty, L’Heureux-Dubé J. claimed, at p. 38: “That
duty includes the sole and primary responsibility to oversee all aspects of day
to day life and long-term well-being, as well as major decisions with regard to
education, religion, health and well-being.” This is consonant with the more
general discussion above about the privileged parental role in the upbringing
of their children, whether rooted in ss. 2 (a) or 7 of the Charter .
With regard to the constitutionality of the “best interests of the child” test,
L’Heureux-Dubé J. claimed, at p. 71:
It would seem to be self-evident that the best
interests test is value neutral, and cannot be seen on its face to violate any
right protected by the Charter . Indeed, as an objective, the
legislative focus on the best interests of the child is completely consonant
with the articulated values and underlying concerns of the Charter , as
it aims to protect a vulnerable segment of society by ensuring that the
interests and needs of the child take precedence over any competing
considerations in custody and access decisions.
While the case
at bar does not concern a legislative reference to the “best interests” of the
child standard per se, the standard, in my view, is implicated since the
School Board purports to be acting in response to the concerns of parents, who
are otherwise obligated to act in their children’s “best interests”. This was,
in fact, noted by the trial judge, who, at para. 55, recognized that the School
Board purported that “its corporate decision was made in the best interests of
the children”. This case, therefore, while obviously not ignoring the needs
and constitutional rights of parents in same-sex relationships, is about the
“best interests” of all children in the public school system.
121
Although the issue does not appear to have been expressly considered by
this Court in the past, in my view, there can be no doubt that the School Board
is a branch of government and thus subject to the Charter by operation
of s. 32 . In applying the approach set forth by La Forest J. in McKinney v.
University of Guelph, [1990] 3 S.C.R. 229, and Douglas/Kwantlen Faculty
Assn. v. Douglas College, [1990] 3 S.C.R. 570, I find many similarities
between the status of elected school boards such as the respondent and that of
a municipal council, which he addressed in Godbout v. Longueuil
(City), [1997] 3 S.C.R. 844. Thus, like a municipal council, the School
Board is an elected body endowed by legislation with largely autonomous
rule-making and decisional powers. As La Forest J. indicated (at para. 47):
I take to be an important idea governing the application of the
Canadian Charter to entities other than Parliament, the provincial
legislatures or the federal or provincial governments . . . that
where such entities are, in reality, “governmental” in nature — as evidenced by
such things as the degree of government control exercised over them, or by the
governmental quality of the functions they perform — they cannot escape Charter
scrutiny. In other words, the ambit of s. 32 is wide enough to include all
entities that are essentially governmental in nature and is not restricted
merely to those that are formally part of the structure of the federal or
provincial governments.
Here, as was
the case of the municipal council in Godbout, school boards “are
democratically elected by members of the general public and are accountable to
their constituents in a manner analogous to that in which Parliament and the
provincial legislatures are accountable to the electorates they represent
. . ., this itself is a highly significant (although perhaps not a
decisive) indicium of ‘government’ in the requisite sense” (para. 51).
Moreover, although not directly endowed with taxation powers, they are the
beneficiaries of school taxes levied by municipalities on behalf of the
province under ss. 107 and 119 et seq. of the School Act.
Finally, and most importantly, school boards “derive their existence
. . . from the provinces; that is, they exercise powers conferred on
them by provincial legislatures, powers and functions which they would
otherwise have to perform themselves” (para. 51). I believe that these
considerations clearly establish the applicability of the Charter to the
School Board.
122
However, in my view, it would be inappropriate to embark upon a complete
s. 15 analysis in the case at bar, as if to establish a direct breach of
the Charter by the School Board. Although the appellants raise such
issues before this Court, they were not addressed by the courts below, whose
reasoning was based exclusively on the scope of the Board’s authority under the
Act. Thus, I would be reluctant, for instance, to deal with issues such as
substantive discrimination under s. 15 and justification under s. 1 without the
benefit of findings of fact specifically directed at them.
123
In addition, such an analysis would raise substantial issues concerning
standing, which have similarly not been addressed by the courts below. None of
the appellants are same-sex parents or children of such parents, who could
allege having been exposed to differential treatment based on their personal
characteristics by not being represented alongside other family types in Surrey
K-1 classrooms. Thus, this Court would have to decide whether the criteria for
public interest standing set forth in Thorson v. Attorney General of Canada,
[1975] 1 S.C.R. 138, Nova Scotia Board of Censors v. McNeil, [1976] 2
S.C.R. 265, Minister of Justice of Canada v. Borowski, [1981] 2 S.C.R.
575, and Finlay v. Canada (Minister of Finance), [1986] 2 S.C.R.
607, are met by at least one of the plaintiffs in this case. Professor P. W.
Hogg, in Constitutional Law of Canada (loose-leaf ed.), vol. 2,
summarizes the result of these cases as follows (at p. 56-9):
While it is still the case that a private plaintiff has no right to
bring a declaratory action when he or she has no special personal interest in
an issue of constitutional or public law, the courts will grant standing as a
matter of discretion to the plaintiff who establishes (1) that the action
raises a serious legal question, (2) that the plaintiff has a genuine interest
in the resolution of the question, and (3) that there is no other reasonable
and effective manner in which the question may be brought to court.
In my view,
while there is no doubt that the appellants, including Mr. Chamberlain, have a
genuine interest in the resolution of the question, a suit by same-sex parents
or children directly affected by the Resolution appears to be the “reasonable
and effective manner” in which one would expect an allegation of a s. 15 breach
by the Board to be raised.
124
Moreover, a determination that “the action raises a serious legal
question” in the context of the standing analysis would involve some
circularity here, as the test established by Iacobucci J. in Law v. Canada
(Minister of Employment and Immigration), [1999] 1 S.C.R. 497, requires
that the impugned law or act draw a formal distinction between the claimant and
others on the basis of one or more personal characteristics. In the case at
bar, none of the claimants has been made subject to a distinction based on his
or her personal characteristics. As mentioned above, Mr. Warren is a
homosexual teacher in the Coquitlam school district, rather than in Surrey, and
is unaffected by the Three Books Resolution. Mr. Cook was a secondary school
student in Surrey at the time the Resolution was adopted, and was not directly
affected by it. Ms. Elwin is the author of Asha’s Mums, one of the
books at issue, and her evidence concerns the reception of the book in places
other than Surrey. She makes no claim to having been impacted by the
Resolution. Ms. Willcott is a Surrey resident who opposed the Resolution and
whose six-year-old son was in Mr. Chamberlain’s Grade One class at that time.
She does not claim to be a homosexual or to otherwise have been directly
affected by the Resolution. Finally, Mr. Chamberlain himself is a homosexual
K-1 teacher in Surrey. Although he introduced the books for approval and
argues that the Resolution may deny benefits to some children, he cannot claim
that it denies him equal benefit of the law based on his personal
characteristics. He does not claim, for instance, that the Board’s refusal to
approve the books was in any way related to his own homosexuality. Indeed,
there is every reason to think that the same conclusion would have been reached
had the books been introduced by a heterosexual teacher.
125
The appellants could conceivably circumvent these difficulties by
arguing, for instance, that Mr. Chamberlain has been discriminated against by
him not being able to teach materials that reflect his lifestyle, or that
homosexual persons in general are being discriminated against by their not
being shown to exist in the learning resources adopted by the Minister and the
School Board for use in K-1 classrooms in Surrey. In my view, while these
arguments may have some merit, it is unnecessary to resolve the issue at this
point. I believe the standing difficulties I have outlined arise from the fact
that this case truly shows itself to be about a distinction linked, not to the
personal characteristics of any individual, but to the particular features or
contents of the Three Books; in other words, it is about the “ways and means”
of implementing the curriculum, an exercise of educational policy choice,
within the context of a broader commitment to actual non-discrimination. As I
suggested above, there is effectively consensus on Charter values in the
context of the case at bar. No one is advocating discriminatory treatment of
any persons. Moreover, as will be explained below, I am of the view that the
relevant Charter values are incorporated in the requirements of the School
Act, notably through the criterion of “highest morality” in s. 76.
Therefore, I am satisfied that approaching this case as one of accommodation or
balancing between competing Charter rights adequately addresses the
impact of the Charter .
126
The Charter reflects a commitment to equality, protects all
persons from discrimination, protects the rights of all Canadians to exercise
their religious freedom and freedom of conscience, and also protects freedom of
expression. Thus, persons who believe that homosexual behaviour, manifest in
the conduct of persons involved in same-sex relationships, is immoral or not
morally equivalent to heterosexual behaviour, for religious or non-religious
reasons, are entitled to hold and express that view. On the other hand,
persons who believe that homosexual behaviour is morally equivalent to
heterosexual behaviour are also entitled to hold and express that view. Both
groups, however, are not entitled to act in a discriminatory manner. Thus,
this case engages the s. 15, s. 2(a) and s. 2(b) rights of both
the appellants and the parents who expressed their views to the School Board —
and all must be considered as imported into the review of the School Board’s
decision. I note that in Trinity Western University v. British Columbia
College of Teachers, [2001] 1 S.C.R. 772, 2001 SCC 31, at para. 31, this
Court affirmed the position elaborated in Dagenais v. Canadian Broadcasting
Corp., [1994] 3 S.C.R. 835, that:
A hierarchical approach to rights, which places some over others, must
be avoided, both when interpreting the Charter and when developing the
common law. When the protected rights of two individuals come into conflict
. . . Charter principles require a balance to be achieved that
fully respects the importance of both sets of rights.
127
Many of the parents who signed affidavits supporting the respondent
specifically stated that they do not discriminate and are not “homophobic”. A
sample of such statements includes the following:
I am aware that there are differing views regarding
the issue of homosexuality and same-sex couples, or religion, politics or other
matters of strong personal opinion, and I respect the right of others to hold
views that differ from my own and live in a manner consistent with those views,
so long as they do not disregard the rights of my family and children to
differ. I am not homophobic as I neither fear nor hate homosexuals, I merely
disagree with some of their views regarding sexual behaviour and wish to be
free to do so without discrimination or harassment.
I am not homophobic and respect the right of each
individual in society to live their lives without the occurrence of
discrimination contrary to the law. However, I do not believe that I, as a
parent, nor my child, should be required or taught to agree with the
appropriateness of same-sex sexual relationships.
. . . we do not wish our children to be exposed to the topic
of same-sex couples at an early age where they are unable to deal with the
complexities of the issue when we believe that this is not a proper family
unit. We are not homophobic as we neither hate nor fear those of a homosexual
orientation. We simply have strong religious beliefs regarding homosexual
behaviour which we wish to impart to our children. It is our desire that the
school system not interfere with our right to teach our children our values.
Our children will, at some point, be exposed to the topic as we do not wish to
be overly protective or keep our children away from what is happening in
society. However, we believe that this topic should be addressed primarily at
home and at an age we deem appropriate.
I am bringing up my children to love and respect
everyone, but not necessarily to accept their actions or beliefs.
Adults in
Canadian society who think that homosexual behaviour is immoral can still be
staunchly committed to non-discrimination. In the case at bar, there is, in my
view, no evidence that the parents who felt that the Three Books were
inappropriate for five- and six-year-old children fostered discrimination
against persons in any way. Many persons, religious and not, justify this
distinction by drawing a line, reflected in the passages above, between beliefs
held about persons and beliefs held about the conduct of persons.
128
If many Canadians, as a result of deeply held religious or non-religious
beliefs or opinions, draw such a line and commit to such a distinction in their
daily lives, must the law obliterate it because of the allegation that acts of
discrimination against persons are born from the view held by some that certain
persons’ conduct is immoral or inappropriate? Does a commitment to eradicating
the potential for future instances of discrimination require that religious
persons or others be forced to abandon their views regarding the immorality of
certain conduct? Can s. 15 be used to eliminate beliefs, whether popular or
unpopular? In a society committed to liberal values and robust pluralism, the
answer to all of these questions must be in the negative.
129
This Court has recognized that there are many religious organizations
within our Canadian community, and that their diversity must be respected. To
this I add that there are many other organizations within civil society,
including those such as GALE or the intervener EGALE, which espouse particular
views about homosexuality which, while not being “religious” per se, are
clearly particular normative claims about “beliefs”. The views of these
institutions of civil society must also be respected.
130
In Trinity Western, this Court held that while the British
Columbia College of Teachers was correct to have considered the Charter
and other human rights legislation when examining the question of whether to
grant accreditation to a private university, the College of Teachers also had
to ask whether the rights in question were actually in conflict. In that case,
at para. 29, this Court concluded that any potential conflict between the s. 2 (a)
and s. 15 Charter rights “should be resolved through the proper
delineation of the rights and values involved. In essence, properly defining
the scope of the rights avoids a conflict in this case. Neither freedom of
religion nor the guarantee against discrimination based on sexual orientation
is absolute.” In an instance where belief claims seem to conflict, there will
be a need to strike a balance, either by defining the rights so as to avoid a
conflict or within a s. 1 justification. In the case at bar, the recognition
of the value of each rights claim is adequately respected in the balance or
accommodation that was struck by the School Board: the Three Books portraying
parents in same-sex relationships will not be employed in the two earliest
grades, but this subject matter, like the issue of homosexuality as a general
topic of human sexuality, is present in later aspects of the curriculum.
Further, the failure to approve the Three Books does not necessarily preclude
the issue of same-sex parents being discussed in the classroom, a point which I
will address below.
131
As this Court has stated in Trinity Western, at para. 36:
. . . the proper place to draw the line in cases like the
one at bar is generally between belief and conduct. The freedom to hold
beliefs is broader than the freedom to act on them. Absent concrete
evidence that training teachers at TWU fosters discrimination in the public
schools of B.C., the freedom of individuals to adhere to certain religious
beliefs while at TWU should be respected. . . . For better or
for worse, tolerance of divergent beliefs is a hallmark of a democratic
society. [Emphasis added.]
The key
underlined phrase is a recognition that the distinction between conduct and
belief is present in Canada’s constitutional case law: persons are entitled to
hold such beliefs as they choose, but their ability to act on them, whether in
the private or public sphere, may be narrower. This approach reflects the fact
that s. 2 (a) and s. 2 (b) of the Charter co-exist with s.
15 , which extends protection against discrimination to both religious persons
and homosexual persons. The balance struck in the case at bar reflects a
position which is respectful of the views of both sides when one looks at the
totality of the context.
132
Beyond this, nothing in Vriend v. Alberta, [1998] 1 S.C.R. 493,
or the existing s. 15 case law speaks to a constitutionally enforced inability
of Canadian citizens to morally disapprove of homosexual behaviour or
relationships: it is a feeble notion of pluralism that transforms “tolerance”
into “mandated approval or acceptance”. In my view, the inherent dignity of
the individual not only survives such moral disapproval, but to insist on the
alternative risks treating another person in a manner inconsistent with their
human dignity: there is a potential for a collision of dignities. Surely a
person’s s. 2 (a) or s. 2 (b) Charter right to hold beliefs
which disapprove of the conduct of others cannot be obliterated by another
person’s s. 15 rights, just like a person’s s. 15 rights cannot be trumped by
s. 2 (a) or 2 (b) rights. In such cases, there is a need for
reasonable accommodation or balancing. In my view, in the context of this
case, the decision reflects a constitutionally acceptable balance.
133
It was submitted before this Court in the case at bar that the best
interests of children includes education about “tolerance”. I, obviously,
agree. As was quoted above from Ross, supra, at para. 42: “The
school is an arena for the exchange of ideas and must, therefore, be premised
upon principles of tolerance and impartiality so that all persons within the
school environment feel equally free to participate.” But to suggest that
“tolerance” requires the mandatory approval of the Three Books, which is what
the appellants seek as a remedy, begs the question as to what the books portray
and the capability of children to receive the messages in the books in a manner
which is consistent with the parental determination of what is in their best
interests. This is a question regarding which reasonable parents disagree, regarding
which some form of accommodation between disagreeing parents has to be struck,
and regarding which, in my view, given the paramount role of parents vis-à-vis
their children, explained above, significant deference is owed to parents.
134
I also note that language espousing “tolerance” ought not be employed as
a cloak for the means of obliterating disagreement. Section 15 of the Charter
protects all persons from discrimination on numerous enumerated and analogous
grounds, including the grounds of religion and sexual orientation. Language
appealing to “respect”, “tolerance”, “recognition” or “dignity”, however, must
reflect a two-way street in the context of conflicting beliefs, as to do
otherwise fails to appreciate and respect the dignity of each person involved
in any disagreement, and runs the risk of escaping the collision of dignities
by saying “pick one”. But this cannot be the answer. In my view, the
relationship between s. 2 and s. 15 of the Charter , in a truly free
society, must permit persons who respect the fundamental and inherent dignity
of others and who do not discriminate, to still disagree with others and even
disapprove of the conduct or beliefs of others. Otherwise, claims for
“respect” or “recognition” or “tolerance”, where such language becomes a
constitutionally mandated proxy for “acceptance”, tend to obliterate
disagreement.
135
It is often suggested, and was in fact submitted by many of the parties
before this Court, that religious belief and practice, and public policy decisions
based on such views, ought to effectively be privatized, retreated into the
religious “closets” of home or church. I note, however, that the essence of
freedom of religion or conscience, and in my view also the essence of freedom
of expression more generally, was addressed in the following passage from
Dickson J.’s reasons in R. v. Big M Drug Mart Ltd., [1985] 1 S.C.R. 295,
at pp. 336-37:
A truly free society is one which can accommodate a
wide variety of beliefs, diversity of tastes and pursuits, customs and codes of
conduct. A free society is one which aims at equality with respect to the
enjoyment of fundamental freedoms and I say this without any reliance upon s.
15 of the Charter . Freedom must surely be founded in respect for the
inherent dignity and the inviolable rights of the human person. The essence of
the concept of freedom of religion is the right to entertain such religious
beliefs as a person chooses, the right to declare religious beliefs openly and
without fear of hindrance or reprisal, and the right to manifest religious
belief by worship and practice or by teaching and dissemination. But the
concept means more than that.
Freedom can primarily be characterized by the
absence of coercion or constraint. If a person is compelled by the state or
the will of another to a course of action or inaction which he would not
otherwise have chosen, he is not acting of his own volition and he cannot be
said to be truly free. One of the major purposes of the Charter is to
protect, within reason, from compulsion or restraint. Coercion includes not
only such blatant forms of compulsion as direct commands to act or refrain from
acting on pain of sanction, coercion includes indirect forms of control which
determine or limit alternative courses of conduct available to others. Freedom
in a broad sense embraces both the absence of coercion and constraint, and the
right to manifest beliefs and practices. Freedom means that, subject to such
limitations as are necessary to protect public safety, order, health, or morals
or the fundamental rights and freedoms of others, no one is to be forced to act
in a way contrary to his beliefs or his conscience.
I note that
this passage refers to many “public” words, such as “declare” and “manifest”.
This was not, in my view, an accident. Perhaps, if as submitted before this
Court, it is preferable that the development of beliefs relating to religious
faith or morality be undertaken exclusively in the private sphere, then perhaps
so too should the development of beliefs as to what is or is not appropriate
sexual conduct be undertaken in the private sphere, since it is clear that the
nature of both kinds of belief, although constitutionally protected, are
publicly contested. In my view, however, it is preferable that no
constitutionally protected right be forced exclusively into the private
sphere. In cases where there is a conflict between public expressions of
rights, an accommodation or balance will need to be struck, either by defining
the scope of the rights so as to avoid the conflict, or within s. 1 balancing.
But an acceptable resolution when rights collide is not to allow one rights
claim to obliterate the public exercise of another right. An acceptable
resolution is accommodation or balancing: “Freedom of religion, conscience and
association coexist with the right to be free of discrimination based on sexual
orientation” (Trinity Western, supra, at para. 34).
C. Section 76 of the School Act
136
The discussion above is consistent with the proper understanding of
“secular” and “non-sectarian”, terms referred to in s. 76 of the School Act,
which provides general direction as to how all schools are to be conducted. A
proper understanding of these concepts was well elaborated by the Court of
Appeal below and has been discussed in the reasons of the Chief Justice. (See
also, generally, Iain T. Benson, “Notes Towards a (Re)Definition of the
‘Secular’” (2000), 33 U.B.C. L. Rev. 519.)
137
In my view, Saunders J. below erred in her assumption that “secular”
effectively meant “non-religious”. This is incorrect since nothing in the Charter ,
political or democratic theory, or a proper understanding of pluralism demands
that atheistically based moral positions trump religiously based moral
positions on matters of public policy. I note that the preamble to the Charter
itself establishes that “. . . Canada is founded upon principles
that recognize the supremacy of God and the rule of law”. According to the
reasoning espoused by Saunders J., if one’s moral view manifests from a
religiously grounded faith, it is not to be heard in the public square, but if
it does not, then it is publicly acceptable. The problem with this approach is
that everyone has “belief” or “faith” in something, be it atheistic, agnostic
or religious. To construe the “secular” as the realm of the “unbelief” is
therefore erroneous. Given this, why, then, should the religiously informed
conscience be placed at a public disadvantage or disqualification? To do so
would be to distort liberal principles in an illiberal fashion and would
provide only a feeble notion of pluralism. The key is that people will
disagree about important issues, and such disagreement, where it does not
imperil community living, must be capable of being accommodated at the core of
a modern pluralism.
138
As Mackenzie J.A. stated in the Court of Appeal below, at paras. 31-34:
Today, adherents of non-Christian religions and
persons of no religious conviction are much more visible in the public square
than a century ago and any truly free society must recognize and respect this
diversity in its public schools. “Strictly secular and non-sectarian” must be
interpreted in a manner that respects this reality. That respect precludes any
religious establishment or indoctrination associated with any particular
religion in the public schools but it cannot make religious unbelief a
condition of participation in the setting of the moral agenda. Such a
disqualification would be contrary to the fundamental freedom of conscience and
religion set forth in s. 2 of the Charter , and the right to equality in
s. 15 . It would negate the right of all citizens to participate democratically
in the education of their children in a truly free society.
“Non-sectarian”, while originally it may have been
limited to a Christian context of various denominations and sects, must now be
extended to include other religious traditions as well as those who do not
adhere to any religious faith or tradition. The section precludes the teaching
of religious doctrine associated with any particular faith or tradition (except
in a context which is intended to educate students generally about the various
religious traditions for the purpose of advancing religious tolerance and
understanding and does not advance any particular doctrinal position over
others).
In my opinion, “strictly secular” in the School
Act can only mean pluralist in the sense that moral positions are to be
accorded standing in the public square irrespective of whether the position
flows out of a conscience that is religiously informed or not. The meaning of
strictly secular is thus pluralist or inclusive in its widest sense. This
interpretation accords with Big M, where the fatal flaw in the Lord’s
Day Act was its link to exclusively Christian doctrine rather than
morality. It also accords with the distinction between morality and dogma or
creed in s. 76(2).
No society can be said to be truly free where only
those whose morals are uninfluenced by religion are entitled to participate in
deliberations related to moral issues of education in public schools. In my
respectful view “strictly secular” so interpreted could not survive scrutiny in
the light of the freedom of conscience and religion guaranteed by s. 2 of the Charter
and the equality rights guaranteed by s. 15 .
139
Therefore, in my view, the dual requirements that education be “secular”
and “non-sectarian” refer to keeping the schools free from inculcation or
indoctrination in the precepts of any religion, and do not prevent persons with
religiously based moral positions on matters of public policy from
participating in deliberations concerning moral education in public schools.
Regardless of the personal convictions of individual members, the reasons
invoked by the Board for refusing to approve the books — notably the fact that
parents in the community held certain religious and moral views and the need to
respect their constitutional right to freedom of religion and their primary
role as educators of their children — raise secular concerns that could
properly be considered by the Board.
140
The discussion above is also consistent with a proper interpretation of
the requirement, set out is s. 76 of the School Act, that the “highest
morality” be inculcated. I agree with Mackenzie J.A. that this notion ought to
be defined as a principle that “maintain[s] the allegiance of the whole of
society including the plurality of religious adherents and those who are not
religious” (para. 35). There can be no doubt that the values expressed in the Charter
derive from a wide social consensus and should be considered as principles of
the “highest morality” within the meaning of s. 76 of the School Act.
Consequently, public schools in British Columbia are obliged to conform their
teaching to Charter values, such as the principle of non-discrimination
against persons on the basis of their sexual orientation, embodied by s. 15 and
affirmed by several decisions of this Court, such as Egan v. Canada,
[1995] 2 S.C.R. 513, and Vriend, supra. Such an interpretation
is consistent with this Court’s approach to the statutory requirement,
considered in Trinity Western, supra, that the British Columbia
College of Teachers establish standards for the competence of its members
“having regard to the public interest” (para. 11). Iacobucci and Bastarache
JJ. held that “the pluralistic nature of society and the extent of diversity in
Canada are important elements that must be understood by future teachers
because they are the fabric of the society within which teachers operate and
the reason why there is a need to respect and promote minority rights” (para.
13). Thus, the College of Teachers could properly, in light of the “public
interest” requirement, consider alleged discriminatory practices in an
institution requesting accreditation of its training program for teachers.
Likewise, in my view, it can be said that the requirement of “highest morality”
incorporates such fundamental values.
141
However, in the implementation of this general School Act-mandated
policy of promoting tolerance, the need to strive for an appropriate balance
between competing Charter rights — in the case at bar, the parents’
freedom of religion under s. 2 (a) and the right of same-sex couples and
their children to equality under s. 15 — remains a relevant consideration in
the exercise by the School Board of its powers to approve complementary
educational resources for local use. Thus, the question becomes whether the
Board struck such an appropriate balance between these competing rights, taking
into account the entire context, including the contents of the curriculum in
its entirety, the framework established by the School Act and the nature
of the Board’s own authority as a delegate of the parents’ right to educate
their children. This question can only be answered by applying the relevant
standard of review to the Board’s decision.
V. Standard of Review
142
I agree with the Chief Justice that the standard of review is to be
established upon a consideration of the factors under the pragmatic and
functional approach and the appropriate standard of review in this case is
reasonableness. First, the absence of a privative clause or a legislative
direction to defer to the school boards, while consistent with a less
deferential standard of review, should be considered in light of the
corresponding absence of a clause expressly allowing the decisions of the Board
to be appealed before the courts and should not be given undue weight when an
administrative decision maker, rather than an adjudicative body, is concerned.
Second, the decision to approve the books or not requires the Board to balance
the interests of different groups, a function which falls within its core area
of expertise as a locally elected representative body. As Major J. stated in Nanaimo
(City) v. Rascal Trucking Ltd., [2000] 1 S.C.R. 342, 2000 SCC 13, at
para. 35:
Municipal councillors are elected by the constituents they represent
and as such are more conversant with the exigencies of their community than are
the courts. The fact that municipal councils are elected representatives of
their community, and accountable to their constituents, is relevant in
scrutinizing intra vires decisions. The reality that municipalities
often balance complex and divergent interests in arriving at decisions in the
public interest is of similar importance. In short, these considerations
warrant that the intra vires decisions of municipalities be reviewed
upon a deferential standard.
The same
considerations apply to an elected school board. As I indicated above, I am of
the view that the Board’s decision did not contradict the requirements of the School
Act or the ministerial directives. Thus, it was made within the ambit of
the discretion granted by the Act and should normally be reviewed upon a
deferential standard.
143
As the Chief Justice points out, however, the decision also has a
significant human rights dimension. This Court has recognized that such
decisions ought to be treated with less deference, as the courts have primary
expertise in interpreting and applying human rights instruments and balancing
fundamental rights claims: see, e.g., Ross, supra, at para. 24.
While I agree with this general approach, I believe courts should be reluctant
to assume that they possess greater expertise than administrative decision
makers with respect to all questions having a human rights component. In my
view, the pragmatic and functional analysis was and is meant to be contextual
in nature, and specific factors considered in previous cases, such as the
presence of a human rights component, should not be looked at in isolation.
Thus, in Trinity Western, supra, other factors also pointed to a
less deferential standard: the legislation empowering the College of Teachers
to grant accreditation to teacher training programs expressly subjected its
decisions to appellate review and, unlike the School Board in the case at bar,
the College of Teachers was not directly elected by citizens. More
importantly, courts should recognize that administrative decisions may involve
a spectrum of human rights issues, not all of which are within the courts’ core
area of expertise. Canada (Attorney General) v. Mossop, [1993] 1 S.C.R.
554, leaves no doubt that when administrative tribunals make general
determinations of law concerning basic human rights issues and affecting
numerous future cases, little or no deference is to be expected. However, in
the case at bar, the Board made a largely factual determination with a view to
balancing local parental concerns against the broad objective of promoting Charter
values such as tolerance and respect through a comprehensive educational
program spanning several years. In my view, this is the very kind of
polycentric decision described by Bastarache J. in Pushpanathan v. Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), [1998] 1 S.C.R. 982, and should
thus attract greater deference.
144
Third, I agree with the Chief Justice that the purpose for which the
legislature granted the Board authority to approve supplementary learning
materials was to allow for local input in choosing such materials, and that
such purpose should be accorded appropriate weight. However, as I explained
above, the presence of human rights issues among the factors relevant to the
Board’s decision in this case does not defeat this purpose; there is no
indication that such exercise of local democracy, when made within the
boundaries set by the School Act and the Minister, is strictly limited
to uncontroversial matters. Finally, as mentioned above, the nature of the
problem does not involve the strict application of legal rules or the
interpretation of law, but a highly contextual and polycentric analysis. Thus,
while, as will be explained below, I believe the Board’s decision to be
justified under a reasonableness standard, it is also my view that the
foregoing considerations should inform this Court’s examination of this
decision.
VI. Reviewing the Three Books Resolution
145
As stated at the outset, I am of the view that the decision of the
School Board was clearly a reasonable one. To explain why, I will revisit one
contextual factor, and address several specific factors.
A. This Case Is About Accommodation or
Balancing Between Competing Interests
146
Must subject matter involving portrayals of same-sex parents or couples
be placed on a list of approved teaching materials for children of five and six
years of age? Were such materials approved at the provincial level, any
teacher in any school district in British Columbia could, at his or her
discretion, employ the materials. In the absence of provincially approved
materials, however, individual communities are empowered, by the operation of
the School Act, to approve or not approve resource materials. Perhaps
some parents, as their collective will manifests in the decisions of their
elected school trustees, might answer the above question in the affirmative.
Other parents may be of the view that this subject matter is too complicated,
too “controversial”, too far removed and different from their life experiences,
too confusing, for children of the tender years of five and six. This parental
view will yield a negative response to the above question. Surely it cannot be
said that the Charter mandates only one educational policy response,
especially when the totality of context of the curricula for grades K-12
inclusive are considered. Also, as noted above, with regard to the disapproval
of decisions made, either at the provincial or local level, recourse can be
sought, as it is on most matters of public policy, at the ballot box.
147
The School Board was clearly caught between two vocal and passionate
sides in this dispute. As was discussed above, accommodation is the
overarching factor in the case at bar. Clearly, this case involves competing
interests: those of parents in same-sex relationships and certain teachers,
such as Mr. Chamberlain, who desire to have books portraying parents in
same-sex relationships employed in K-1, and those of parents who are concerned
about the use of such material in classrooms with children of such a young
age. I am of the view, on these facts, that while it would not have been
unconstitutional to approve the Three Books for use as educational resources,
it is similarly not unconstitutional not to approve the books. The Charter
does not demand that five- and six-year-olds be exposed to parents in same-sex
relationships within a dimension of a school curriculum. Nor, explicitly, does
the curriculum itself. Therefore, any decision as to whether and when such
subject matter is raised in the classroom is left to the operation of the School
Act. As discussed above, in the absence of approval of material addressing
the subject matter at the provincial level, school boards have a discretion to
approve or not approve complementary educational materials: the nature of the
division of responsibilities between the provincial Ministry of Education and
the school boards is clear. Underpinning and prior to this division of
responsibilities, however, is the primary and paramount role of parents in the
moral education of their children: state interests, be they provincial or
local, are subsidiary to those of parents in the education context.
148
In addition, as I mentioned above, the PP curriculum itself expressly
recognizes that “[t]he family is the primary educator in the development of
children’s attitudes and values” (p. 6) and sets forth several guidelines for
dealing with “sensitive issues”. Notably, it recommends that teachers
“[i]nform parents of the objectives of the curriculum before addressing any
sensitive issues in the classroom and provide opportunities for parents to be
involved in their children’s learning”, “[e]xplore alternatives to allow
parents to share the responsibility for student attainment of the Personal
Development learning outcomes”, and “[o]btain the support of the school
administration before beginning instruction on any potentially sensitive
issues” (p. 6). In addition, while “[a]ll resources on the Ministry’s recommended
list have been thoroughly screened for social concerns from a provincial
perspective”, “teachers must consider the appropriateness of any resource
from the perspective of the local community” (p. 188 (emphasis added)).
Thus, the curriculum established by the Minister clearly contemplates that even
provincially approved resources may be considered inappropriate for use in certain
local communities, and that parental concerns about such “sensitive issues”
constitute a valid and proper consideration in the exercise of the teacher’s
discretion to use such materials. In my view, there appears to be no reason
why such concerns or controversy could not equally be considered by the school
board in deciding whether to approve complementary materials for local use.
149
Are the books “controversial”? If so, how? They are alleged to be
controversial since they deal with the subject matter of parents in a same-sex
relationship. Is choosing to not approve books which portray parents in a
same-sex relationship something capable of being done in pursuit of the
“highest morality”? In my view, it is clear, as per the reasons of the Court
of Appeal below, that a proper understanding of the “highest morality” must
include the principle of non-discrimination. But, does the failure to portray
same-sex parents at all to K-1 students result in discrimination? If so, how
must same-sex parents be portrayed? Must they be just shown to exist as one
family model amongst many, or must they be portrayed as “morally equivalent” to
heterosexual parents? Is a distinction between these two methods of portrayal
possible when the target audience is comprised of five- and six‑year-old
children?
150
The moral status of same-sex relationships is controversial: to say
otherwise is to ignore the reality of competing beliefs which led to this
case. This moral debate, however, is clearly distinct from the very clear
proposition that no persons are to be discriminated against on the basis of
sexual orientation. The appellants, using the courts, seek to make this
controversial moral issue uncontroversial by saying that s. 15 and “Charter
values” are required to eradicate moral beliefs, because the hypothesis is that
possible future acts of discrimination are likely to emanate from such beliefs.
This is not, however, necessarily true. As discussed above, many persons are
staunchly committed to the principle of non-discrimination and the inherent
dignity of all persons, and yet concurrently hold views which disapprove of the
conduct of some persons. To permit the courts to wade into this debate risks
seeing s. 15 protection against discrimination based upon sexual orientation
being employed aggressively to trump s. 2 (a) protection of the freedom
of religion and conscience, as well as s. 15 protection against discrimination
based on conscience, religious or otherwise. This would be a reading of the Charter
that is inconsistent with the case law of this Court, which does not permit a
hierarchy of rights, as well as inconsistent with the purpose of the Charter
itself.
151
The “controversy” or parental concern to which the School Board was
responding when it decided to not approve the Three Books revolves, in my view,
around two factors: (1) the nature of the portrayal of same-sex parents in the
Three Books; and (2) the capacity of K-1 age students to interpret this
portrayal. It is clear that the books have normative content, but the question
is what content is perceived by five- and six-year-olds, a determination which
must be addressed from the perspective of parents, who are the arbiters of such
a question.
152
I note finally that judicial review as to constitutionality is about
what is essential, constitutionally mandated, rather than what may or may not
be desirable as a matter of educational policy or personal preference. This
case is not about whether or not this Court thinks that it would be preferable,
as a pedagogical question, that the Three Books be approved. On this point, I
note a relevant comment, within the majority reasons of Burger C.J. in the U.S.
Supreme Court case of Wisconsin v. Yoder, supra, that: “courts
are not school boards or legislatures, and are ill-equipped to determine the
‘necessity’ of discrete aspects of a State’s program of compulsory education”
(p. 235). Moreover, in my view, the standard of reasonableness simpliciter
is normally associated with cases where there are a number of reasonable
outcomes among which the decision maker is entitled to choose. Thus, courts
should be wary of using this standard to effectively constrain the decision
maker to a single specific outcome. This accords with the general approach to
judicial review of administrative action adopted by this Court. In Canada
(Director of Investigation and Research) v. Southam Inc., [1997] 1
S.C.R. 748, Iacobucci J., after describing this standard, wrote for a unanimous
Court, at para. 80:
[A] reviewer, and even one who has embarked upon review on a standard
of reasonableness simpliciter, will often be tempted to find some way to
intervene when the reviewer him- or herself would have come to a conclusion
opposite to the tribunal’s. Appellate courts must resist such temptations.
. . . Judicial restraint is needed if a cohesive, rational, and, I
believe, sensible system of judicial review is to be fashioned.
B. The School Board’s Decision Was
Reasonable
153
Since a school board is not a court or tribunal, it does not give
detailed reasons to support the decisions in its resolutions. When facing a
school board decision, courts are thus forced to read into what went on, with
some speculation. Much of the justifying provided has clearly benefited from
such hindsight. It has been established, however, that the Board was generally
motivated by concerns related to age appropriateness and parental concern.
1. Role of the School Board
154
As developed at length above, it is well established in Canadian law
that parents have the primary authority and responsibility for the moral and
religious education of their children, and that responsibility is then
delegated to teachers, administrators and schools: the state’s interest is
secondary. In the context of the case at bar, the School Board is an
instrument by which, in the absence of an already clearly developed consensus
at the provincial level (whether pertaining to curriculum subject matter or to
education resource materials), consensus is developed locally, a reflection of
what parents deem is in their children’s best interests. These determinations
must be consistent with the framework of the curriculum developed by the
province, and, in my view, also complement that framework by permitting a more
localized evaluation, based upon an individualized parental examination of
their children’s needs.
155
This understanding of shared authority, in my view, is clearly inherent
in the nature of the School Act itself, insofar as the School Act
permits, in the absence of provincial selection of learning resources, room for
local selection of complementary “educational resource materials”: local
variation exists to respond to views of local communities and parents. Note
that Ministerial Orders reproduced above refer to “educational resources
materials that the board considers are appropriate” (emphasis added).
This must have some significance. If not, this case would provide an odd
logic: in the absence of the development of consensus regarding curriculum
subject matter or resources at the provincial approval level, can parents,
teachers or interest groups, who perhaps would not have succeeded at the
provincial level (note that Mr. Chamberlain did first bring his request to the
Ministry of Education), demand for a particular subject matter or resource for
a particular age level to be addressed or employed at the local level, when
that local level is precisely an environment within which it is highly likely
that parents will be concerned and highly unlikely to voluntarily choose to
employ such material at such a young age? Does the Charter dictate the
minutia of school curricula such as to dictate whether material must be treated
in K-1 rather than possibly at a later grade level? Specifically, does it
require that all types of families be depicted in K-1? In my view, the answer
is no.
156
The School Board had two choices: to approve or not to approve, that
was the question. The appellants’ argument seems to tend towards the
conclusion that the School Board had no choice but to approve the books. What
is a better educational choice, permit the Three Books to be taught in K-1
against the wishes of some parents and then provide for the exclusion of
certain children from the class as suggested by the appellants, or to teach a
general lesson about tolerance and respect for people by less controversial
means and leave the issue of parents in same-sex relationships and
homosexuality for a time when students are better positioned to address the
issues involved and better positioned to reconcile the potentially incongruous
messages they may be receiving on this subject matter? The choice is
difficult. The choice, however, was specifically intended to be made
locally, as the School Act envisages.
157
The views of school trustees may vary from area to area and may differ
regarding the appropriateness of particular materials in their district. The
views of individual trustees within a district will also likely vary, and as on
all matters of policy, decisions will need to be reached by consensus or, when
necessary, by vote. Not only does this reality permit a recognition of
differing views held by various communities within the province, but such
variation is specifically envisioned by the operation of the School Act.
This status quo, not unexpectedly, will result in some local variation
between districts in the nature of the “educational resource materials” lists.
For example, the trial judge noted, at para. 97, that two of the Three Books
have been approved for use in other school districts in B.C. Any local list,
however, must be consistent with the general framework of the curriculum, and
must certainly not include materials which contradict the demands of the
curriculum. Lastly, any local variation, like the provincial curriculum
itself, is not static: school trustees, like provincial politicians, will
ultimately face the consequences of their decisions at the ballot box.
158
When the School Board engages in the local evaluation of complementary
“educational resource materials”, they are governed by Regulation 8800.1, which
sets out the criteria and procedure for evaluation. The key dimensions of that
regulation demand that the learning resources be “relevant to the learning
outcomes and content of the course or courses”, “appropriate in terms of the
age, maturity, and learning needs of the student for whom it is intended”,
“appropriate for the particular community in which it will be used”, and “fair,
objective, free from gratuitous violence, propaganda and discrimination, except
where a teaching/learning situation requires illustrative material to develop
critical thinking”. The procedure for obtaining approval is also found in that
regulation. It preliminarily addresses that responsibility for selecting
resources rests with the Superintendent of Schools and other professional staff
employed by the Board. It also states that on “controversial matters”, the
Board “expects that good professional judgement will be exercised and that there
will be consultation with others, including parents and professional colleagues
where deemed appropriate”. Regulation 8800.1 is complemented by Policy 8425,
which specifically addresses materials selection for the PP curriculum. It
reiterates the need for “age and developmentally appropriate” materials and
also reiterates the need to involve parents, students and staff in the
materials review process.
2. Reasons Given by the Superintendent and the
Board, and their Relevance to the Curriculum Requirements
159
The initial request for approval of the Three Books by Mr. Chamberlain
was addressed by the ESC, as demanded by Regulation 8800.1. The ESC was headed
by Superintendent Renihan. He expressed his position on the Three Books as
follows:
Based on my experience in education and curriculum,
particularly my experience as Assistant Deputy Minister, Curriculum and
Evaluation (1989 to 1993) and Executive Director, Curriculum and Instruction
(1987 to 1998) for the Department of Education, Province of Saskatchewan, I
questioned whether the Three Books were appropriate for the Kindergarten and
Grade One level. The PP K-7 curriculum refers to family models but does not
specifically address homosexuality or same-sex couples. In my view, the Three
Books were not necessary to achieve the learning objectives of the PP K-7
curriculum. I was of the view that if the Ministry had intended that
homosexuality and/or family models involving same-sex couples be a component of
the PP K-7 curriculum for Kindergarten and Grade One, given the contentious and
sensitive nature of the topic, such would have been expressly included in the
Ministry’s PP K-7 Integrated Resource Package (“IRP”). As the Ministry had not
specifically included such in the IRP or included any other resources on
homosexuality or same-sex couples for K-1, I anticipated that any decision by
the District to approve such would be very controversial amongst parents in the
District and a decision in this regard must come from the Board as elected
representatives of the community. I was also concerned that the right of
parents to be the primary educators in the development of attitudes and values
of Kindergarten and Grade One children be maintained. I found it difficult to
conclude that by approving the Three Books for Kindergarten and Grade One, the
school would be providing a supportive role and maintaining a partnership
between home and school.
Notably, he
was of the view that the books were likely not age appropriate, that they were
not necessary to meet the objectives of the PP curriculum, and that parents
were likely to be concerned about the approval of such materials, especially
given the lack of any similar approved materials at the provincial level. As
stated in Superintendent Renihan’s affidavit, his professional opinion was
generally concurred with by the other members of the ESC:
Given the review of the Three Books by Dr. Cynthia Lewis, Maureen
MacDonald, the EDC, Dr. Wayne Taylor and myself, and our collective concerns,
it was decided to not recommend approval of the Three Books to the Board and
specifically to word the Administrative Memorandum to go to the Board along
with the Three books as only requesting “that the Board consider the
(Three Books)”. [Emphasis in original.]
This sending
of the issue to the Board is consistent with both Regulation 8800.1 and Policy
8425.
160
The Board then considered the Three Books. The lack of a
“recommendation to approve” from the ESC was a factor considered by the
trustees: Trustee Polak stated “I was cognizant that senior District staff
. . . are highly qualified in the areas of curriculum required
learning resources and the fact that such were not recommending approval was
duly noted.”
161
Four of the six trustees were of the view that the Three Books were not
appropriate for K-1 students. The School Board did not have all of the expert
views before them that are found in the record. These four trustees voted
their conscience, unable to conclude, based on their perception of parental
concern and the demands of the curriculum, that such educational materials
ought to be approved for K-1. Responding to parental concern is a valid and
secular concern. Two other trustees voted against the Resolution, in favour of
approving the Three Books.
162
Trustee Mary R. Polak states in her affidavit that:
The questions that I considered relevant to the
Three Books Motion were:
1. Do the Three Books deal with the subject
matter in a way that is appropriate given the age and developmental maturity of
Kindergarten and Grade One children and the learning needs of these children;
2. Are the Three Books necessary given the
required learning outcomes for Personal Planning K-7; and
3. Do the Three Books deal with the subject
matter in a way that reflects the needs and values of the Surrey community
including parents?
Such concerns
are clearly appropriate, and consistent with the School Act and
Regulation 8800.1 and Policy 8425.
163
Further, Trustee Polak’s affidavit, certified as accurate within
Superintendent Renihan’s affidavit, describes as follows the various arguments
given by the trustees in favour of their respective positions. It states:
The discussion of the Board focused on the fact that
the Three Books raise issues of a sensitive nature which parents must be
involved in, and their concerns given weight, in accordance with Policy 8800
and the Regulation thereto and also new Policy 8425.
Trustee Chisholm indicated to the Board that he
would not support the Three Books Motion because the Three Books were only
going to be used to initiate discussion in the classroom.
Trustee Stilwell responded to Mr. Chisholm by
indicating that her concern was exactly as stated by Mr. Chisholm, the Three
Books would initiate discussion on a sensitive issue, without involving
parents. Trustee Stilwell stated that in her view initiating discussion in the
classroom on this sensitive topic without including parents would be wrong.
Trustee Tymoschuk spoke in support of the Three
Books Motion. He indicated that he had two key concerns with approval of the
Three Books as instructional learning resources for Kindergarten and Grade
One. His first concern was that if the Board approved the Three Books, all
Kindergarten and Grade one students in the District would be exposed to the
issues raised by such. There would be little or no choice for parents with
respect to whether they desired to have their children exposed to such issues.
Secondly, Trustee Tymoschuk indicated to the Board that he had “done his
homework” prior to the meeting. He indicated that he had read the Three Books
at least twice together with his wife. At that time, Trustee Tymoschuk had a
child in Kindergarten and he stated to the Board that he and his wife had
reviewed the Three Books as parents. He indicated that he and his wife had
come to the conclusion that the Three Books were not age appropriate for
Kindergarten and Grade One because they could create confusion and conflict.
He expressed to the Board his view, as a parent, that most Kindergarten and
Grade One children are curious by nature and if the Three Books were used in
Surrey classrooms, Kindergarten and Grade One students would begin to ask
questions that many parents given the sensitive nature of the topic would not
want to have to respond to at such young ages.
164
Of particular importance to the decision of the Board with respect to
the Three Books was the fact, as referred to in the quote from Superintendent
Renihan above, that the provincial “recommended learning resources” as set out
by the Ministry of Education in the Integrated Resource Package for K-1,
particularly the “Family life education” “suborganizer” of the “Personal
Development” component did not, at that time, include any other resources
expressly dealing with homosexuality or same-sex couples/families. In fact, at
that time, none of the provincially approved “educational resource materials”
for any aspect of the K-1 curriculum addressed this subject matter.
165
As noted by the reasons of the Chief Justice, in October of 1996, the
B.C. Minister of Education, the Honourable Moe Sihota, made public statements
which suggested that same-sex parented families were amongst the family models
which he thought could be addressed under the PP curriculum. This was stated
while at the same time the Ministry had both, as of that date, refused to
approve the Three Books in this case at the provincial level and had also
failed to approve any “learning resources” to support such instruction. Thus,
this case came about since, after not getting the materials he wanted approved
by the Minister, Mr. Chamberlain turned to the local level.
166
In my view, what the Minister of Education thought personally is one
view of many, especially in light of his Ministry’s failure to take any
concrete action to include a resource on the subject matter for the K-1
curriculum. The more important question is: what does the PP curriculum
actually require, in terms of educational resource materials, to meet its
objectives? The reasons of the Chief Justice have argued that the Resolution
is unreasonable in that it directly contradicts what the curriculum intends or
requires. I disagree: the curriculum does not indicate that parents in a
same-sex relationship are to be addressed in K-1. Further, in the context of
judicial review, I am aware of a need to defer not only to the perceptions of
parents, but also to the views of the educational professionals who evaluated
the material before sending the issue to the School Board for the ultimate
determination of the issue.
167
Is the Resolution consistent with the demands of the curriculum? The
“Family life education” “suborganizer” refers to students being expected to
“identify a variety of models for family organization”. In my view, this
statement does not support the Chief Justice’s interpretation that “all
types of families found in the community should be discussed by K-1 students”
(para. 67) and that “discussing and understanding all family types” is a
“prescribed learning outcome” (para. 71). There must be some space for a
school board to refuse to approve a book, regardless of the fact that the book
actually concerns “family models” in the broadest understanding of the
concept. Based on the reasons of the Chief Justice, it would seem that a
school board could not exclude any book regarding any family model, because to
do so would be contrary to the curriculum’s reference to a “variety of models”
being addressed. But surely the imagination can conjure up some family models,
which despite existing in our society as a matter of fact, parents would rather
were not portrayed to five- and six-year-olds. I note that at the time of
trial, only three books had been approved by the province, which suggests that,
while there was a curriculum commitment to a “variety” of family models, the
provincial list was far from achieving a comprehensiveness standard of
portraying all families.
168
The “prescribed learning outcomes” for the K-1 “Family life education”
“suborganizer” include having children draw and write about their own families,
and having children talk about each other’s families. In a situation where
there is a child in the classroom who has same-sex parents, it is obvious that
these activities would raise the issue of same-sex parents. Even in such a
situation, however, it is not necessary that educational resource materials
which portray same-sex parents be generally approved for use in all classrooms
in a particular school district. As I will discuss below, there may be
instances where teachers may find it necessary, in their discretion, of course,
to discuss families with same-sex parents, and perhaps even employ materials in
the classroom.
169
I also think that the broader context of the Surrey Board’s curriculum
is relevant, in that the record indicates that in the later grades in the
curriculum, older students are introduced to some of the more complicated
dimensions of human sexuality, including the subject matter of homosexuality.
This is a recognition of the fact that the education of children continues
throughout the totality of their schooling: therefore, not all topics need to
be addressed in the first two years. Therefore, it becomes clear that this
case is not about addressing an educational context where the topic of
homosexuality is being completely excluded from the school. Beyond this, as
found by the Court of Appeal, it is clear that the School Board has a stringent
anti-discrimination policy, one that is taken seriously. Thus, the totality of
the context tends towards a conclusion that the Charter values of
equality and non-discrimination are being fostered by the School Board more
generally.
170
In my view, these considerations are consistent with the conclusion
reached by the Board and its professional staff that the books were not
necessary to attain the objectives set by the curriculum. While I agree with
the Chief Justice that, beyond necessity, relevance to these objectives is an
important consideration in any decision to approve supplementary materials, I
disagree that it is determinative in the case at bar. Indeed, the reasons
provided by Dr. Renihan and the discussion at the Board implied that the
relevance of the Three Books to the curriculum’s objective of representating a
variety of family types was assumed. The debate was as to the necessity of
this material to satisfy the K-1 curriculum. Relevance is but one factor in
the balance; otherwise, as discussed above, the Board would have no choice but
to approve all relevant materials (i.e., all books about families) sought to be
introduced by parents, teachers or interest groups, which would be incompatible
with the discretionary authority which the legislature clearly conferred upon
the Board. As I explained above, parental concerns concerning the age
appropriateness of the books and their impact on their ability to pass on their
religious views to their children also were factors that the Board was properly
entitled to consider.
171
What of the books themselves? Do they contain a neutral message? It is
clear that the reason why the books were proposed for approval by Mr.
Chamberlain and why they are found on the GALE list of recommended resources is
because they contain some normative content related to a positive portrayal of
parents in same-sex relationships. The appellants claim that the books are
harmless, insofar as they do not pronounce on the moral rightness or wrongness
of homosexual relationships or parents: they only show such families to exist,
as one amongst many models of family. The books, therefore, it is submitted,
are only about tolerating others and learning not to discriminate. In this
way, they espouse values that directly emanate from the Charter .
172
The respondent’s reading of local parental concern is that the books
portray same-sex parents as being on a moral par with heterosexual parents,
i.e., there are many kinds of relationships that are out there, and none is
better or worse than the others. This is a moral message, and a moral message of
some concern to these parents since they disapprove of same-sex relationships.
This view is concerned about the moral equating of homosexual parents with
heterosexual parents, which is implicit in the identification, in all three of
the books, of homosexual “Moms” and “Dads”. The message which caused concern,
in the words of one parent’s affidavit, is that: “Mommies and Daddies are seen
as good things in the eyes of my children and therefore the lifestyles of the
Mommies and Daddies in the stories must be acceptable”.
173
Another concern is that the natural curiosity of children will lead to
inquiries about homosexuality that parents are uncomfortable having raised at
school. For example, given that the basics of human reproduction, an
inherently heterosexual phenomenon, are a dimension of the curriculum to be
addressed in K-1, the concern is that when a discussion of “Mommies” and
“Daddies” manifests, perhaps the presence of two “Mommies” or two “Daddies”
might cause certain children to be exposed to issues or questions which might
seem, in the views of some parents, too complicated for children of five or six
years of age. This view was shared by ESC member and Surrey District Principal
Dr. Cynthia Lewis, who claimed:
My own view of the Three Books, based on my
expertise in curriculum, is that the stories themselves are relatively
innocuous but the social issues underlying the stories are sensitive. They are
sensitive because they bring in the social issue of same-sex couples. The
message of tolerance and inclusion is necessary at all grade levels but the
Three Books are meant to be used to deal with far broader social issues. In my
opinion, unless a child has had life experience regarding same-sex parents,
this topic could potentially be mysterious and confusing in Kindergarten and
Grade One. There is a risk of misinterpretation if the Three Books were
approved for use with all students in Kindergarten and Grade One.
174
The experts basically present two competing views of these Three Books.
One view is that they are simply books aimed at the dominant theme of
non-discrimination, with the presence of parents in a same-sex relationship
simply being tangential context. The books are therefore about acceptance.
The other view is that regardless of the valid and present acceptance theme, a
different message is also present: parents in same-sex relationships are being
portrayed as “normal” by being portrayed in a positive sense.
175
In my view, one book clearly purports to pronounce on the morality of
same-sex relationships: Asha’s Mums. In that book, there is the
following exchange:
When my turn came to talk about my drawing I said, “This is my brother
Mark and my mummies and me. We’re on our way to the Science Centre.”
Coreen said “How come you’ve got two mummies?”
“Because I do,” I said.
“You can’t have two mummies,” Judi insisted.
“Yes she can,” Rita said turning around in her seat.
“Just like you can have two aunts, and two daddies and two grandmas,”
yelled Diane from across the room.
Diane likes to yell.
“See,” I said to Coreen.
“My mum and dad said you can’t have two mothers living together. My
dad says it’s bad,” Coreen insisted.
“It’s not bad. My mummies said we’re a family because we live
together and love each other,” I said.
“But how come you have two?” Judi asked.
Before I could answer Terrence said to Ms. Samuels, “Is it wrong to
have two mummies?”
“Well . . .” Ms. Samuels began but Diane yelled, “It’s
not wrong if they’re nice to you and if you like them.” [Emphasis added.]
In my view,
this raises the issue of the morality of parents in same-sex relationships and
purports to pronounce on their moral status.
176
The other two books contain more subtle messages. In One Dad, Two
Dads, Brown Dad, Blue Dads, the key theme seems to be racial
discrimination, as what is being portrayed as normal about the dads is their
blue or green skin. One of the two key characters, Lou, has two blue dads.
Lou explains how his blue dads are just like other dads: they talk, sing, and
they even eat cookies in bed. The plot then continues, with the discussion
turning to “how they got that way”. The answer is clear: “They were blue when
I got them and blue they are still. And it’s not from a juice, or a toy, or a
pill.” The book closes with the speculation as to whether green dads exist.
Enter Jean, who claims that “I have two dads who both are green.”
177
Belinda’s Bouquet, is about an overweight girl who is made fun of
by a mean bus driver. After this incident, Belinda visits her best friend
Daniel’s house, and Belinda is comforted by Daniel’s (first) mother: “Belinda,
you tell that bus driver that your body belongs to you . . . .
It’s none of anybody else’s business what size your body is.” Belinda replies
that she is not going to eat lunch: “I’m going on a diet”, she says. “Maybe if
I stop eating so much, I won’t be fat.” The mother then seeks to empower
Belinda by telling her a story/parable about plant growth, within which a woman
planted a garden, and then tried to make all the plants the same by feeding
some plants less food/sunlight/water than others. We then learn that those
underfed flowers wilted, so the woman, realizing her foolishness, watered the
underfed flowers, letting them drink their fill. The children ask what became
of the plants, and the mother responds by pointing outside, where the woman
from the story/parable, who we now learn is “Mommy”, the second mother, is
tending to a multitude of healthy plants. Belinda then sprints in to finish
her snack, so that she doesn’t “wither and droop”. Everyone has a snack
together in the kitchen shared by “Mama and Mommy”. This book is clearly about
Belinda’s self-esteem, with the key difference being that it is set in a
non-traditional home.
178
In my view, the difference between the two general approaches to the
Three Books raises the question as to whether it is possible for parents in
same-sex relationships to be portrayed to five- and six-year-olds in a way
which reflects the subtle distinction between the clearly appropriate public
message of promoting non-discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation
while at the same time avoiding forcing a conclusion regarding the
controversial question of whether homosexual relationships (i.e., persons
acting on the basis of their sexual orientation) are morally acceptable. This
question relates to the notion of “age appropriateness”: do five- and
six-year-olds have the capacity and ability to differentiate between accepting
such portrayals as “another mode of being” that is not to be discriminated
against, without also considering that it is “just as good a mode of being”?
The second factual question relates to the significant emphasis in the expert
and parental testimony regarding the concern that to provide for the portrayal
of one view of parents in same-sex relationships at school and yet another at
home may give rise to a conflict of authority, which will cause “cognitive
dissonance” on the children’s part.
179
With regard to both the age appropriateness factor and the cognitive
dissonance point, the experts, not surprisingly, split. That having been said,
however, the views of the experts, plausible on both sides of the argument, are
of secondary importance since what is paramount and constitutionally protected
in an educational context is the views of parents. The parents are in the best
position to examine their child’s frame of perception and the likelihood that
books which portray parents in same-sex relationships will lead to their child
being curious about questions which the parents feel are best not addressed at
the ages of five and six.
180
The school trustees were of the view, based on their perception of the
concerns of parents, that the subject matter in the books was inappropriate for
children of five and six years of age. This is a determination rightly made by
parents. Since a decision at the provincial level was not made, the advantage
of making a decision at the local level, discussed above, is that parents can
undertake an individualized analysis of what is best for their children, and
represent this view to their local school board. Evaluating the cognitive
dissonance point could involve wading into hundreds of pages of testimony as to
whether or not certain theories of child developmental psychology are
convincing or not. Courts are ill-equipped for such analysis. Regardless, it
is clear that the experts’ views, offered in hindsight, convincing or not,
cannot impeach decisions arrived at by parents and communicated to their
representatives at the School Board. The only exception would be if it could
be shown that the parental views and decisions are not in the children’s “best
interests”, which is clearly not so in the case at bar.
181
Given the parental perception that the Three Books are not age
appropriate and risk causing cognitive dissonance, another factor, expressed by
several parents, arises: the fact that teachers are authority figures for young
children. Parents expressed this concern as follows:
My children see their teachers as authority figures and would
uncritically accept their teachers’ views about homosexuality and same-sex
relationships as trustworthy and accurate.
We are also teaching our children to respect and
obey authority, including their teachers. At the early stages of Kindergarten
and Grade One, we do not believe that our children can deal with a conflict
between what we are attempting to teach them about . . . and
what they may be introduced to at school.
Teachers are very influential in children’s lives,
especially at the lower grades. This is true of [my daughter] as I have taught
her to respect the authority of teachers.
This Court, in
Ross, supra, at para. 43, made a near identical observation:
Teachers occupy positions of trust and confidence, and exert
considerable influence over their students as a result of their positions. The
conduct of a teacher bears directly upon the community’s perception of the
ability of the teacher to fulfil such a position of trust and influence, and
upon the community’s confidence in the public school system as a whole.
Further, and
in particular reference to the facts of the case at bar, the reasons in Ross,
at para. 82, stated that: “Young children are especially vulnerable to the
messages conveyed by their teachers.” Given that the parents in the case at
bar have communicated their views to the School Board, to insist on the
materials being approved directly undermines parental authority, an authority
which the parents have only conditionally delegated to teachers and public
schools.
182
The Three Books Resolution only purported to not approve the Three Books
as approved educational resource materials. Thus, all it did was indicate that
the Three Books were not generally approved for all classrooms as materials
that could be employed to deliver the curriculum. The Resolution does not
preclude a change of view, either locally or provincially. Were the local
School Board or the provincial Ministry of Education to choose to employ books
in K-1 which portray parents in same-sex relationships, then teachers could, in
their discretion, employ the materials.
183
In addition, the Resolution is silent as to the possibility that the
Three Books could or could not be approved as Library Resources. Although this
question is not expressly before this Court, I agree with the Court of Appeal
that the criteria set out by the Board in Regulation 8800.1 do not reveal any
compelling reasons for the Board not to approve the books as Library
Resources. Notably, the approval criteria for such resources do not include
the requirement that the books be “appropriate for the particular community in
which it will be used”, which was crucial to the Board’s refusal to approve
them as Recommended Learning Resources.
184
As I noted above, the “prescribed learning outcomes” of the K-1 PP
curriculum, in a situation where there was a child with same-sex parents in the
classroom, might lead to the issue of parents in a same-sex relationship being
raised in class. Beyond this curriculum-related raising of the subject matter,
however, there are many other means by which it could be raised: consider
sleep-overs at a friend’s house, birthday parties, permission slips for field
trips (as per the plot of Asha’s Mums), car-pooling, parental
chaperoning, etc, in the context of a child who has parents in a same-sex
relationship. In such circumstances, teachers may feel it is necessary to
discuss the issue. In addition, as the Court of Appeal rightly noted, were the
books to be approved as Library Resources, their classroom use may be
appropriate in such circumstances, subject to the parents’ right to be informed
and, as described below, to “opt out”. This is different, however, than
including such subject matter as generally approved to be employed in all
classrooms in the School District. With regard to this alternative solution, I
note, in fact, that some parents who submitted affidavits in support of the
respondents referred to a variant of this possibility. One set of parents
suggested:
We are not suggesting that the Three Books not be
available in any situation. For example, we would support the Three Books
being available for presentation to children on a one-to-one basis where that
child has some life experience with the topic of same-sex couples. However, we
do not support the use of the Three Books for all students in a classroom to
introduce a homosexual couple . . . .
If some
parents seek to resist having their children exposed to the subject matter of
homosexuality in a situation where there is a child in the class with parents
in a same-sex relationship, then the situation where the children of such
parents may be excused from the class for a short time may arise. I note that
some school boards, cognizant that such a parental desire to have their children
“opted out” of certain subject matter might arise, have mechanisms by which
parents will be notified when sensitive or controversial subject matter is
going to be raised. Such mechanisms are geared at respecting the
constitutionally protected paramountcy of the parental role in the moral
education of their children. Ultimately, as per Adler, supra,
the ultimate parental response would be to remove children from the public
school system. However, in my view, this should be seen as a last resort, and
not as a natural alternative when there is an acceptable balance to be struck
between local parental concerns and a broader program of tolerance. When such
a balance is available, as in the case at bar, keeping the concerned children
in the public school system can only further and strengthen the message of
respect and tolerance that it wishes to inculcate.
185
Another way in which the subject matter of homosexuality or same-sex
parented families could be raised in K-1 classrooms might be in the context of
name-calling, slurs, or insults being used as harassment. It was submitted
before this Court that sexual orientation-related slurs are common in the
school context, often employed by younger children harbouring a complete lack
of understanding as to what the derogatory insult means. In such instances, it
would be expected that a teacher or administrator would take action: such
discriminatory behaviour is unacceptable and teachers’ discretion to combat it
by the mechanism of addressing sexual orientation in specific cases ought to be
acknowledged. This having been said, addressing name-calling is distinct from
the question at bar.
186
This case concerns policy choices regarding curriculum implementation,
decisions which are the responsibility of the province or the local school
board. It is not constitutionally mandated that five- and six-year-old
children be exposed to educational resource materials which portray parents in
same-sex relationships, especially when there is significant parental concern
that these materials may be confusing for children to whom they wish to teach
the subtle, but essential in the eyes of certain parents, distinction between
what may exist on the one hand and conduct which may not be morally right on
the other.
VII. Conclusion
187
I would therefore dismiss the appeal with costs throughout to the
respondent.
The following are the reasons delivered by
LeBel J. —
I. Introduction
188
I have had the advantage of reading the reasons of the Chief Justice,
and I concur with her disposition of the case. I agree with her that it can be
dealt with on the basis of administrative law principles. I also agree with
much of the substance of her analysis of those principles and their application
here. I part company with her approach, however, on the characterization of
the problem with the Board’s resolution, and on the methodology that should be
employed in reviewing it. In my view, the Board’s decision could not be upheld
even on the most deferential standard of review, because it was patently
unreasonable. It is therefore unnecessary to go through the full analysis of
the various factors used to determine the appropriate standard of judicial
review.
189
The Board reached its decision in a way that was so clearly contrary to
an obligation set out in its constitutive statute as to be not just
unreasonable but illegal. The School Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 412, directs
the Board to conduct all schools on strictly secular and non-sectarian
principles. The overarching concern motivating the Board to decide as it did
was accommodation of the moral and religious belief of some parents that
homosexuality is wrong, which led them to object to their children being
exposed to story books in which same-sex parented families appear. The Board
allowed itself to be decisively influenced by certain parents’ unwillingness to
countenance an opposed point of view and a different way of life. The question
then becomes whether the trustees were faithful to the mandate spelled out in
the statute. A decision taken on such a basis, whether reasonable or not,
cannot be called secular or non-sectarian within the meaning of the statute, on
any plausible interpretation. As a result, the decision amounts to a breach of
statute, is patently unreasonable, and should be quashed.
II. The Methodological Framework for
Reviewing the Board’s Decision
190
Interesting as it may be, a discussion on the applicable standard of
review seems to me to be a digression from the real issue presented by this
appeal. The pragmatic and functional approach has proven a useful tool in
reviewing adjudicative or quasi-judicial decisions made by administrative
tribunals. There are, however, limits to the usefulness of applying this
framework to its full extent in a different context.
191
When the administrative body whose decision is challenged is not a
tribunal, but an elected body with delegated power to make policy decisions,
the primary function of judicial review is to determine whether that body acted
within the bounds of the authority conferred on it. Courts must respect the
responsibility of such bodies to serve those who elected them, and will, as a
rule, interpret their statutory powers generously (see Shell Canada Products
Ltd. v. Vancouver (City), [1994] 1 S.C.R. 231, at p. 244, per
McLachlin J. (as she then was); Nanaimo (City) v. Rascal
Trucking Ltd., [2000] 1 S.C.R. 342, 2000 SCC 13, at para. 36; 114957
Canada Ltée (Spraytech, Société d’arrosage) v. Hudson (Town),
[2001] 2 S.C.R. 241, 2001 SCC 40, at para. 23). The decisions or actions of an
administrative body of this kind will be invalidated if they are plainly
contrary to the express or implied limitations on its powers. The mechanical
application, in this context, of a test which was developed with a quite
different kind of administrative body in mind is not only unnecessary, but may
also lead both to practical difficulties and to uncertainties about the proper
basis of judicial review.
192
When courts are called upon to review adjudicative decisions of
administrative tribunals, the key question is the basis on which the
legislature intended review by the courts to be available. This inquiry must
be undertaken bearing in mind the fact that the legislature has decided to take
the matter out of the hands of the courts and to give the tribunal primary
authority over it, as well as the axiom that no administrative body has untrammelled
discretion. Evidence of the degree of discretion granted to the tribunal is to
be found in its constitutive statute and a variety of other contextual
factors. Questions such as the presence or absence of a privative clause in
the legislation, the specialized nature of the subject matter, the expertise of
the tribunal, the legislature’s reasons for entrusting this decision to the
tribunal, and the nature of the question compared to the kinds of questions
courts are accustomed to considering, are relevant to the inquiry because they
shed light on the ultimate question: what standard of review the legislature
intended.
193
The decision under review here is different. Our Court is reviewing a
policy decision made by an elected body whose function is to run local schools
with the input of the local community. The full set of factors included in the
standard-of-review formula does not translate well into this context.
Consider, for example, the presence or absence of a privative clause. One
would not expect to find a privative clause in connection with the Board’s
decisions, and the absence of one in the statute in no way signals that the
legislature expected intervention by the courts in the Board’s day-to-day
business to be possible. Expertise is another factor which is more apposite in
the adjudicative context than it is here. Trustees are authorized to make
decisions not because they have any special expertise, but because they
represent the community. Their level of expertise does not indicate anything
about the extent of their discretion.
194
The ultimate question remains the legislature’s intention. Going
through the various factors in the “pragmatic and functional method” is not
always the best path to that intention. In the context of this appeal, we
should look instead to the statutory grant of power to the Board and the
conditions attached to it. The courts are responsible for ensuring that the
Board acts within the scope of its power. In my opinion, interference in the
Board’s functions on any other basis would generally be unwarranted.
195
I do not intend to cast any doubt on the validity of the pragmatic and
functional approach. On the contrary, I suggest that it is more consistent
with the philosophy underlying that approach to adapt the framework of judicial
review to varying circumstances and different kinds of administrative actors
than it is to go through the same checklist of factors in every case, whether
or not they are pertinent — a methodology which, I would suggest, is
neither pragmatic nor functional.
196
This Court’s jurisprudence on review of the actions of municipal
councils is instructive here, because municipalities share many of the
characteristics of the School Board. Like a municipal council, the Board is an
elected body whose role is to bring the views of the community into the making
of local policy decisions. Like a municipality, it exercises statutory powers,
and its autonomy is circumscribed by the language of the statute (see Public
School Boards’ Assn. of Alberta v. Alberta (Attorney General), [2000] 2
S.C.R. 409, 2000 SCC 45, at paras. 33-34, per Major J.). In this
crucial sense, both a school board and a municipality are unlike a legislature,
which has plenary law-making power within the limits of the Constitution.
197
In evaluating municipal actions, our Court has always focussed on
whether the action in question was authorized, not on whether it was
reasonable. A municipality’s enactment of a by-law “is reviewable to the
extent of determining whether the actions are intra vires” (Shell,
supra, at p. 273). A municipality is a creature of statute and can only
act pursuant to powers expressly conferred by statute, powers necessarily or
fairly implied by the statute, and ancillary powers indispensable to carrying
out its purpose (R. v. Sharma, [1993] 1 S.C.R. 650, at p. 668; Hudson,
supra, at para. 18). Actions not grounded in a power that can be derived
from the statute are invalid, and the extent of the municipality’s powers is
generally a matter of statutory interpretation.
198
In Nanaimo, supra, this Court held that the pragmatic and
functional framework applies to the adjudicative decisions of municipalities.
Review of the municipality’s decision was divided into two steps: the
preliminary question of whether the municipality had the authority to make this
kind of decision and the decision itself. As long as the decision was intra
vires, it was entitled to a high degree of deference, reflecting the fact
that municipal councillors represent their constituents and know more about
their needs and concerns than courts do (Nanaimo, at para. 35).
199
I would not take Nanaimo to imply that the framework for
reviewing adjudicative decisions of municipalities is different in principle
from the approach we have consistently taken in reviewing the actions of
municipalities generally. The two-step inquiry in Nanaimo is simply
another way of expressing the single test of vires that was applied in Shell,
supra. The municipality’s decision in Nanaimo would have been found
to be patently unreasonable if it had been so capricious or arbitrary as to be
beyond its legal powers. As this Court observed in Canada (Director of
Investigation and Research) v. Southam Inc., [1997] 1 S.C.R. 748, at para.
55, “[t]he standard of patent unreasonableness is principally a jurisdictional
test”.
200
The Board’s decision not to approve the three books had political and
adjudicative aspects. It could be analogized to the passage of a by-law, or to
the decision challenged in Nanaimo. In either case, the preliminary
question is whether the Board acted legally; it could not validly exercise a
power it did not have.
201
Although my conclusion on the legality of the decision leads me to think
that the issue is not directly raised by this appeal, I would hold that the
Board’s educational policy decisions, as long as they are made validly pursuant
to its powers, would be entitled to a very high level of deference. If
anything, there are even more compelling reasons for deference in this context
than there were in Nanaimo. What kind of educational materials are best
suited to realizing the province’s pedagogical objectives and to reflecting the
preferences of the particular community served by the Board is a question on
which courts are singularly ill-equipped to impose their views. Review of this
decision on a reasonableness standard, in my respectful view, fails to give due
recognition to the Board’s role as a local government body accountable to the
electorate. As long as it acts pursuant to its statutory powers, it is
carrying out the will of the community it serves and in general is answerable to
the community, not to the courts. But if it purports to exercise powers it
does not have, its actions are invalid.
202
I alluded above to the practical difficulties and the problems of
legitimacy that can ensue if the pragmatic and functional approach is applied
to the Board, and other bodies like it, in a formulaic way. Attention will be
diverted from the real issue of legality to an unnecessary exploration of
tangential questions. This needlessly drains the resources of courts,
particularly trial courts, which must often devote a great deal of time to
intricate arguments on the applicable standard of review before they can get to
the heart of the matter.
203
In any dispute about the standard of review, some combination of factors
will almost always indicate more deference while others point to less
deference. Indeed, at times a single factor will raise competing
considerations, as the second factor of expertise is said to do in this case.
As a result, it can be expected that the most frequent outcome of balancing the
factors on both sides will be a conclusion that review should be on the
compromise standard of reasonableness.
204
The reasonableness standard may entail practical problems of its own.
It is perhaps the most difficult of the three standards to apply in a manner
that is attentive both to the prerogatives of the administrative body and to
the court’s supervisory responsibilities. The difference between review on a
correctness standard and review on a standard of patent unreasonableness is
intuitive and relatively easy to observe. But many courts, including this one,
struggle to keep reasonableness analytically distinct from correctness on the
one hand and patent unreasonableness on the other. The application of the
reasonableness standard involves a delicate analysis that is necessary and
helpful when appropriate. The need for its conventional application becomes less
compelling in cases like this one, where the key issue to be resolved boils
down to a question of legality which turns on the interpretation of the
statutory grant of power.
205
The danger that the reasonableness standard could be overused leads, in
turn, to the danger that the line dividing the role of a local government body
from that of a reviewing court will be blurred. It is important to keep that
line distinct, for it helps to maintain the separation between the judiciary
and representative government. The insulation of the judicial and political
spheres from each other does not only protect our independent judiciary from
political interference (see Reference re Remuneration of Judges of the
Provincial Court of Prince Edward Island, [1997] 3 S.C.R. 3). It also
protects political bodies from excessive interference by the courts. It is
beyond the scope of legitimate judicial review to apply a standard of
reasonableness to the actions of local policy-making entities like
municipalities and school boards. Courts should not be tempted to replace the
decisions of such bodies with their own view of what is reasonable, or to
become unduly involved in the management of towns, cities and schools.
III. The Legality of the Resolution
206
In my view, we should focus on whether the Board acted legally,
consistent with its mandate under the School Act. I respectfully agree
with the Chief Justice that the School Act’s directive to observe
principles of secularism and non-sectarianism is at the heart of this case.
All the other factors canvassed by the majority do not change the fact that in
the end we identify the same central issue and agree on how it should be
resolved.
207
Clearly, the Board was authorized to approve or not to approve books for
classroom use. But its authority is limited by the requirements in ss. 76(1)
and 76(2) of the Act to conduct schools on “strictly secular and non-sectarian
principles”, and to inculcate “[t]he highest morality” while avoiding the
teaching of any “religious dogma or creed”. The evidence in this appeal leads
me to conclude that the way the Board dealt with the three books was
inconsistent with the School Act’s commitment to secularism and
non-sectarianism. The decision not to approve the books was primarily driven
by a desire to accommodate the beliefs of a number of parents, and at least one
Board member, that homosexuality is wrong and should be condemned.
Pedagogical policy shaped by such beliefs cannot be secular or non-sectarian
within the meaning of the School Act.
208
I am in substantial agreement with the Chief Justice’s views on the
meaning of these provisions. Like her, I take the words “secular” and
“non-sectarian” in the School Act to imply that no single conception of
morality can be allowed to deny or exclude opposed points of view. I would
also note that the language of the School Act must be interpreted with
awareness of its context and history, which are particular to the province of
British Columbia. In this connection, the analysis of Mackenzie J.A. observed
that s. 76 and its precursor provisions, dating back to the Common School
Act, 1865, “aimed toward a non-denominational system of public education
and prohibition of control by any denominational establishment” ((2000), 191
D.L.R. (4th) 128, at para. 21). British Columbia has changed since this
provision was first adopted, and today the words “strictly secular” and
“non-sectarian” must be interpreted in a manner cognizant of the inclusion of
many adherents of non-Christian religions, as well as persons of no religious
affiliation, in the province’s population. The meaning of the statutory
language has evolved in the modern context, but the underlying concern is still
the same: to ensure that the public school system is not a vehicle for
indoctrinating children in any particular set of beliefs, religious or
otherwise.
209
I share the view of both Mackenzie J.A. and the Chief Justice that s. 76
does not prohibit decisions about school governance that are informed by
religious belief. As Mackenzie J.A. points out, the history of the words
“secular” and “non-sectarian”, which at the time they were adopted meant
something like “non-denominational Christia[n]”, makes such a conclusion
impossible. Furthermore, it is precluded by the language and the spirit of s.
76, which aims to foster tolerance and diversity of views, not to shut religion
out of the arena. I respectfully disagree with the opinion of the chambers
judge that s. 76 forbids the Board to make any decision based on religious
considerations, and requires its members to confine their religious beliefs to
the private sphere. In my opinion, this approach would almost make religious
unbelief into a species of sectarianism or dogma.
210
The powers of trustees to make policy decisions reflecting their beliefs
or those of parents do not extend as far as their personal freedom of religion
and conscience, but it does not follow that their decisions may not be
influenced by religious convictions. What s. 76 rules out is policy based on
beliefs that are intolerant of others. It is of little import whether those
beliefs are religious, moral or philosophical.
211
Section 76 does not limit in any way the freedom of parents and Board
members to adhere to a religious doctrine that condemns homosexuality. It does
prohibit the translation of such doctrine into policy decisions by the Board,
to the extent that they reflect a denial of the validity of other points of
view. There is no difficulty in reconciling the School Act’s commitment
to secularism with freedom of religion. Freedom of religion is not diminished,
but is safeguarded, by the state’s abstention from favouring or promoting any
specific religious creed.
212
Reasonable people may disagree about the precise meaning of the terms
“secular” and “non-sectarian”, and the Board’s own interpretation of them may
well be entitled to curial deference. But I do not think it is possible on any
interpretation to reconcile the requirements of secularism and non-sectarianism
with the decision it made here, one that was fundamentally animated by the
conviction of certain parents that materials which might suggest a moral
perspective different from their own were not to be tolerated. Disagreement
with the practices and beliefs of others, while certainly permissible and
perhaps inevitable in a pluralist society, does not justify denying others the
opportunity for their views to be represented, or refusing to acknowledge their
existence. Whatever the personal views of the Board members might have been,
their responsibility to carry out their public duties in accordance with
strictly secular and non-sectarian principles included an obligation to avoid
making policy decisions on the basis of exclusionary beliefs. In effect, the
Board circumvented the policy set out by the legislature in s. 76. As the
legislature’s delegate, it lacked the authority to do so, and by doing so it
rendered its decision patently unreasonable.
213
The affidavits filed by many of the parents explain their reasons for
opposing approval of the three books. One parent’s affidavit, quoted by the
chambers judge at para. 89 ((1998), 168 D.L.R. (4th) 222), stated “[w]e
believe, and would like to teach our children that according to our religious
views, the homosexual lifestyle is wrong.” Another parent said “I wish to
teach my children according to my own religious beliefs and oppose lessons at
school which contradict what I am attempting to teach my children.” I have no
doubt that the affiants are good, nurturing parents who deserve credit for the
care they are taking to impart religious and moral values to their children.
But their children go to school in a system in which no one doctrine (religious
or otherwise) can be imposed so as to condemn a lifestyle that does not fit
with its values, or to preclude the discussion of any other point of view. In
such a system, they will not be shielded from lessons that may contradict what
their parents teach them.
214
The incompatibility of the views expressed in the affidavits with the
principles of secularism and non-sectarianism would perhaps be even more
apparent if the parents had objected to the portrayal of families of a
particular religious background — Muslim families, for example. No doubt
the practices of Muslims are contrary to the teachings of some other religions;
indeed, their beliefs are deeply opposed to those of some other religions. But
Christian or Hindu parents could not object (unless they renounced any claim
that their objections were non-sectarian) to the mere presence of a Muslim
family in a story book, or the mere intimation that happy, likeable Muslim
families exist, on the basis that Muslims do and believe some things with which
they do not agree, or that encountering these stories might bring children face
to face with the reality that not everyone shares their parents’ beliefs.
Parents who raised such objections would demonstrate their outright rejection
of the principles of pluralism and tolerance enshrined in the School Act
and, indeed, at the very heart of the Canadian society in which young
schoolchildren are learning to participate.
215
The legislature has delegated a broad discretion to the Board in
choosing educational materials, and there is no positive obligation on it to
introduce books that portray same-sex parented families. But when the
possibility of doing so was placed before it, it had a duty to consider the
matter in accordance with the values of secularism and non-sectarianism, and
to arrive at a decision that avoided the taint of intolerance. It is not the
prerogative of the Board to repeal or override the legislated policy of running
schools on strictly secular and non-sectarian principles, whether in response
to pressure from certain parents or for any other reason. The distaste of some
parents for books that do not conform with their personal beliefs cannot shape
the policy of a pluralist education system that has proclaimed its commitment
to accepting and celebrating diversity.
Appeal allowed with costs, Gonthier
and Bastarache JJ. dissenting.
Solicitors for the appellants: Arvay Finlay, Victoria.
Solicitors for the respondent: Dives, Grauer &
Harper, Vancouver.
Solicitors for the intervener EGALE Canada Inc.: Sack
Goldblatt Mitchell, Toronto.
Solicitors for the intervener the British Columbia Civil Liberties
Association: Lawson, Lundell, Vancouver.
Solicitors for the intervener Families in
Partnership: Green & Chercover, Toronto.
Solicitors for the intervener the Board of Trustees of School
District No. 34 (Abbotsford): Bull, Housser & Tupper,
Vancouver.
Solicitors for the intervener the Elementary Teachers’ Federation of
Ontario: Sack Goldblatt Mitchell, Toronto.
Solicitors for the intervener the Canadian Civil Liberties
Association: Paliare, Roland, Rosenberg, Rothstein, Toronto.
Solicitors for the interveners the Evangelical Fellowship of Canada,
the Archdiocese of Vancouver, the Catholic Civil Rights League and the Canadian
Alliance for Social Justice and Family Values Association: Fasken
Martineau DuMoulin, Vancouver.