Date:
20090126
Docket: A-79-08
Citation: 2009 FCA 22
CORAM: LINDEN J.A.
EVANS
J.A.
RYER
J.A.
BETWEEN:
CYNTHIA HARRIS
Applicant
and
MINISTER OF HUMAN RESOURCES
AND SKILLS DEVELOPMENT
Respondent
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
LINDEN J.A. (Dissenting Reasons)
[1]
The issue
in this application for judicial review is whether the applicant, Cynthia
Harris, is barred from claiming permanent disability benefits under the Canada
Pension Plan, because she did not work outside the home in 1998, in order to
take care of her severely disabled son. She raises the question of whether
certain provisions of the Plan, known as the Child Rearing Drop-Out provisions
(the CRDO) violate section 15(1) of the Charter, as they apply only to parents
of children under seven years old who stay at home to provide childcare, and
overlook the plight of parents of disabled children seven years and older who must
remain at home to look after their children beyond the time that non-disabled
children are expected to be in school.
[2]
This is an
application for judicial review of a decision of the Pension Appeals Board
(PAB), which held that the child-rearing drop-out (CRDO) provisions contained
in subparagraph 44(2)(b)(iv) of the Canada Pension Plan and paragraph
77(1)(a) of the Regulations do not infringe subsection 15(1) of
the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms. For the reasons that follow,
I would allow the application, and find that the CRDO does infringe section
15(1), and is not saved by section 1 of the Charter. I am aware that my
colleagues, Evans and Ryer JJ.A., have concluded that there is no section 15(1)
violation, but with the greatest of respect, I cannot agree.
[3]
This
question arises because the Minister denied Ms. Harris’s application for a
disability pension. Under the Plan, in order to qualify for a disability
pension, the claimant must have made contributions to the Plan in at least four
out of the last six years (the “recency requirement”). The CRDO was enacted to
relax this requirement for parents who temporarily leave the workforce due to
child-rearing responsibilities. The provision excludes years in which the
claimant was out of the workforce caring for children under the age of seven
from being considered as part of the six years. While Ms. Harris contributed to
the Plan, she did not meet this recency requirement, and hence was held not to
qualify for benefits on that basis.
[4]
The
respondent’s experts provided evidence that Parliament chose the age of seven
as the cut-off, as this reflects the age at which most children are able to
attend school full-time, easing the burden of childcare on the parent and
providing him or her with more flexibility in the labour market. Central to
this case are the implications of generalizations about “most children” for the
parents of children who are disabled and who do not fit this mould, as was the
situation with Ms. Harris.
RELEVANT LEGISLATIVE PROVISIONS
[5]
Subsection
44(2) of the Canada Pension Plan, R.S.C. 1985, c. 8, sets out the
“recency requirement”, discussed above, for eligibility for a disability
pension. I have underlined the portions that are relevant to this application:
44. (2) For the purposes of paragraphs (1)(b)
and (e),
(a) a contributor
shall be considered to have made contributions for not less than the minimum
qualifying period only if the contributor has made contributions on earnings
that are not less than the basic exemption of that contributor, calculated
without regard to subsection 20(2),
(i) for at least four of the last six calendar years
included either wholly or partly in the contributor’s contributory period
or, where there are fewer than six calendar years included either wholly or
partly in the contributor’s contributory period, for at least four years,
(i.1) for at least 25 calendar years included either
wholly or partly in the contributor’s contributory period, of which at least
three are in the last six calendar years included either wholly or partly in
the contributor’s contributory period, or
(ii) for each year after the month of cessation of the
contributor’s previous disability benefit; and
(b) the
contributory period of a contributor shall be the period
(i) commencing January 1, 1966 or when he reaches
eighteen years of age, whichever is the later, and
(ii) ending with the month in which he is determined to
have become disabled for the purpose of paragraph (1)(b),
but excluding
(iii) any month that was excluded from the contributor’s
contributory period under this Act or under a provincial pension plan by
reason of disability, and
(iv) in relation to any benefits payable under this Act
for any month after December, 1977, any month for which the contributor
was a family allowance recipient in a year for which the contributor’s
unadjusted pensionable earnings are less than the basic exemption of the
contributor for the year, calculated without regard to subsection 20(2).
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44. (2)
Pour l’application des alinéas (1)b) et e) :
a) un cotisant n’est réputé avoir versé des cotisations pendant au moins
la période minimale d’admissibilité que s’il a versé des cotisations sur des
gains qui sont au moins égaux à son exemption de base, compte non tenu du
paragraphe 20(2), selon le cas :
(i) soit, pendant au moins quatre
des six dernières années civiles comprises, en tout ou en partie, dans sa
période cotisable, soit, lorsqu’il y a moins de six années civiles
entièrement ou partiellement comprises dans sa période cotisable, pendant au
moins quatre années,
(i.1) pendant au moins vingt-cinq
années civiles comprises, en tout ou en partie, dans sa période cotisable,
dont au moins trois dans les six dernières années civiles comprises, en tout
ou en partie, dans sa période cotisable,
(ii) pour chaque année subséquente au
mois de la cessation de la pension d’invalidité;
b) la période cotisable d’un cotisant est la période qui :
(i) commence le 1er janvier
1966 ou au moment où il atteint l’âge de dix-huit ans, en choisissant celle
de ces deux dates qui est postérieure à l’autre,
(ii) se termine avec le mois au cours
duquel il est déclaré invalide dans le cadre de l’alinéa (1)b),
mais
ne comprend pas :
(iii) un mois qui, en raison d’une
invalidité, a été exclu de la période cotisable de ce cotisant conformément à
la présente loi ou à un régime provincial de pensions,
(iv) en ce qui concerne une prestation
payable en application de la présente loi à l’égard d’un mois postérieur à
décembre 1977, un mois relativement auquel il était bénéficiaire d’une
allocation familiale dans une année à l’égard de laquelle ses gains non
ajustés ouvrant droit à pension étaient inférieurs à son exemption de base
pour l’année, compte non tenu du paragraphe 20(2).
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[6]
Briefly,
subparagraph 42(2)(a)(i) provides that a contributor will be eligible
for a disability pension if she contributed to the plan for four out of the
last six years of her contributory period. The contributory period is then
defined by paragraph 42(2)(b), generally as the entire time between the
contributor’s eighteenth birthday, and the time she becomes disabled.
[7]
The
child-rearing drop-out provision is introduced in subparagraph 42(2)(b)(iv),
which allows any month to be excluded from the contributory period where two
conditions are met: (1) the contributor is a “family allowance recipient”, as
defined in the Regulations; and (2) the contributor has earnings for the year below
the basic exemption amount.
[8]
“Family
allowance recipient” is in turn defined by paragraph 77(1)(a) of the Canada
Pension Plan Regulations, C.R.C. c. 385, as including:
(a) the spouse
of a person, where the person is described in that definition as having
received or being in receipt of an allowance or a family allowance, if the
spouse remains at home and is the primary care giver for a child under seven
years of age, and where the other spouse cannot be considered a family
allowance recipient for the same period;
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a) du
conjoint d’une personne qui, selon cette définition, reçoit ou a reçu une
allocation ou une allocation familiale, lorsque le conjoint reste à la
maison et est la principale personne qui s’occupe d’un enfant âgé de moins de
sept ans, et que l’autre conjoint ne peut être considéré comme
bénéficiaire d’une allocation familiale pour la même période;
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[9]
Thus a
parent who remains out of the paid workforce, and in the home, to care for a
child under the age of seven, is entitled to drop the years she does so from
her contributory period. This has the benign effect of preserving a
contributor’s eligibility for a CPP disability pension, even though she is not
working (and thus not contributing to the Plan), because of her child-rearing
responsibilities.
[10]
I turn now
to consider the particular circumstances of the applicant, Cynthia Harris.
FACTS
[11]
Ms. Harris’s son, Bradley, was born in 1989. Her
second child, Jessica, was born in 1991. While Ms. Harris had returned to work
briefly in 1991, between the birth of her children, when Jessica was born she
and her husband decided that she would stay at home full-time to care for the
children until they reached school age.
[12]
In 1996, Bradley suffered a number of strokes.
Between 1996 and 1998, Bradley was severely disabled, and had to re-learn basic
activities such as walking and using his hands and arms. Ms. Harris cared for
her son full-time during this period. Her evidence was that he could only
attend school for the equivalent of two days a week, and that she could not
afford to hire a baby-sitter qualified to deal with Bradley’s special needs.
[13]
By the fall of 1998, Bradley had largely
recovered and was able to begin attending school full-time, albeit with his
mother attending with him at least three times per week. Ms. Harris returned to
the paid workforce in 2001.
[14]
In 1997, Ms. Harris was diagnosed with multiple
sclerosis (MS). In 2002, she stopped working due to impairments caused by MS,
and made her application for a disability pension.
[15]
Pursuant
to the CRDO, the years 1990 and 1992-1997 were dropped from her contributory
period, Jessica having turned 7 in 1998. Thus, the six years that were
considered to determine if Ms. Harris met the recency requirement were 2002,
2001, 2000, 1999, 1998, and 1991. Ms. Harris made contributions in only three
of those years (1991, 2001, 2002). Therefore, she was deemed ineligible for a
disability pension. That decision was affirmed upon reconsideration by the
Minister.
[16]
They key
point here is that if 1998, a year in which Ms. Harris was engaged in providing
care for her disabled son, is also dropped from the contributory period, she
would be eligible for a disability pension. In that scenario, the six years of
her contributory period would be 2002, 2001, 2000, 1999, 1991, and 1989, and
she would have made contributions in four of those years (2002, 2001, 1991, and
1989), which would have allowed her to qualify. My colleague Ryer J.A. is
correct to note that Ms. Harris would also be eligible for a disability pension
if she had worked between the fall of 1998 (when Bradley returned to school)
and 2001. However, this does not negate the fact that but for her inability to
“drop-out” 1998, when she was providing necessary full-time care for Bradley,
she also would have been eligible.
ISSUES AND STANDARD OF REVIEW
[17]
The issue
in this application is whether the CRDO cut-off violates section 15(1) of the
Charter, and if so, whether it can be saved by section 1. Section 15(1) reads
as follows:
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.
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15. (1) La loi
ne fait acception de personne et s'applique également à tous, et tous ont
droit à la même protection et au même bénéfice de la loi, indépendamment de
toute discrimination, notamment des discriminations fondées sur la race,
l'origine nationale ou ethnique, la couleur, la religion, le sexe, l'âge ou
les déficiences mentales ou physiques.
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[18]
Ms. Harris
argues that the cut-off is discriminatory because it is rooted in norms about
able-bodied children and when they are able to begin attending school, and
fails to take into account the circumstances faced by her as a parent and
caregiver to a severely disabled child. The respondent, on the other hand,
submits that the cut-off is based only on the age of the child and is neutral
to the issue of disability.
[19]
The
parties agree that the standard of review for constitutional questions is
correctness (Dunsmuir v. New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9 at paragraph 58).
A REFOCUSED EQUALITY ANALYSIS
[20]
The treatment of section 15 has posed a unique
challenge for courts since its coming into force in 1985. The approach that has
been employed over the years has been refined and adjusted, but we have still
not definitively crystallized and stabilized the correct approach. The most
recent Supreme Court decision to address the framework for equality cases is R.
v. Kapp, 2008 SCC 41. Justice Abella, writing for the majority, referred
back to Justice McIntyre’s statement in the very first section 15 case, Andrews
v. Law Society of British Columbia, [1989] 1 S.C.R. 143, explaining that
the purpose of the guarantee is to promote substantive, rather than merely
formal equality. He cautioned against an approach focused on treating “likes”
alike, writing (at paragraph 26):
In simple
terms, then, it may be said that a law which treats all identically and which
provides equality of treatment between "A" and "B" might
well cause inequality for "C", depending on differences in personal
characteristics and situations. To approach the ideal of full equality before
and under the law -- and in human affairs an approach is all that can be
expected -- the main consideration must be the impact of the law on the
individual or the group concerned. Recognizing that there will always be an
infinite variety of personal characteristics, capacities, entitlements and
merits among those subject to a law, there must be accorded, as nearly as may
be possible, an equality of benefit and protection and no more of the
restrictions, penalties or burdens imposed upon one than another. In other
words, the admittedly unattainable ideal should be that a law expressed to bind
all should not because of irrelevant personal differences have a more
burdensome or less beneficial impact on one than another.
[21]
Thus, in Andrews, the
majority articulated a two-part test for establishing discrimination within the
meaning of section 15(1): (1) does the impugned law create a distinction based on
an enumerated or analogous ground; and (2) does that distinction create a
disadvantage by perpetuating prejudice or stereotyping?
[22]
Subsequently, in Law v. Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration), [1999] 1 S.C.R. 497, the court attempted to
address the schisms in the jurisprudence that followed Andrews. Law articulated
a three-part test for finding discrimination: the courts were to ask (1) did
the impugned law make a distinction on the basis of one or more personal
characteristics or fail to take into account the claimant’s already
disadvantaged position in Canadian society; (2) was that distinction based on
an enumerated or analogous ground; and (3) was the distinction discriminatory,
in the sense of perpetuating or promoting the view that the claimant was less
capable or worthy of recognition or value as a human being or as a member of
Canadian society? However, as the court later noted in Kapp, the Law test
was essentially the same as the two-part test from Andrews.
[23]
However, in Law, the
court suggested that the last part of the inquiry, determining whether a
distinction resulted in discrimination within the meaning of section 15(1),
should focus on whether an impugned law negatively affected a claimant’s “human
dignity”. It articulated four contextual factors to assist this analysis: (1)
any pre-existing disadvantage suffered by the group; (2) the degree of
correspondence between the impugned law and the actual needs, circumstances,
and capacities of the group; (3) whether the law or program has an ameliorative
purpose or effect; and (4) the nature of the interest affected (at paragraphs
62-75).
[24]
In
Kapp, the court acknowledged that while Law was an attempt to
unify the law, “human dignity” has proved to be a difficult concept to apply in
legal analysis. The human dignity analysis was born in Justice L’Heureux-Dubé’s
dissenting reasons in Egan v. Canada, [1995] 2 S.C.R. 513, where she
advocated that the equality analysis focus on whether legislation exacerbated
the pre-existing disadvantage of oppressed groups, and de-emphasized the role
of the enumerated and analogous grounds. This strand of her analysis was later incorporated
into the third prong of the Law test and its focus on whether the
impugned law promoted a view that the claimant was less capable or worthy of
respect, thus perpetuating the disadvantage of oppressed groups. However, it
was clear that the need to identify an enumerated or analogous ground remained
significant to the analysis.
[25]
Scholars
have suggested that the concept of “human dignity”, which Justice
L’Heureux-Dubé described as the underlying value of section 15, was transformed
into an additional hurdle which claimants had to overcome to establish
discrimination (see Daphne Gilbert, “Time to Regroup: Rethinking Section 15 of
the Charter” (2003), 48 McGill L.J. 627). It was said that claimants were
forced not only to establish that they felt subjectively demeaned by a
distinction, but also had to satisfy the court that their perceptions were
“objectively” reasonable.
[26]
While
the promotion of human dignity is undoubtedly the ultimate objective of section
15 (and indeed, the Charter as a whole), it has proved problematic as a legal
standard. The Court in Kapp recognized this in suggesting that “the
factors cited in Law should not be read literally as if they were
legislative dispositions, but as a way of focussing on the central concern of section
15 identified in Andrews – combatting discrimination, defined in terms
of perpetuating disadvantage and stereotyping” (Kapp at paragraph 24).
[27]
In
my view, in Kapp
the Supreme Court calls for a recommitment to the ideal of substantive equality.
We must focus on the perspective of the claimant, that is, to view the
situation through the eyes of the claimant. We should heed the words of Justice
Frankfurter (then of the United States Supreme Court), who once cautioned “it was a wise man who said that there is no greater
inequality than the equal treatment of unequals” (Dennis v. United States, 339 U.S. 162 (1950) at 184). This court must
ensure that the Law factors are not used as a mere cloak for formalism. As for disabled individuals,
to honour this principle it may be necessary for legislation to provide
something extra to level the playing field in order to truly treat people
equally. I have approached the following analysis with these directives in
mind.
THE PURPOSE OF THE CPP AND THE CRDO
[28]
As the Supreme Court has stated in numerous
cases, the section 15 inquiry should begin with an understanding of the
purposes of the impugned legislation (Hodge v. Canada (Minister of Human Resources
Development), [2004] 3 S.C.R. 357, 2004 SCC 65 at paragraph
26).
[29]
The Plan is a federally-administered social
insurance plan based on compulsory contributions. Its purpose is to provide a
reasonable level of income replacement on the retirement, disability, or death
of a contributor. This income replacement function makes prior
participation in the workforce by beneficiaries an important basis of
eligibility.
[30]
The admirable purpose of the CRDO provision is
not contentious. As was stated in the House of Commons, its purpose is to:
…ensure that
a contributor who remains home to care for young children will not be penalized
for that period during which he or she has low or zero earnings. The provision
would protect eligibility for CPP benefits which the contributor has earned
through contributions before, during and after the period devoted to raising
young children. Again, this provision will provide a measure of real economic
recognition and financial security to work in the home, and it will do so
without compromising the basic contributory earnings-related structure of the
Plan.
[31]
The expert report of Marianna Geordano (which
was before the PAB in this case) also addressed the cut-off of age seven:
Age seven is the
age by which children would most likely be expected to be enrolled in school on
a full time basis. Once children are in school parents would have greater
labour market flexibility and a wider range of options with respect to
childcare.
[32]
On the basis of the evidence, the CRDO has the
purpose of according recognition (economic, and to some degree, social) to work
performed in the home, primarily by women. It also recognizes the fact that
child-rearing responsibilities do impose a certain lack of labour market
flexibility on parents, particularly mothers. The cut-off age of seven reflects
a common understanding of a stage where that burden is significantly lessened,
as most children are cared for during the day at school. While many parents do
continue to remain out of the workforce as full-time caregivers even after
their children enter school, the cut-off seems to reflect a notion that this is
a choice or preference on the part of the parent, rather than an inherent
necessity of child-rearing.
[33]
The problem I find
with the CRDO, as will become clear, is that it treated Ms. Harris as though
she had a real choice to re-enter the work force, when in fact she had none.
Faced with a child who needed special care, a public school system that could
not accommodate him, and insufficient finances to hire a professional
caregiver, she did what many parents in her situation do: she remained out of
the workforce to be a full-time caregiver. Unfortunately, now that Ms. Harris
is herself disabled, she finds that she is being penalized for having served
this indispensable caregiving role.
THE SECTION 15 INQUIRY
[34]
Applying
the framework discussed by the Supreme Court in Kapp, the first stage of
the inquiry is to ask whether the CRDO creates a distinction based on an
enumerated or analogous ground. Contrary to the finding of the PAB, I find that
it does.
The proper comparator group
[35]
In
Kapp, the majority noted that “criticism has also accrued for the way Law
has allowed the formalism of some of the Court’s post-Andrews jurisprudence
to resurface in the form of an artificial comparator analysis focussed on
treating likes alike” (at paragraph 22). From this teaching, at the very least,
this court should be cautious not to accept a comparator group that would give
rise to a formalistic analysis.
[36]
It may
also be that the Supreme Court in Kapp has signalled that it may be rethinking
the comparator group-based analysis, given the emphasis it placed on
stereotyping and disadvantage more generally. If that were so, and, if
the analysis of this case were not channelled through the comparator group
framework, the discriminatory nature of the CRDO becomes much clearer. This is
a case where discrimination is apparent on the basis of the disproportionate and
prejudicial economic impact of the legislation on an already-disadvantaged
group, the caregivers of disabled children. On this fresh approach, it is
obvious to me that the disabled have once again been overlooked by well-meaning
legislators.
[37]
To
the extent that comparator groups are still relevant, however, it is essential
to define the comparator group in a way that reflects the claimant’s
perspective (Law at paragraph 59). For this reason, I would reject the
PAB’s choice of comparator group, which is supported by the Minister in this
application: parents of non-disabled children seven and older who stay out of
the workforce to care for their children. The PAB found, using this comparator,
that the CRDO does not make a distinction, since the parents of non-disabled
children seven and over are also not eligible for the drop-out. I agree with
the applicant that this comparator group does not reflect the full
universe of people potentially entitled to the benefit of the CRDO, namely,
parents.
[38]
Further,
as discussed above, the purpose of the CRDO is to avoid penalizing parents for
the lack of labour market flexibility imposed by child-rearing
responsibilities; in my view, the burden imposed by child-rearing, not the age
of the child per se, is the relevant characteristic for the inquiry.
[39]
The
proper comparator group must reflect the sociological fact central to this
claim—that while free full-time schooling is available to non-disabled and
less-severely-disabled children over six, severely disabled children may
continue to require full-time parental caregiving beyond age six. The
respondent’s proposed comparator group gives rise to an analysis that is
formalistic and not responsive to the claimed ground of discrimination,
disability, or to the experiences of disabled people and their families, whose
difficulties are totally ignored.
[40]
I
would adopt the comparator group proposed by counsel for Ms. Harris at the
hearing: the parents of all non-disabled children six years and under, and the
parents of children seven and older, whose disabilities are not severe enough
that they are prevented from attending school full-time.
Differential treatment
[41]
Having
considered the appropriate comparator group, I find that the CRDO cut-off does
impose differential treatment on Ms. Harris. While parents in the comparator
group are entitled to the benefit of the CRDO for the full period that
their labour choices are restricted by having to care for children at home
full-time, a parent in her position is only so entitled for part of that
time, until her youngest child reaches the age of seven. Since the “recency
requirement” of the CPP makes the availability of a disability pension an
“all-or-nothing” prospect, in Ms. Harris’s case the CRDO cut-off translated
into the total unavailability of a pension. This must be considered
differential treatment.
[42]
I
note briefly that even if I had accepted the PAB’s comparator group, I would
have also found differential treatment on the basis of the disproportionate
impact of the cut-off on parents of severely disabled children, following the
Supreme Court’s reasoning in Vriend v. Alberta, [1998] 1 S.C.R. 493. In
that case, it was argued that the exclusion of sexual orientation as a
prohibited ground of discrimination under Alberta’s human rights
legislation did not amount to a distinction, since neither heterosexuals nor
homosexuals were able to claim discrimination on the basis of sexual
orientation. Justice Cory, writing on this point for the majority, rejected
this formalistic reasoning, pointing out the unlikelihood that a heterosexual
person would be discriminated against on the basis of sexual orientation.
[43]
The
same logic applies in the instant case. While the parents of non- or
less-severely disabled children are no longer confronted with the burden of a
child who requires full-time care in the home once they reach the age of seven,
the parents of severely disabled children over the age of seven are. The CRDO
cut-off has a disproportionate impact on these parents because it fails to
address their very real needs, ignoring their already-disadvantaged position.
Distinction based on an enumerated or
analogous ground
[44]
I
also find that this differential treatment is based on an enumerated ground,
the disability of Ms. Harris’s son, Bradley. It was argued that a parent cannot
claim discrimination on the basis of her child’s personal characteristics.
However, this is not a case where a parent is merely trying to reassert a claim
of discrimination made in the name of her child, as the Ontario Court of Appeal
found in Wynberg v. Ontario (2006), 82 O.R. (3d) 561 at paragraphs
205-206. This is a case where a parent is the “real” and only target of a law
that embodies allegedly discriminatory attitudes towards her child, similar to
the case of Benner v. Canada (Secretary of State), [1997] 1 S.C.R. 358.
[45]
In
Benner, the Supreme Court held the relationship between a parent and
child is of a “particularly unique and intimate nature”, such that the
characteristics of a child’s parent (such as race or nationality) were as
immutable to him as his own (at paragraph 82). Thus, a law that imposed a
burden on Mr. Benner as the result of the gender of his parent was found to
discriminate against him on the basis of gender, even though it was neutral as
to his own gender.
[46]
The
reverse proposition should also apply. A parent has no more control than the
child over whether the child is disabled. Further, because of the special care
disabled children require, even over and above the dependent relationship all
children have with their parents, the child’s disability affects the parent in
a way that is profound and unchangeable. I therefore conclude that the
differential treatment is based on an enumerated ground, disability.
[47]
This
finding does not represent an extension of the principle from Benner, on
my reading. The Supreme Court was clear that it was not introducing a broad
doctrine of “discrimination by association”, and that this was a question for
another day. Specifically, it left open whether its analysis could extend “to
situations where, for example, the association is voluntary rather than
involuntary, or where the characteristic of the parent in question upon which
the differential treatment is founded is not an enumerated or analogous ground”
(at paragraph 82). The instant case does not raise either of these questions,
but involves the same type of relationship (parent-child) and a claim centred on
an enumerated ground of discrimination (disability).
The distinction is discriminatory
[48]
I
now turn to the second part of the Kapp test, the issue of whether the
differential treatment is discriminatory within the meaning of the equality guarantee.
In her landmark Royal Commission Report on Equality in Employment (1984),
Justice Abella (then of the Ontario Family Court), at page 2, wrote that where
disadvantage was suffered by a particular group, this was a prima facie
indicator of discrimination:
It is not a
question of whether this discrimination is motivated by an intentional desire
to obstruct someone’s potential, or whether it is the accidental by-product of
innocently motivated practices or systems. If the barrier is affecting certain
groups in a disproportionately negative way, it is a signal that the practices
that lead to this adverse impact may be discriminatory.
[49]
Further,
she explained:
Sometimes equality
means treating people the same, despite their differences, and sometimes it
means treating them as equals by accommodating their differences.
Formerly, we
thought that equality only meant sameness and that treating persons as equals
meant treating everyone the same. We now know that to treat everyone the same
may be to offend the notion of equality. Ignoring differences may mean ignoring
legitimate needs. It is not fair to use the differences between people as an
excuse to exclude them arbitrarily from equitable participation. (at page 3)
For disabled
persons, there must be as full accommodation as possible and the widest range
of human and technical supports…Pension and benefit schemes must be adjusted so
as to encourage disabled persons to join the workplace… (at page 5)
Equality
under the Charter, then is a right to integrate into the mainstream of Canadian
society based on, and notwithstanding, differences. It is acknowledging and
accommodating differences rather than ignoring and denying them. (at page 13)
[50]
It
is important to note that that this claim is based on the ground of disability.
Because persons with disabilities will often require accommodation, sometimes
requiring that something extra be provided, this court must be particularly vigilant
not to adopt an analysis that focuses on “treating likes alike”. Laws that
discriminate on the basis of disability will often do so not because they draw
formal distinctions between disabled people and non-disabled people, but rather
because they “[fail] to take into account the already disadvantaged position”
of the former, as contemplated in Law (at paragraph 39).
[51]
Equality
rights have proven to be a difficult area for courts. As evidenced by the above
discussion of the evolving section 15 framework, even the Supreme Court has
struggled to define the scope of the right with precision. The ground of
disability is additionally complicated, as the Supreme Court acknowledged in Eaton v. Brant County Board of Education, [1997] 1 S.C.R. 241 at paragraph 69, because there are
endless differences between disabled individuals, in terms of the type and
severity of their disabilities, and many options available to accommodate those
differences.
[52]
With
these complexities, it is no surprise that it is difficult to discern a unified
theory underlying the Supreme Court’s disability jurisprudence. Sometimes the
court interferes, as in Eldridge v. British Columbia (Attorney
General), [1997] 3 S.C.R. 624, where the court found that the government had
a duty to accommodate deaf patients by providing sign-language interpreters
under the auspices of the province’s health services plan.
[53]
In
other cases, disability claimants have been unsuccessful. As Professor Peter
Hogg summarizes, these cases (including Eaton, Granovsky v. Canada (Minister
of Employment and Immigration), [2000] 1 S.C.R. 703, and Auton (Guardian ad litem of) v. British Columbia (Attorney
General), [2004] 3 S.C.R. 657), involved
legislative schemes that already attempted to accommodate persons with disabilities;
the claimants alleged that the accommodations were not extended far enough or
were otherwise inappropriate. Professor Hogg concludes that the Supreme Court
has generally been willing to show deference to the legislatures’ attempts to
accommodate disability (Constitutional Law in Canada, 5th
ed. (looseleaf), (Toronto: Carswell, 2007) at 55-74).
[54]
On
the other hand, in Nova Scotia (Workers’ Compensation Board) v. Martin, [2003]
2 S.C.R. 504, the court found a legislative scheme which denied workers’ compensation
to chronic pain sufferers discriminated against them on the basis of
disability. The unanimous court found that the blanket denial of benefits to
chronic pain sufferers, without any assessment of their individual
circumstances, ignored the very real needs of these individuals and perpetuated
stereotyping of persons claiming chronic pain as malingerers (see especially at
paragraph 86). Since Martin, it is much less clear how much
deference is owed to legislative attempts to accommodate disability.
[55]
Even
the Supreme Court has struggled with issues of disability, in addition to its
grappling with section 15 more generally, most recently in Kapp. Despite
these difficulties, Justice Sopinka gave some useful guidance in this area in
his judgment in Eaton (at paragraph 67):
Exclusion from the
mainstream of society results from the construction of a society based solely
on “mainstream” attributes to which disabled persons will never be able to gain
access. Whether it is the impossibility of success at a written test for
a blind person, or the need for ramp access to a library, the discrimination
does not lie in the attribution of untrue characteristics to the disabled
individual. The blind person cannot see and the person in a wheelchair
needs a ramp. Rather, it is the failure to make reasonable accommodation,
to fine-tune society so that its structures and assumptions do not result in
the relegation and banishment of disabled persons from participation, which
results in discrimination against them. The discrimination inquiry which
uses “the attribution of stereotypical characteristics” reasoning as commonly
understood is simply inappropriate here. It may be seen rather as a case
of reverse stereotyping which, by not allowing for the condition of a disabled
individual, ignores his or her disability and forces the individual to sink or
swim within the mainstream environment. It is recognition of the actual
characteristics, and reasonable accommodation of these characteristics which is
the central purpose of s. 15(1) in relation to disability.
[56]
Similarly,
in Gosselin v. Quebec (Attorney General), [2002] 4 S.C.R. 429, 2002 SCC
84 at paragraph 37, Chief Justice McLachlin wrote, “a law that imposes
restrictions or denies benefits on account of presumed or unjustly attributed
characteristics is likely to deny essential human worth and to be
discriminatory”.
[57]
There can
be no doubt that in this case, the CRDO cut-off is based on a presumed
characteristic, that children seven years of age and older are capable of attending
school full-time. As counsel for the Minister sets out in the memorandum of
fact and law, “the cut-off age reflects the norm that once children are in
school full-time, parents have more flexibility to participate in the paid
workforce and a reduced need for childcare”. This view was also reflected in
the Geordano report. This lays bare the discriminatory nature of the cut-off,
which reflects assumptions based on the capabilities of non-disabled children,
without any regard for the different circumstances of disabled children who are
not able to attend school full-time and continue to require ongoing full-time home
care.
[58]
It may be
true, as the respondent argues, that age-based cut-offs are often arbitrary and
must be based on generalizations. Yet the CRDO cut-off is not arbitrary. The
Minister admits it is rooted in assumptions about the capabilities of “most”
children—that is, non-disabled children. These norms are not neutral to the
issue of disability, and reinforce a worldview that is “relentlessly oriented
to the able-bodied”, to borrow a phrase from Granovsky (at paragraph 30).
To say that the cut-off is based only on age is to gloss over this “reverse
stereotyping”, as it was described by Justice Sopinka in Eaton. Such an
approach is the very essence of formalism, and must be rejected, for it totally
overlooks the plight of the disabled, perpetuating their disadvantaged
situation.
[59]
Further,
the applicant has adduced considerable evidence about the economic and
psychological disadvantages suffered by parents who are forced to remain out of
the workforce to care for disabled children. The CRDO was enacted in
acknowledgement of the burdens imposed on parents when child-rearing
responsibilities require them to leave the workforce temporarily. Surely,
parents who must remain out of the workforce for even longer due to their
child’s special needs must suffer this disadvantage to an even greater degree.
However, by not extending the same benefit to parents who are forced to remain
out of the workforce for longer due to their child’s disability, the Minister
has allowed the stereotyping and disadvantage of the disabled to be
perpetuated, another indicator of discrimination.
[60]
Finally, the CRDO cut-off reflects an
understanding that parents who stay home to care for their children after the
age of seven do so as a matter of choice, as the burden of full-time caregiving
is normally relieved by the school system. This provision fails to reflect the
fact that many parents in the position of Ms. Harris simply do not have this
choice, and therefore fails to recognize that the work performed by such
parents is just as essential as the caregiving work performed by the parents of
children who have not yet reached school age. This failure to accord this same
recognition to the necessary caregiving role performed by parents whose
disabled children cannot attend school also suggests that the cut-off is
discriminatory.
[61]
My colleague, Evans J.A., concludes that the
Supreme Court’s decision in Granovksy is “virtually dispositive” of Ms.
Harris’s application. In Granovsky, the court held that another CPP drop-out
provision was not discriminatory (and thus did not violate section 15(1) of the
Charter) simply because it benefited only the permanently disabled, and
excluded the temporarily disabled. Writing for the court, Justice Binnie
concluded that it was open to Parliament to target more severely disabled
individuals than Mr. Granovsky, those with permanent disabilities. The drop-out
provisions in issue in that case were already an attempt to accommodate the
disabled; in the absence of evidence that Parliament’s line-drawing had
stimgatized or demeaned persons with temporary disabilities, the court would
not find the limits of this accommodation discriminatory. Mr. Granovsky was
excluded from the drop-out not because his needs were being marginalized or
ignored by Parliament, but rather because he was a member of a more advantaged
group than those it sought to assist.
[62]
With respect to Evans J.A., in my view this case
differs from Granovsky. The CRDO drop-out may have an ameliorative
purpose, but it is not one directed at easing the plight of the disabled, or
parents of disabled children. It is a scheme that seeks to assist a vulnerable
group, stay-at-home parents of young children, but in doing so wholly fails to
consider the needs of an even more disadvantaged group, the parents of young disabled
children. This is not a case where Parliament has already attempted to
accommodate disability, and the courts are being called upon to force it to go
further. This is a case where an admittedly well-meaning legislative scheme has,
as a result of stereotyping, totally ignored and failed to offer any
accommodation for the parents of disabled children.
[63]
For these reasons, I conclude that the
distinction both reflects prejudicial attitudes and perpetuates economic
disadvantage, which to use the “philosophically enhancing” phrase, demeans the
human dignity of these disabled individuals. It is therefore discriminatory
within the meaning of section 15(1) of the Charter. As there was no issue
raised with regard to section 15(2), there is no need to consider it here.
THE SECTION 1 INQUIRY
[64]
The test for justifying an infringement of a
Charter right under section 1 was outlined in R. v. Oakes, [1986] 1
S.C.R. 103. The respondent must establish first that there is a
“pressing and substantial” legislative objective behind the impugned
provisions. Then, it must establish that the infringement of the applicant’s
section 15 rights are rationally connected to that objective, that the
infringement is minimally impairing of the right, and finally that there is
proportionality between the deleterious effects and the salutary effects of the
limit on Ms. Harris’s Charter rights. All of these tests must be met for
section 1 to apply and save the violation.
[65]
The respondent states rightly that the objective
of the CRDO is pressing and substantial—that is, to protect the eligibility for
Plan benefits earned by contributors who leave or reduce their participation in
the workforce to care for young children. However, the cut-off cannot be
rationally connected to this purpose, because, in reality, it is a limit placed
on the realization of this objective by some parents of some young children
that need consideration, the disabled.
[66]
I would adopt another statement of the CRDO’s
purpose from the respondent’s written submissions, “to protect the eligibility
of contributors who leave the paid work force to care for young children while
still ensuring the Plan remains sustainable and accessible to most wage
earners” (emphasis mine). The cut-off is ostensibly oriented at limiting
the drop-out provisions in order to ensure that the CPP remains financially
viable. Hence it can be said to be rationally connected to that objective, so
that the first two tests of section 1 are met.
[67]
In my view, however, the cut-off is not
minimally impairing of the applicant’s section 15 rights. As the Review
Tribunal noted, the respondent’s actuarial expert admitted that the extension
of the CRDO to parents who remain out of the workforce to care for severely
disabled children would not have a serious impact on the financial viability of
the Plan. His report indicated that if the CRDO were extended to parents with
children aged 7 to 24 who are disabled, that this would increase annual CPP
expenditures by only 0.1%. Such a long extension, to age 24, is not necessary
in this case, so the costs would be significantly less. All that is sought is
to extend it to the parents of young disabled children until they can attend
school full-time.
[68]
Although it may be possible for the government
to justify section 15 infringements where the financial consequences would be
very severe, the Supreme Court has also cautioned that justification arguments
based on cost should be viewed with scepticism (Newfoundland (Treasury
Board) v. N.A.P.E., [2004] 3 S.C.R. 381, 2004 SCC 66 at paragraph 72).
[69]
Notably, the Minister has not attempted to
justify this infringement on the basis of the expense involved. Its minimal
impairment argument is based on the fact that there are other provisions in the
Plan that it claims would help provide women in Ms. Harris’s position some
measure of financial security. This does not strengthen the respondent’s argument
that the cut-off itself is minimally impairing of her equality rights,
especially since these other provisions have actually proved to be of no
assistance to her. The fact remains that, as a direct result of the CRDO, Ms.
Harris, because she was the mother of a disabled child in 1998, has found
herself completely ineligible for a disability pension, despite the professed
purpose of these provisions.
[70]
Given the expert evidence that the CRDO could be
extended without jeopardizing the financial viability of the Plan (the
objective of the cut-off), I conclude that the artificial cut-off at seven
years of age is not minimally impairing to Ms. Harris. I would, therefore,
without the need to consider the fourth stage of the Oakes test, find
that the infringement of Ms. Harris’s section 15 rights is not justified under
section 1 of the Charter.
CONCLUSION
[71]
For the
foregoing reasons, I would allow this application, and conclude that the CRDO
provision infringes section 15(1) of the Charter, and is not saved by section
1. The cut-off, while on its face based only on the age of a child,
discriminates against disabled children and their parents. Through its foundation
in norms pertaining to non-disabled children, the CRDO ignores the needs of
workers who, by virtue of discrimination on the basis of their children’s
disabilities, are denied the choice of returning to the paid workforce once
their children reach the age of seven. This is a case, as Justice McIntyre
contemplated in Andrews, where purportedly equal treatment has produced
serious inequality.
THE APPROPRIATE REMEDY
[72]
Ms. Harris
has asked this court to declare that the CRDO be extended to her, by ordering
that 1998 be dropped from her contributory period, making her eligible for a
disability pension. Essentially, she is suggesting that the words “or where the
child is a person with a disability, until that child is able to attend school
full-time” be read into paragraph 77(1)(a) of the Regulations.
However, in the circumstances, this would be too hasty and simplistic a
solution.
[73]
The Canada
Pension Plan is a sophisticated statutory scheme, and Parliament would have a
number of legislative choices in response to this ruling. The requirement that
two thirds of the provinces comprising two thirds of Canada’s population must consent to any amendment
to the Plan also demonstrates the complexity of this area. In these
circumstances, reading in would represent an improper intrusion by this court
into Parliament’s role (Schachter v. Canada, [1992] 2 S.C.R. 679 at
paragraph 52).
[74]
The only
option is to declare invalid the offending paragraphs. I would therefore strike
down subparagraph 44(2)(b)(iv) of the Canada Pension Plan, and
paragraph 77(1)(a) of the Regulations.
[75]
However, a temporary suspension of a declaration
of invalidity is appropriate in cases such as this where benefit schemes are
found to be underinclusive, because striking down the provisions immediately
would have the harsh effect of denying benefits to deserving persons already
entitled (Schachter, at paragraph 79).
[76]
In the
result, I would declare invalid and strike down subparagraph 44(2)(b)(iv)
of the Canada Pension Plan, and paragraph 77(1)(a) of the
Regulations. In the circumstances, I would
grant a one-year suspended declaration of invalidity, to
allow Parliament to formulate an appropriate legislative response to this
decision.
"A.M.
Linden"
EVANS
J.A.
[77]
I have had
the great benefit of reading the reasons of my colleague, Linden J.A., who
concludes that the child rearing drop-out (CRDO) provisions of the Canada
Pension Plan (CPP) are unconstitutionally under inclusive because they
discriminate on the ground of disability against parents who stay at home to
care for children over the age of seven with a disability that prevents them
from attending full-time public school.
[78]
I
gratefully accept my colleague’s account of the relevant facts of this case and
his description of the statutory scheme. However, I respectfully disagree with
his conclusion. In my view, the CRDO provisions do not infringe Ms Harris’s
rights under section 15 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms.
[79]
The basis
of our disagreement concerns the definition of the purposes of the impugned
CRDO provisions and the nature of the benefit that they provide. My colleague
says that these provisions ensure that parents’ CPP benefits are not
jeopardised by their decision to stay at home to care for their children while
they are unable to attend full-time public school. Parliament has relaxed the
CPP “recency requirement”, he reasons, for the benefit of parents of children
under the age of seven because that is the age at which “normal” children can
go to school. Subsequently, the parent who had been looking after them at home
(generally, the mother) will have more flexibility, which enables her to return
to the labour market.
[80]
The
problem with limiting the relaxation to parents of children under the age of
seven, Linden J.A. says, is that Parliament has thereby defined eligibility on
the basis of a stereotype: the able-bodied child who can attend school at age seven.
Parliament has thus denied to parents of children who cannot attend school at
that age because of a disability the benefit enjoyed by other parents, namely,
the right to stay at home to look after children who cannot attend school
without prejudicing their eligibility for CPP benefits.
[81]
In my
respectful view, this is too broad a view of the purpose of the legislation and
the benefit that it provides. As I see it, Parliament has decided to relax the
“recency requirement” in favour of parents who temporarily leave employment to
look after young children: see the Expert Report of Marianna Giordano,
Respondent’s Record, vol 1 at 22, para. 10.
[82]
The extent
of the relaxation was defined by reference to the age at which children
in Canada can attend public school.
Viewed in this light, the CRDO provisions apply equally to all. Thus, parents
of children under the age of seven, regardless of whether or not they have a
disability, are eligible for the benefit of the CRDO, while parents of children
over the age of seven are not.
[83]
This is
not a case where it is more difficult for those with a personal characteristic
protected by section 15 to qualify for a statutory benefit: all children take
the same length of time to reach the age of seven. Nor is it a case where some
parents are prejudiced because their children must be older than seven before
they can go to school. Bradley Harris was unable to attend school in 1998
because of his disability, not because of his age.
[84]
Counsel
for Ms Harris says that, for the CRDO provisions to comply with section 15,
they must apply regardless of the age of a child whose disability prevents them
from attending school and their parent from returning to work. Thus, on the
facts of this case, if Bradley had not recovered sufficiently to go to school,
Ms Harris would have been entitled to drop from the “recency requirement” every
year that she stayed at home to care for him until he reached the age of 18.
[85]
In my
view, this underlines the fact that Ms Harris’s complaint is not that she was
excluded from the benefit of the relaxation of the “recency requirements”
available to the parents of children without a disability that prevented them
from attending school. In other words, her argument is that the Constitution
prevents Parliament from designing a program for the benefit of the parents of
pre-school age children, without also extending it to those whose children,
regardless of age, are unable to attend school by virtue of a disability. And,
if Ms Harris is right, why might a section 15 claim not also be made by a
person who stayed at home to care for a child over the age of 18, a parent, or
a sibling, who had a serious disability and for whom no publicly provided care
was available?
[86]
In my
view, whether the CRDO provisions should extend to parents who are at home
looking after children with disabilities beyond the age of seven is a matter of
social and economic policy and priorities to be decided in the political realm,
not of constitutionally guaranteed human rights to be determined by the courts.
[87]
First, it
is neither inappropriate nor unsurprising for Parliament to design a program
that recognizes the particular needs of young children for nurture, and the
demands that these place on parents. Other programs are similarly directed, such
as the monthly allowance paid to all parents of pre-school age children: see
Universal Child Care Benefit Act, S.C. 2006, c. 4, section 168.
[88]
The age of
seven in the CRDO provisions is not merely a proxy for a child’s being in
full-time school. Rather, it was chosen by Parliament to define when a child is
no longer young enough to require a parent to stay at home, without prejudicing
her ability to satisfy the “recency requirement” for eligibility for CPP. That
the rationale of the selection of the age was that children are then old enough
for full-time school, and their parents can thus more easily return to work,
does not mean that the program should be divorced from the age of the
children.
[89]
Second,
the CPP is a self-funded, contributory, and compulsory social insurance
program, in which the period of insured coverage is related to the date when a
contributor ceases to pay premiums. The CRDO provisions are designed to extend
the period of CPP coverage for a relatively short and well-defined period of
time. They do this by directing the benefit to parents who stay at home with
pre-school age children, that is, who temporarily leave employment for a
maximum of seven years. A program aimed at all parents who leave employment to
care for a child with a disability, for a maximum of another 12 years, would
constitute such an extension of the period of coverage that the program would
be qualitatively different from the one enacted.
[90]
Third, the
Supreme Court of Canada has observed that eligibility for benefits under the
CPP, and other social benefit programs, inevitably involves the somewhat
arbitrary drawing of lines in complex schemes involving the balancing of
competing interests. Hence, courts have been reluctant to conclude that
Parliament has drawn those lines at constitutionally impermissible points. In
order to ensure that Parliament has sufficient room to manoeuvre, courts should
not define at too high a level of generality the legislative purpose underlying
a particular benefit.
[91]
Thus, in Granovsky
v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration),
[2000] 1 S.C.R. 703, 2000 SCC 28, at para. 79 (Granovsky), the Court
rejected a section 15 challenge to other CPP drop out provisions. The claimant
in that case unsuccessfully argued that the provisions were discriminatory
because they benefited only the permanently disabled, and not to the
temporarily disabled. In my view, Granovsky is virtually dispositive of
this application.
[92]
I am
prepared to accept for the purpose of this application that “parents of a child
with disabilities” constitute an analogous ground for the purpose of section
15. Nonetheless, this application in my view falls at the first hurdle of the
section 15 analysis. The CRDO provisions do not create a difference on the
ground of disability, even if the comparator group is defined as Ms Harris
suggests, namely, parents whose children, over the age of seven, do not have a
disability that requires a parent to stay out of the workforce in order to care
for them at home. Ms Harris is treated no differently from these parents: none
are entitled to the benefit of the CRDO. While age is a constitutionally
prohibited ground of discrimination under section 15, it is not alleged that
the CRDO provisions discriminate on the ground of age.
[93]
In reaching
this conclusion, I am mindful of the financial and other difficulties
experienced by Ms Harris, and other parents, who stay at home to care for
children with a disability that prevents them from attending school. The facts
of this case are particularly compelling because Ms Harris needs to drop only
one additional year in order to be eligible for a long-term disability pension
(an all-or-nothing benefit, which is not prorated) and, thanks in large part to
her efforts, Bradley made an excellent recovery and was soon able to go to
school.
[94]
The
applicant submitted evidence indicating that, since relatively few children
have disabilities which cannot be accommodated in school, the cost to the CPP
of extending the CRDO provisions in the manner urged by counsel is relatively
modest. This evidence would be relevant at the section 1 stage of a Charter the
analysis and in the political process. However, it is not relevant here because
Ms Harris’s claim does not get past section 15.
[95]
Ms Harris
has argued her case in this Court, as she must, as one of constitutional legal
principle, and this is the basis on which it has to be decided. The
Constitution cannot erase all the financial and other hardships suffered by
parents of a child with a disability which prevents the child from attending
school. It can only ensure that the law does not treat them in a discriminatory
manner, which in my view, the present CRDO provisions do not. See Granovsky at
para. 33.
[96]
For these
reasons, I would dismiss the application for judicial review.
"John M. Evans"
RYER
J.A. (Concurring Reasons)
[97]
I have
reviewed the reasons of my colleague Linden J.A. and except to the extent
otherwise indicated, I adopt his description of the relevant facts and the
statutory scheme. I cannot agree with his conclusion with respect to the
disposition of this application. I am in agreement with the conclusion reached
by Evans J.A., although for reasons that differ from his.
[98]
Paragraph
44(1)(b) of the Canada Pension Plan, R.S. 1985, c. C-8 (the “Plan”)
sets out a number of conditions that must be met before a contributor will
qualify to receive a disability pension. Pursuant to subparagraphs 44(1)(b)(i)
and 44(2)(a)(i) of the Plan, a contributor is required to establish that
he or she has made contributions of stipulated amounts for at least four of the
last six years (the “4 of 6 contribution requirement”) in the contributory
period that ends in the month that the contributor becomes disabled.
[99]
Pursuant
to paragraph 44(2)(b) of the Plan, the contribution period generally
begins on the eighteenth birthday of the contributor and ends in the month in
which the contributor is determined to have become disabled. Importantly, in
this case, subparagraph 44(2)(b)(iv) of the Plan, in conjunction with
paragraph 77(1)(a) of the Canada Pension Plan Regulations, C.R.C.
c. 385 (the “Plan Regulations”), permits a contributor to exclude from the
contributory period any month that the contributor provides at-home care for a
child under the age of seven.
[100] The applicant urges the Court
to declare that subparagraph 44(2)(b)(iv) of the Plan and paragraph
77(1)(a) of the Plan Regulations (the “CRDO Provisions”) are
unconstitutional and to strike them down because they discriminate against her
in a manner that contravenes subsection 15(1) of the Canadian Charter of
Rights and Freedoms, Schedule B to the Canada Act 1982 (U.K.) 1982,
c. 11 (the “Charter”). Subsection 15(1) of the Charter reads as follows:
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.
|
15. (1) La loi
ne fait acception de personne et s'applique également à tous, et tous ont
droit à la même protection et au même bénéfice de la loi, indépendamment de
toute discrimination, notamment des discriminations fondées sur la race,
l'origine nationale ou ethnique, la couleur, la religion, le sexe, l'âge ou
les déficiences mentales ou physiques.
|
[101] In their reasons, Justices
Linden and Evans disagree as to the purpose behind the CRDO Provisions. Both
agree that those provisions provide a benefit in terms of a relaxation of the 4
of 6 contribution requirement. To that extent, I am in agreement with them.
Evans J.A. postulates that the purpose of the CRDO Provisions is to provide the
benefit to a parent who leaves the work force to provide at-home care to “young
children” – those under the age of seven. Linden J.A. views the purpose of the
CRDO Provisions more broadly. In his view, those provisions should be regarded
as having been intended to permit a contributor to “drop out” as many months of
at-home care for a disabled child as may be required until that child is able
to go to school. In terms of these divergent views with respect to the purpose
of the CRDO Provisions, I am in agreement with the view stated by Evans J.A.
[102] However, with respect to my
colleagues, I am of the view that the applicant’s constitutional challenge to
the CRDO Provisions should be dealt with on a simpler basis, one that does not
require a consideration of the purpose of that impugned legislation.
[103] In this case, the subsection
15(1) challenge is based on an allegation that the applicant was not provided
with “equal benefit of the law without discrimination”. In my view, this
challenge requires the applicant to identify the impugned legislation and the
benefit provided thereunder. Thereafter, the applicant must establish that the
benefit was denied to her and that the basis for the denial was discrimination
on the grounds enumerated in subsection 15(1) or analogous grounds.
[104] The impugned legislative
provisions are subparagraph 44(2)(b)(iv) of the Plan and paragraph
77(1)(a) of the Plan Regulations. In my view, the benefit provided by
this legislation is the entitlement of a disability pension claimant to exclude
from the determination of the claimant’s contributory period, for the purposes
of the 4 of 6 contribution requirement, each month of at-home care for a child
under the age of seven, subject to certain other criteria that are not in issue
in this application. In short, the benefit of the impugned legislation is the
entitlement to exclude or “drop out” up to seventy-two months of absence from
the work force, due to at-home child care, for the purpose of determining
whether the 4 of 6 contribution requirement has been met.
[105] The next step is to determine
whether the claimant was denied the benefit that is provided by the impugned
legislation. It is at this point, in my view, that the applicant meets an
insurmountable obstacle. At the hearing, the applicant conceded that in her
application for a disability pension, she in fact excluded the maximum number
of months permitted by the CRDO Provisions in attempting to demonstrate that
she met the 4 of 6 contribution requirement. Unfortunately for the applicant,
she did not meet that requirement, notwithstanding that she claimed and
received the maximum benefit that the impugned legislation provided.
[106] In my view, the applicant’s
admission that she received the maximum benefit provided by the CRDO
Provisions makes it impossible for her to establish that she has been denied
the benefit provided by the law that she wishes to have declared
unconstitutional. Accordingly, her application must fail.
[107] This conclusion appears to be
consistent with the concept of equality under subsection 15(1) of the Charter
that was described by McIntyre J. at paragraph 26 of his decision in Andrews
v. Law Society of British Columbia, [1989] 1 S.C.R. 143. In that paragraph,
he stated:
Recognizing that there
will always be an infinite variety of personal characteristics, capacities,
entitlements and merits among those subject to a law, there must be accorded,
as nearly as may be possible, an equality of benefit and protection and no more
of the restrictions, penalties or burdens imposed upon one than another. In
other words, the admittedly unattainable ideal should be that a law expressed
to bind all should not because of irrelevant personal differences have a more
burdensome or less beneficial impact on one than another.
[Emphasis
added]
The underlined portion of this quotation,
in my view, reinforces my conclusion by informing that a law may be susceptible
to challenge under subsection 15(1) of the Charter where that law
has a “less beneficial impact upon one than the other”. To me, this indicates
that where a person has received the full extent of the beneficial impact of a
particular law, that person has not been denied equality of the benefit of that
law. In this regard, it is important to keep in mind that in Andrews,
the complainant was denied the benefit of membership in the Law Society of
British Columbia because he lacked Canadian citizenship.
[108] It seems to me that the
applicant’s claim is not that she has been denied any “benefit of the law”.
Instead, her complaint is that the impugned legislation should have provided
more of a benefit than it does. Similar assertions were rejected by the Supreme
Court of Canada in Auton (Guardian ad litem of) v. British Columbia
(Attorney General), [2004] 3 S.C.R. 657, Hodge v. Canada (Minister of Human Resources
Development),
[2004] 3 S.C.R. 357 and Granovsky v. Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration), [2000] 1 S.C.R. 703. While
it may well be debatable as to whether the CRDO Provisions should impart more
extensive benefits than they currently do, in my view, that debate should be
held in Parliament, not in the courts.
[109] It follows, in my view, that
the question of whether discrimination is afoot is not one that needs to be
addressed in this appeal. If it did, the arguments between my colleagues as to
the purpose of the impugned legislation might well become live issues. In Hodge,
Binnie J. stated, at paragraph 24:
24 The
usual starting point is an analysis of the legislation (or state conduct) that
denied the benefit or imposed the unwanted burden. While we are dealing in this
appeal with access to a government benefit, and the starting point is thus the purpose
of the legislative provisions, a similar exercise is required where a claim is
based on the effect of an impugned law or state action.
This passage indicates that an analysis of the purpose of
the impugned legislation will be relevant where there has been a denial of the
benefit of the law. It seems to follow that where the full benefit of the
impugned law has been enjoyed by the person challenging the law, no such
analysis should be necessary.
[110] I wish to make an observation
with respect to certain factual characterizations that appear in the reasons of
my colleague Linden J.A. In particular, in paragraphs 33 and 59 of his reasons,
Linden J.A. intimates that the reason that the applicant was unable to meet the
4 of 6 contribution requirement was because she was forced to provide full-time
at-home care for her son. In that regard, I would observe that the applicant’s
son was able to go to school in the fall of 1998 but she did not return to the
work force until 2001. That period of absence from the work force cannot be
attributed to a requirement to provide at-home care to her son and if she had
worked for a year during that period, she would have met the 4 of 6
contribution requirement.
[111] For these reasons, I would
dismiss the application.
"C. Michael Ryer"