Docket: A-17-16
Citation:
2017 FCA 130
CORAM:
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STRATAS J.A.
WEBB J.A.
GLEASON J.A.
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BETWEEN:
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CURTIS LEWIS
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Appellant
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and
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THE MINISTER OF
PUBLIC SAFETY
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AND EMERGENCY
PREPAREDNESS
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Respondent
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and
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JUSTICE FOR
CHILDREN AND YOUTH
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Intervener
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REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
GLEASON J.A.
[1]
In this appeal, the appellant, Curtis Lewis,
seeks to set aside the November 25, 2015 judgment of the Federal Court in Lewis
v. Canada (Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness), 2015 FC 1309
(available on CanLII) [Lewis] in which the Federal Court (per
Annis, J.) dismissed Mr. Lewis’ application for judicial review of the July 28,
2014 decision of a Canada Boarder Services Agency (CBSA) Inland Enforcement
Officer. In that decision, the Enforcement Officer refused Mr. Lewis’
request under section 48 of the Immigration and Refugee Protection Act,
S.C. 2001, c. 27 (the IRPA)
to defer his deportation from Canada to Guyana pending determination of his
application for humanitarian and compassionate (H&C) relief under
section 25 of the IRPA and pending a request to re-open an appeal
before the Immigration Appeal Division (the IAD) of the Immigration and
Refugee Board (the IRB).
[2]
The requested deferral was premised largely on
the impact Mr. Lewis’ removal would have on his daughter, a Canadian citizen of
indigenous heritage who, in all likelihood, would accompany her father to
Guyana if he is sent back to that country.
[3]
In the decision under appeal, the Federal Court certified
the following questions under section 74 of the IRPA:
a. Do the principles set out by the Supreme Court of Canada in
R. v Gladue, R. v Ipeelee, and R. v Anderson apply, mutatis
mutandis, to removals under section 48 of the IRPA such that there must be
a full consideration of the impact on an Aboriginal child of the removal from
Canada of her non-citizen custodial parent prior to the execution of the
removal order?
b. Does Section 7 of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms
mandate Gladue-like consideration of the impact of the removal of an
Aboriginal child’s custodial parent prior to the execution of the removal
order?
[4]
For the reasons that follow, I would answer these
questions in the negative but would allow this appeal as the Enforcement
Officer’s consideration of the best interests of Mr. Lewis’ daughter was
unreasonable. I would accordingly set aside the Enforcement Officer’s July 28,
2014 decision and remit Mr. Lewis’ application under section 48 of the IRPA to
another CBSA Enforcement Officer for re-determination in accordance with these
reasons.
I.
Background
[5]
Mr. Lewis is a permanent Canadian resident and a
Guyanese citizen. He is nearly 60 years old and came to Canada as a child in
1966, when his family immigrated here. Although his
family members are now citizens, he claims that he did not become a Canadian
citizen (when he was eligible to apply) essentially because he ignored the
importance of making an application for citizenship. He has no family members
or connections in Guyana and has not been back to that country since 1966. Mr.
Lewis has worked as a drywall lather and plasterer in Canada but was unemployed
and on social assistance at the time of his deferral application.
[6]
Mr. Lewis has sole custody of his young Canadian
daughter who is currently 9 years old. She is a member of the Gwich’in First
Nation (Inuvik) by virtue of her maternal lineage and has status as an “Indian”
under the Indian Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. I-5. The girl’s mother is
unable to care for the child and lost custody and visitation rights by reason
of her substance abuse issues. While there are other members of the mother’s
family who live in the Northwest Territories and members of Mr. Lewis’ family
who live in Toronto, there appears to be no one other than Mr. Lewis who would
be willing and in a position to care for the child on a full time basis. Thus, the
refusal of the requested deferral may well have resulted in the de facto
removal of the child from Canada as having her declared a ward of the state
appears to be the only other option available to the girl, which Mr. Lewis is not
prepared to see occur. The CBSA accepted that the child was to accompany Mr.
Lewis to Guyana and was prepared to purchase airline tickets for both Mr. Lewis and the child.
[7]
Mr. Lewis has a criminal record in Canada. In
1979, he was convicted of assault causing bodily harm, for which he received a
suspended sentence. In 1985, he was again convicted of assault causing bodily
harm and of a related Failure to Appear, for which he received fines and a
short period of incarceration (possibly because he did not pay the fines). In
2003, Mr. Lewis was convicted of assault causing bodily harm for a third time, and
he received a 12-month conditional sentence.
[8]
Following his 2003 conviction, Mr. Lewis’
immigration status was referred to the IRB for a determination under paragraph
36(1)(a) of the IRPA which provided (and still provides) that a permanent
resident is inadmissible for serious criminality if convicted of an offence
under federal law punishable by a maximum term of imprisonment of at least 10
years or for which a term of imprisonment of more than six months was imposed.
[9]
On July 7, 2004, the IRB determined that
paragraph 36(1)(a) of the IRPA applied and consequently issued a
Deportation Order against Mr. Lewis under subsection 45(d) of the IRPA. Mr.
Lewis appealed that decision to the IAD under subsections 63(3) and 68(1) of
the IRPA. The IAD rendered its decision on November 15, 2005. Citing Mr. Lewis’
ties to Canada, the hardship his deportation would cause, his compliance with
anger management training, the lack of danger he posed to the public and his
limited criminal record, the IAD stayed the Deportation Order for one year,
subject to conditions. These included that Mr. Lewis was required to advise Citizenship
and Immigration Canada (CIC) of any change in address and to apply for a valid
passport or other travel documents.
[10]
Mr. Lewis advised CIC on April 12, 2006 that he intended
to move from Edmonton to Yellowknife, but did not actually do so. Instead, he
remained in Edmonton and became homeless for several months in late 2006 and
early 2007. The CIC office in Yellowknife informed the CIC office in Edmonton
that Mr. Lewis had not reported his change of address in Yellowknife. In
addition, CIC determined that Mr. Lewis had not applied for a passport. CIC
advised the IAD of these facts, and on March 5, 2007 the IAD cancelled the stay
and dismissed the appeal of the Deportation Order. As Mr. Lewis’ whereabouts
were then unknown to the IAD and CIC, he was not served with a copy of the
IAD’s decision dismissing the appeal of the Deportation Order. A warrant for the
Mr. Lewis’ arrest was issued following the reactivation of the Deportation
Order.
[11]
Mr. Lewis’ daughter was born in 2007. He lived
for about three years with the child’s mother and the child in Edmonton, but,
when the child was removed from the home by child welfare officials, Mr. Lewis left
the child’s mother to establish his own residence so he could be awarded
custody of the child. The Edmonton Family Court of the Provincial Court of
Alberta awarded Mr. Lewis sole custody of his daughter on October 6, 2011. Its
order made no provision for access or visitation by the child’s mother, who did
not appear at the custody hearing. Since then, the child has lived with Mr.
Lewis and she has had no contact with her mother, who remains incapable of
caring for her.
[12]
Mr. Lewis came to the attention of the police in
October of 2007 in Edmonton when he was identified as a witness to a crime. On
November 12, 2007, he was arrested on the strength of the outstanding warrant and
was placed briefly in immigration detention. Upon release, Mr. Lewis was
subject to conditions, including: (1) to provide an address and notice of any changes
to it to officials and (2) to report to a CBSA officer regularly. He has only
partially complied with the reporting condition.
[13]
Following his arrest, Mr. Lewis was not funnelled
into the Pre-Removal Risk Assessment (PRRA) process (the usual next step in
removing someone in his situation from Canada) because he had no Guyanese
identification that would have allowed for the ready issuance of a passport or
travel documents by Guyana. He remained in limbo until late 2013.
[14]
In August 2013, with the knowledge of the CBSA, Mr.
Lewis moved to Toronto to be closer to his own family. His daughter attends
school in Toronto, and Mr. Lewis has a network of family and friends that
support him in caring for her. In the affidavit he filed in support of his
deferral request, Mr. Lewis deposed that he has done everything in his power to
help his daughter preserve her links with her Aboriginal culture. The child’s
teacher, who is also a member of a First Nation, is supportive, and the child
attends an afterschool First Nations Study Program offered by the school board,
where she has learned about indigenous cultures and has met others of
indigenous heritage. Mr. Lewis says that he is hoping to bring his daughter to
the Northwest Territories to visit her maternal relatives, but has not been
permitted by the CBSA to leave Toronto.
[15]
On September 26, 2013, Guyanese officials
informed the CBSA that travel documents had been approved for Mr. Lewis. He was
convened to a PRRA interview on November 12, 2013, and shortly thereafter a
Senior Immigration Officer denied the PRRA application because Mr. Lewis could
not demonstrate that he fell within the criteria outlined in section 97 of the IRPA.
At the time and currently, that section provides in relevant part:
97 (1) A person in need of protection is a person in Canada whose
removal to their country or countries of nationality or, if they do not have
a country of nationality, their country of former habitual residence, would
subject them personally
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97 (1) A qualité de personne à protéger la personne qui se trouve
au Canada et serait personnellement, par son renvoi vers tout pays dont elle
a la nationalité ou, si elle n’a pas de nationalité, dans lequel elle avait
sa résidence habituelle, exposée :
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(a) to a danger, believed on substantial grounds to exist,
of torture within the meaning of Article 1 of the Convention Against Torture;
or
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a) soit
au risque, s’il y a des motifs sérieux de le croire, d’être soumise à la
torture au sens de l’article premier de la Convention contre la torture;
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(b) to a risk to their life or to a risk of cruel and
unusual treatment or punishment […].
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b) soit
à une menace à sa vie ou au risque de traitements ou peines cruels et
inusités […].
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[16]
On July 11, 2014, Mr. Lewis was notified that
his removal would occur on August 1, 2014. In response, he retained legal aid
counsel and filed three applications in late July 2014: (1) an application
to re-open his appeal before the IAD of the Deportation Order, (2) an
application for permanent resident status on H&C grounds under section 25
of the IRPA and (3) a request to defer his removal under section 48 of the IRPA.
[17]
On July 28, 2014, the CBSA Enforcement Officer dismissed
Mr. Lewis’ deferral request. This is the decision which gives rise to the
present appeal.
[18]
On the day of his scheduled removal, Mr. Lewis moved
before the Federal Court for a stay of removal pending resolution of three
applications (to re-open the IAD appeal, the H&C application and the
judicial review of the deferral decision). The Federal Court granted the stay
pending the decision of the Federal Court in the judicial review application and
pending the decision of the IAD on the request to re-open the appeal of the
Deportation Order.
[19]
On October 15, 2014, the IAD dismissed the request
to re-open the appeal of the Deportation Order, finding there had been no
denial of procedural fairness as Mr. Lewis failed to keep the IAD advised of
his whereabouts.
[20]
As noted, the Federal Court dismissed Mr. Lewis’
judicial review application from the Enforcement Officer’s deferral decision on
November 25, 2015. Consequent with the dismissal of the judicial review application,
the Federal Court’s stay order ceased to operate. It appears as if the respondent
has not yet sought to enforce the Enforcement Officer’s decision as the
appellant was still in Canada when this appeal was argued. As of that date, Mr.
Lewis’ H&C application had not yet been determined, and the parties concurred
that it may still be some time before the H&C application is decided.
II.
The Decisions of the CBSA Enforcement Officer
and of the Federal Court
[21]
With this background in mind, it is now possible
to review in more detail the decisions of the Enforcement Officer and the
Federal Court that are the subject of this appeal.
A.
The Enforcement Officer’s Decision
[22]
The Enforcement Officer considered the arguments
that Mr. Lewis made in support of the request for a deferral in a brief letter
decision, the typical form of decision issued in cases such as this due to the
short time frame available for consideration of deferral requests.
[23]
The Enforcement Officer commenced her analysis
by noting that under section 48 of the IRPA, the CBSA is required to enforce
removal orders as soon as possible and that her discretion to grant a deferral
was therefore very limited. She went on to determine that Mr. Lewis’ then pending
application to the IAD did not provide the basis for granting the requested deferral
because it had not been made in a timely fashion. She also noted that the
application would not bar Mr. Lewis’ removal as it could still be considered by
the IAD even if he were removed from Canada.
[24]
The Enforcement Officer then turned to the
pending H&C application and noted that it, too, had not been made in a
timely fashion and therefore was not a bar to removing Mr. Lewis from Canada.
The Enforcement Officer also held that it was beyond her authority to conduct
an adjunct H&C evaluation.
[25]
In terms of the impact of the removal on Mr.
Lewis, the Enforcement Officer noted that separation from family is often the
unfortunate consequence of the removals process and therefore was not on its
own a basis for granting the requested deferral. The Enforcement Officer also
stated that she felt that the separation of Mr. Lewis from his family members
might be temporary and was not satisfied that he had demonstrated he would be
unable to rely on his work experience in Canada to obtain gainful employment “immediately upon arrival in Guyana”.
[26]
The Enforcement Officer next considered the
impact of the removal on Mr. Lewis’ daughter, noting that her authority was
limited to considering the short-term impact of removal on the child’s best
interests. In assessing those interests, the Enforcement Officer accepted that
the child would be accompanying her father to Guyana and therefore stated that
she was “confident that his care and support will
attenuate any period of adjustment [the child] may experience after she has
departed Canada”.
[27]
In terms of the importance of the child’s maintaining
a connection with her indigenous culture, the Enforcement Officer dismissed
this concern in a single paragraph that states as follows:
I acknowledge that [the child’s] aboriginal
heritage is of critical importance to her and also to her Father. I am not
satisfied, however, that counsel’s submissions establish that Mr. Lewis’
removal from Canada will prevent [the child] from maintaining a close
connection with her Aboriginal community, its culture and traditions. I note,
for instance, that [the child] may return to Canada at any time to participate
in “dances, pow wows, speakers and special events, as well as native
Aboriginal centres and Native art shows,” referred to by her Father in his
affidavit, and also note that she may enter Canada whenever her legal guardian
permits it to visit her mother, her mother’s family and the Gwich’in band in
Yellowknife.
[28]
The Enforcement Officer concluded her analysis
by noting Mr. Lewis’ criminal convictions and immigration history, including
his failures in attending at the bond reporting centre following his release
from immigration detention. In light of all these considerations, the
Enforcement Officer concluded that a further deferral of Mr. Lewis’ removal was
not appropriate and thus dismissed his application under section 48 of the
IRPA.
B.
The Decision of the Federal Court
[29]
Mr. Lewis raised before the Federal Court issues
similar to those he raises before us, namely that the Enforcement Officer’s
decision contravened his child’s rights under section 7 of the Canadian
Charter of Rights and Freedoms (the Charter) and that the
Enforcement Officer’s treatment of the child’s best interests was unreasonable.
The Federal Court held that the reasonableness standard applied to its review
of both issues.
[30]
As concerns the Charter issue, the Federal Court
held that there was nothing in the child’s aboriginal status that would give
rise to a protected interest under section 7, especially since there was no
order that she be removed from Canada. The Court also rejected Mr. Lewis’ contention
that the principles from R. v. Gladue, [1999] 1 S.C.R. 688, 171 D.L.R.
(4th) 385 [Gladue], R. v. Ipeelee, 2012 SCC 13, [2012]
1 S.C.R. 433 [Ipeelee] and R. v. Anderson, 2014 SCC 41, [2014] 2
S.C.R. 167 [Anderson] should be applied, with necessary modifications,
to the child’s situation.
[31]
These cases, which arise in the criminal
context, concern subsection 718.2(e) of the Criminal Code, R.S.C.
1985, c. C-46 (Criminal Code). That provision requires a Court in
setting a sentence to consider “all available sanctions,
other than imprisonment, that are reasonable in the circumstances […] with
particular attention to the circumstances of Aboriginal offenders”. In Gladue,
Ipeelee and Anderson, the Supreme Court of Canada
undertook a detailed review of the historical disadvantage and discrimination
that indigenous people have endured in Canada. The Court held that subsection 718.2(e)
of the Criminal Code requires a sentencing court to give due
consideration to the systemic factors that contribute to the over-representation
of indigenous offenders in the criminal justice system and, to the extent
possible, to craft sentences that are sensitive to the experiences of indigenous
offenders in light of these factors, including by considering approaches to
correction other than incarceration if they are appropriate and available. In
this matter, the Federal Court held that these principles have no application
in the immigration context.
[32]
As concerns the best interests of the child, the
Federal Court found the Enforcement Officer’s treatment of the issue to be reasonable
largely because the Court held that it was premature to assume that the child
would be leaving Canada with her father when he is removed to Guyana.
[33]
The Federal Court therefore dismissed the
judicial review application.
III.
Preliminary Issue – the Appropriateness of the
Certified Questions
[34]
The respondent raises a preliminary objection to
this Court’s jurisdiction to hear this appeal, asserting that the Federal Court
improperly certified questions under section 74 of the IRPA in the present case.
The respondent thus requests that this appeal be dismissed for want of jurisdiction.
[35]
Section 74 of the IRPA sets out the conditions
necessary for this Court to have jurisdiction to hear an appeal from a decision
of the Federal Court in a case such as this and provides in relevant part that
an appeal to this Court may only be made if, in rendering judgment, the Federal
Court “certifies that a serious question of general
importance is involved and states the question”.
[36]
The case law of this Court establishes that in
order for a question to be properly certified under section 74 of the IRPA, and
therefore for this Court to have jurisdiction to hear an appeal, the question
certified by the Federal Court must be dispositive of the appeal, must
transcend the interests of the parties and must raise an issue of broad
significance or general importance. In consequence, the question must have been
dealt with by the Federal Court and must necessarily arise from the case itself
(as opposed to arising out of the way in which the Federal Court may have
disposed of the case): Zhang v. Canada (Citizenship and Immigration),
2013 FCA 168 at para. 9, 446 N.R. 382; Varela v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2009 FCA 145 at paras. 28-29, [2010] 1
F.C.R. 129; Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) v. Zazai,
2004 FCA 89 at paras. 11-12, 318 N.R. 365 [Zazai]; and Liyanagamage
v. Canada (Secretary of State), 176 N.R. 4 at para. 4, [1994] F.C.J. No.
1637 (F.C.A.).
[37]
The case law further recognizes that once a
question has been properly certified, this Court may consider any issue in the
appeal and is not limited to considering only the question(s) certified: Baker
v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), [1999] 2 S.C.R. 817 at
para. 12, 174 D.L.R. (4th) 193 [Baker]; Mudrak v. Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2016 FCA 178 at para. 19, 485
N.R. 186 [Mudrak]; and Zazai at para. 10.
[38]
The respondent says that the two questions certified
by the Federal Court in this case are improper as the circumstances of Mr.
Lewis and his daughter are very uncommon and it is unlikely that another child
of indigenous heritage would ever find him or herself subject to being forced
to leave Canada along with an inadmissible custodial parent who is being
removed by the CBSA. The respondent therefore submits that the questions certified
by the Federal Court do not raise issues of broad significance or general
importance. In support of this assertion, the respondent points to the fact
that the issues raised in the present appeal have not been the subject of prior
consideration in the case law.
[39]
In my view, the fact that these issues have not
been the subject of prior consideration in the case law does not mean that they
arise infrequently or cannot be the subject of a proper question under section
74 of the IRPA. Indeed, for a question to be one of general importance under
section 74 of the IRPA, it cannot have been previously settled by the decided
case law: Mudrak at para. 36; Canada (Minister of Citizenship and
Immigration) v. Amado-Cordeiro, 2004 FCA 120, 320 N.R. 319. Thus, all
properly certified questions lack decided binding authority.
[40]
In the absence of any evidence before us as to
how frequently situations like that of Mr. Lewis and his daughter might
actually arise, I am not prepared to conclude that the Federal Court improperly
certified the questions in this case. Thus, I would dismiss the respondent’s
preliminary objection.
IV.
The Appeal on the Merits
[41]
Moving on to consider the appeal on the merits,
as this is an appeal from a decision of the Federal Court in a judicial review
application, the standard of review we are to apply is prescribed by the
Supreme Court of Canada in Agraira v. Canada (Public Safety and Emergency
Preparedness), 2013 SCC 36 at paras. 45-47, [2013] 2 S.C.R. 559. That
standard requires an appellate court to step into the shoes of the trial court,
determine whether that court selected the appropriate standard of review and,
if so, assess whether it applied that standard correctly. Thus, we are in
effect called upon to re-conduct the required judicial review analysis.
A.
The Standard of Review
[42]
In terms of the first portion of the foregoing
inquiry - determining whether the Federal Court selected the appropriate
standard of review - I agree with the Federal Court that the reasonableness
standard applies to the review of the Enforcement Officer’s decision in its
entirety, including the assessment of whether that decision violates section 7
of the Charter.
[43]
It is well-settled that the reasonableness
standard applies generally to the review of decisions made by enforcement officers
under section 48 of the IRPA: Canada (Public Safety and Emergency
Preparedness) v. Shpati, 2011 FCA 286 at para. 27, 343 D.L.R. (4th) 128 [Shpati];
Baron v. Canada (Minister of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness),
2009 FCA 81 at para. 25, [2010] 2 F.C.R. 311 [Baron]. As for the Charter
issue, where, like here, the issue involves consideration of whether a
discretionary decision of an administrative decision-maker respects Charter
values, the Supreme Court of Canada has determined that the reasonableness
standard likewise applies: Loyola High School v. Quebec (Attorney General),
2015 SCC 12 at paras. 3-4, 32, [2015] 1 S.C.R. 613; Doré
v. Barreau du Québec, 2012 SCC 12 at paras. 57-58,
[2012] 1 S.C.R. 395. Thus, the Enforcement Officer’s decision is to be reviewed
for reasonableness.
B.
The Arguments on Appeal
[44]
Mr. Lewis and the intervener make three
principal arguments in support of the request to set aside the Enforcement
Officer’s decision.
[45]
They first say that the decision of the Supreme
Court of Canada in Kanthasamy v. Canada (Citizenship and Immigration),
2015 SCC 61, [2015] 3 S.C.R. 909 [Kanthasamy] must be understood
as having overtaken the decided authority of this Court regarding the depth of
consideration that CBSA enforcement officers are required to give to the best
interests of children in deciding whether or not to grant a deferral of a
removal order under section 48 of the IRPA.
[46]
The previous judgments of this Court in Baron
at paras. 49-51 and Shpati at para. 45 stand for the proposition that an
enforcement officer considering an application to defer a removal order under
section 48 of the IRPA is not entitled to conduct what would amount to a
full-blown consideration of an applicant’s interests as would occur in an
H&C application made under section 25 of the IRPA. This is equally so where
the interests of children are invoked: Baron at para. 57; Langner v.
Canada (Minister of Employment & Immigration), 184 N.R. 230, 29 C.R.R.
(2d) 184 (F.C.A.) [Langner].
[47]
Mr. Lewis and the intervener say that this case
law has been overtaken by Kanthasamy, which they submit mandates a much
more fulsome consideration of the best interests of children affected by a
request to defer the removal of their parent(s) from Canada. In support of this
argument, they say that both the reasoning of the Supreme Court in Kanthasamy
and paragraph 3(3)(f) of the IRPA require that all decision-makers
under the IRPA comply with the United Nations Convention on the Rights of
the Child (the Children’s Convention). They further submit that this
Convention requires that no decision made under the IRPA that impacts children,
including rulings on deferral requests under section 48, can be made until the
children’s best interests are thoroughly examined and given priority
consideration. As this did not occur in the present case, they say the
Enforcement Officer’s decision must be set aside.
[48]
Mr. Lewis goes further and submits that the
requisite analysis is not one that can actually be undertaken by CBSA
enforcement officers given their limited mandate. In other words, because enforcement
officers do not have the authority under section 48 to make complex decisions
involving children in a manner consistent with Kanthasamy, any such
decision would be incomplete and therefore unreasonable. As a consequence, Mr.
Lewis argues that he was entitled to have his removal deferred until his
pending H&C application is decided on the merits. This is because it is only
at this point that the requisite analysis of the impact of his removal on his daughter’s
best interests can be undertaken.
[49]
Mr. Lewis secondly submits that the principles in
Gladue, Ipeelee and Anderson (which I collectively call the
“Gladue principles”) apply outside the
criminal sentencing context, pointing to a number of cases in support of this
argument: United States v. Leonard, 2012 ONCA 622, 112 O.R. (3d) 496; R.
v. Robinson, 2009 ONCA 205, 95 O.R. (3d) 309; Frontenac Ventures Corporation
v. Ardoch Algonquin First Nation, 2008 ONCA 534, 295 D.L.R. (4th) 108;
R. v. Sim (2005), 78 O.R. (3d) 183, 67 W.C.B. (2d) 431 (Ont. C.A.); Twins
v. Canada (Attorney General), 2016 FC 537, 130 W.C.B. (2d) 628; and Law
Society of Upper Canada v. Terence John Robinson, 2013 ONLSAP 18 (available
on CanLII) [Robinson LSUC]. He asserts that the Gladue principles
have quasi-constitutional status and under section 7 of the Charter require
that a meaningful and substantive consideration of the impact of his removal on
his daughter be undertaken before he is removed from Canada. Once again, he
asserts that such consideration can only be undertaken by an H&C officer
under section 25 of the IRPA and not by enforcement officers, given the limited
scope of their authority under section 48 of the IRPA.
[50]
Finally, Mr. Lewis and the intervener submit that
the Enforcement Officer’s consideration of the best interests of Mr. Lewis’
daughter was unreasonable as the Enforcement Officer failed to give adequate
consideration to the importance of the child being able to maintain a
connection with her indigenous roots and heritage, which she could not do if
she were in Guyana. They also say that there is no rational basis for the
Enforcement Officer’s assumption that the child could return to Canada. The intervener
further notes that indigenous children are among the most vulnerable in Canada and
that, even if the Gladue principles do not apply to applications under
the IRPA, an appropriate analysis of the best interests of aboriginal children whose
custodial parent is being removed from Canada requires recognition of the
situation of such children and of the importance of their maintaining a
connection to their culture, community and traditional lands. As none of these
points were given adequate consideration by the Enforcement Officer, the intervener
submits her decision must be set aside.
C.
Analysis
(1)
Section 48 Generally
[51]
It is useful to begin by reviewing section 48 of
the IRPA and the role this section plays in the overall context of the IRPA.
Section 48 of the IRPA currently provides:
48 (1) A removal order is enforceable if it has come into force
and is not stayed.
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48 (1) La mesure de renvoi est exécutoire depuis sa prise d’effet
dès lors qu’elle ne fait pas l’objet d’un sursis.
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(2) If a removal order is enforceable, the foreign national
against whom it was made must leave Canada immediately and the order must be
enforced as soon as possible.
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(2) L’étranger visé par la mesure de renvoi exécutoire doit
immédiatement quitter le territoire du Canada, la mesure devant être exécutée
dès que possible.
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The provision was identical at the time of
the Enforcement Officer’s decision. Previously, subsection 48(2) was arguably more
broadly-worded, requiring that removal orders were to be enforced “as soon as is reasonably practicable” (as opposed to
the current requirement for enforcement “as soon as
possible”).
[52]
Requests for deferral, like the one made by Mr.
Lewis in this case, are typically made after the applicant has either had – or has
had the opportunity to have – more than one hearing before other decision-makers
under the IRPA. These decision-makers are charged with assessing a range of
issues, including whether applicants would face a risk of torture or risks to
their lives or well-being that prevents their removal to their countries of
origin under section 97 (or, where applicable, section 96) of the IRPA or
whether H&C grounds militate in favour of their being allowed to stay in
Canada. Risk determinations are generally made by the Refugee Protection Division
of the IRB, in the context of refugee claims, and by PRRA officers, prior to an
individual’s removal. H&C grounds may be considered by the IAD in the
context of a request to stay a removal order, as occurred in Mr. Lewis’ case,
and may also be considered by ministerial delegates under section 25 of the
IRPA.
[53]
Several of these processes were open to or
utilized by Mr. Lewis. A PRRA officer determined that there would be no risk to
Mr. Lewis if he were returned to Guyana that would justify his remaining in
Canada under section 97 of the IRPA. The IAD originally granted a stay of the
removal order on H&C grounds and cancelled that stay only when Mr. Lewis
failed to abide by the condition of keeping CIC advised of his whereabouts. At
any point thereafter, Mr. Lewis could have applied under section 25 of the
IRPA for H&C consideration and invoked the same arguments he made to the
CBSA Enforcement Officer. However, he did not avail himself of this option
until he was facing removal.
[54]
Deferral requests are typically the last application
made by those who are not entitled to remain in Canada. In light of this and of
the language used by Parliament in section 48 of the IRPA, directing that
removal orders be enforced as soon as possible (or formerly as soon as is
reasonably practicable), this Court and the Federal Court have long held that
the discretion that an enforcement officer may exercise is very limited: Shpati
at para. 45; Baron at para. 51; Wang v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), [2001] 3 F.C.R. 682 at para. 45, 2001 FCT 148
(F.C.T.D.); and Simoes v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
187 F.T.R. 219 at para. 12, 7 Imm. L.R. (3d) 141 (F.C.T.D.) [Simoes].
[55]
As this Court noted in Baron at paragraph
49 (citing with approval from the earlier decision of the Federal Court in
Simoes):
[…] the discretion that [an
enforcement] officer may exercise is very limited, and […] is restricted to
when a removal order will be executed. In deciding when it is “reasonably
practicable” for a removal order to be executed, [an enforcement] officer may
consider various factors such as illness, other impediments to travelling, and
pending H&C applications that were brought on a timely basis but have yet
to be resolved due to backlogs in the system.
[56]
This Court went on to accept the Federal Court’s
further holding in Simoes that “the mere
existence of an H&C application [does] not constitute a bar to the
execution of a valid removal order” and that “an
enforcement officer [is] not required to undertake a substantive review of the
children’s best interests before executing a removal order” (Baron
at paras. 50, 52). Nor does the fact that the individual being removed is the
parent of a Canadian-born child that may accompany the parent back to the
country of origin justify deferral; this was precisely the situation in Baron
and, indeed, is often the case for those who have remained in Canada while
their immigration applications are being processed.
[57]
Thus, under this well-established line of
authority, the mere fact that an H&C application has been made shortly
before the removal date by those subject to being removed or the fact that they
might take their Canadian-born children with them when they are removed from
Canada does not mean that a deferral under section 48 of the IRPA is warranted.
Nor is an enforcement officer entitled to engage in a full-blown analysis of
the best interests of such children as so doing would usurp the function of
H&C officers under section 25 of the IRPA.
[58]
That said, the case law of the Federal Court recognizes
that an enforcement officer, in appropriate cases, may be required to engage in
a truncated consideration of the short-term best interests of children who
might be affected by their parents’ removal.
[59]
In Munar v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship
and Immigration), 2005 FC 1180, [2006] 2 F.C.R. 664 [Munar], de
Montigny J. (as he then was) concluded that the narrow discretion prescribed by
the previous version of section 48 of the IRPA was not inconsistent with
Canada’s obligations under the Children’s Convention both because the Supreme Court
of Canada in Baker (the seminal case dealing with the principles
applicable to assessing children’s best interests in the immigration context) and
the Children’s Convention, itself, recognize that the best interests of the
child principle is not a trump card that automatically renders any state-driven
separation of parent from child unenforceable. Rather, the principle requires
consideration be given to the best interests of the children in question, but
does not necessarily dictate particular outcomes (Munar at paras.
33-34). In the oft-quoted passage at paragraphs 36-40 in Munar, Justice
de Montigny described the type of assessment required by enforcement officers of
the best interests of children whose parent(s) seek to have removal deferred
under section 48 of the IRPA:
36. [… enforcement] officers cannot be required to undertake a full substantive review
of the humanitarian circumstances that are to be considered as part of an H&C
assessment. Not only would that result in a “‘pre H&C’ application” […] but
it would also duplicate to some extent the real H&C assessment. More
importantly, [enforcement] officers have no jurisdiction or delegated authority
to determine applications for permanent residence submitted under section 25 of
the IRPA. They are employed by the Canada Border Services Agency, an agency
under the auspices of the Minister of Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness,
and not by the Department of Citizenship and Immigration. They are not trained
to perform an H&C assessment.
37. Having said all of this, if the best
interest of the child is to be taken seriously, some consideration must be
given to [their] fate when one or both of their parents are to be removed from
this country. As is often the case, I believe that the solution lies somewhere
in between the two extreme positions espoused by the parties. While an absolute
bar on the removal of the parent would not be warranted, an approach precluding
the [enforcement] officers to give any consideration to the situation of a
child would equally be unacceptable.
38. […] the
consideration of the best interests of the child is not an all-or-nothing
exercise, but should be seen as a continuum. While a full-fledged analysis is
required in the context of an H&C application, a less thorough examination
may be sufficient when other types of decisions are made. Because of section 48
of the Act and of its overall structure, […] the obligation of [an enforcement]
officer to consider the interests of Canadian-born children must rest at the
lower end of the spectrum […].
[…]
40. […] What [an enforcement officer] should
be considering […] are the short-term best interests of the child. For
example, it is certainly within the [enforcement] officer’s discretion to defer
removal until a child has terminated his or her school year, if he or she is
going with his or her parent. Similarly, I cannot bring myself to the
conclusion that the [enforcement] officer should not satisfy himself that
provisions have been made for leaving a child in the care of others in Canada
when parents are to be removed. This is clearly within his mandate, if section
48 of the IRPA is to be read consistently with the Convention on the Rights
of the Child. To make enquiries as to whether a child will be adequately
looked after does not amount to a fulsome H&C assessment and in no way
duplicates the role of the immigration officer who will eventually deal with
such an application […].
[60]
Although Munar was a decision on a motion
to stay a removal pending an H&C application, Justice de Montigny’s
reasoning was applied by the Federal Court when it determined Ms. Munar’s
application for judicial review of the section 48 removal order: Munar v.
Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2006 FC 761 at paras.
18-19 (available on CanLII). In addition, the conclusions in Munar have
been applied by the Federal Court in its judicial review of section 48
decisions involving children: see, e.g. Nguyen v. Canada (Public Safety and
Emergency Preparedness), 2017 FC 225 at para.
15 (available on CanLII); Danyi v. Canada (Public Safety and Emergency
Preparedness), 2017 FC 112 at para. 30 (available on CanLII) [Danyi];
Baptiste v. Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2015 FC 1359 at para.
9, 11 Admin. L.R. (6th) 19; Kampemana
v. Canada (Public Safety and Emergency Preparedness), 2015 FC 1060 at paras. 33-34 (available on CanLII);
Ezquivel v. Canada (Public Safety and
Emergency Preparedness), 2014 FC 995 at para. 32 (available on CanLII); Khamis v. Canada (Citizenship and Immigration), 2010 FC 437 at
para. 30 (available on CanLII) [Khamis]; Turay v. Canada (Public Safety and Emergency
Preparedness), 2009 FC 1090 at para. 21 (available on CanLII).
[61]
Thus, under the existing case law, enforcement
officers may look at the short-term best interests of the children whose
parent(s) are being removed from Canada, but cannot engage in a full-blown
H&C analysis of such children’s long-term best interests.
[62]
With this backdrop in mind, I now turn to the
arguments advanced by Mr. Lewis and the intervener in this case.
(2)
The Charter Argument
[63]
It is convenient to first address the Charter
argument as it may be disposed of quickly. The starting point for the
discussion is what the respondent terms a “foundational
principle in the immigration context” (Respondent’s Memorandum of Fact
and Law at para. 55), namely, that section 7 of the Charter does not prevent
the removal of non-citizens from Canada if those being removed will not upon
return to their country of origin face risks of the sort that would qualify for
protection under section 97 of the IRPA: Medovarski v. Canada (Minister of
Citizenship and Immigration), 2005 SCC 51 at para. 46, [2005] 2 S.C.R. 539;
Suresh v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2002 SCC 1
at paras. 5, 78-79, [2002] 1 S.C.R. 3; and Canada (Minister of Employment
and Immigration) v. Chiarelli, [1992] 1 S.C.R. 711 at p. 733, 90 D.L.R.
(4th) 289. As there is no suggestion that Mr. Lewis would face any such risk,
his section 7 Charter rights are not impacted by the removal order. In short,
his constitutionally-protected rights to life, liberty and security of the
person will not be impacted if he is returned to Guyana.
[64]
Nor, in my view, are his child’s section 7
Charter rights impacted. There is no suggestion that she would face risk of a
type that would prevent removal under section 97 of the IRPA if she were to
accompany Mr. Lewis when he is returned to Guyana. Further, this Court has held
that the removal of the parent(s) of Canadian-born children to their countries
of origin when they are inadmissible to remain in Canada does not engage the
children’s section 7 interests: Idahosa v. Canada (Minister of Public Safety
and Emergency Preparedness), 2008 FCA 418 at para. 49, [2009] 4 F.C.R. 293;
Langner at paras. 7-9. Thus, if Mr. Lewis’ child were not of indigenous
heritage, there would be no basis for asserting that her rights under section 7
of the Charter might be impacted by Mr. Lewis’ removal.
[65]
I fail to see how the child’s indigenous
heritage mandates a different conclusion. While her heritage is very
significant to the type of analysis required to adequately address her short-term
best interests in the context of the removal process (as is more fully
discussed below), her heritage does not, of itself, give rise to a Charter-protected
interest that prevents her father’s removal, and this is not changed by Mr.
Lewis’ invocation of the Gladue principles.
[66]
As noted, the Gladue principles arise out
of subsection 718.2(e) of the Criminal Code, which deals with sentencing
and asks courts to consider alternatives to incarceration where possible.
Incarceration, by definition, involves the deprivation of liberty, and a carceral
sentence must therefore be imposed in accordance with the principles of
fundamental justice to be compliant with section 7 of the Charter. Liberty
interests are also engaged in the non-sentencing jurisprudence cited by the
appellant; a subject faces a risk of pre-trial detention in bail decisions,
foreign imprisonment in extradition cases and institutionalisation in not
criminally responsible (NCR) disposition cases. Thus, in these types of
situations, section 7 of the Charter may well require a Gladue-type
analysis where the subject of the sanction is of indigenous heritage. Section 7
of the Charter is engaged in such cases because the affected individuals’
liberty interests are impacted, not because of their status as indigenous
persons.
[67]
Here, on the other hand, no section 7 interests
are impacted by the removal of Mr. Lewis from Canada to Guyana. Thus, there is
no need to inquire whether the removals process accords with fundamental
justice as Mr. Lewis’ and his daughters’ section 7 rights are simply not
engaged.
[68]
As for the Robinson LSUC decision relied
upon by Mr. Lewis, the case makes no mention of the Charter, but rather
considers the sort of penalty a Law Society disciplinary panel should impose on
a lawyer of indigenous heritage who had been convicted of assault. This case is
therefore irrelevant to Mr. Lewis’ Charter argument.
[69]
I thus conclude that the Charter argument is
without merit and that the rights of Mr. Lewis and his daughter under
section 7 of the Charter would not be impacted by Mr. Lewis’ removal to Guyana.
Likewise, section 7 of the Charter did not require that a different type of
analysis be undertaken by the Enforcement Officer in this case.
(3)
Kanthasamy and
the Best Interests of the Child Analysis Required of Enforcement Officers
[70]
I turn now to the argument that the decision of
the Supreme Court of Canada in Kanthasamy mandates that either a more
fulsome analysis of the best interests of affected children be undertaken by enforcement
officers than has previously been required under the jurisprudence of this
Court and the Federal Court or that any such analysis must be deferred until an
application for H&C consideration is determined.
[71]
I begin by noting that Kanthasamy did not
involve a decision made by an enforcement officer under section 48 of the IRPA
but, rather, a decision of a ministerial delegate under section 25 of the
IRPA. Section 25 of the IRPA, unlike section 48, specifically requires that the
decision-maker consider the best interests of any children that would be directly
affected by a decision to refuse H&C relief. Section 25 provides in this regard:
25 (1) […] the Minister must, on request of a foreign national in
Canada who applies for permanent resident status and who is inadmissible […]
or who does not meet the requirements of this Act, and may, on request of a
foreign national outside Canada […] who applies for a permanent resident
visa, examine the circumstances concerning the foreign national and may grant
the foreign national permanent resident status or an exemption from any
applicable criteria or obligations of this Act if the Minister is of the
opinion that it is justified by humanitarian and compassionate considerations
relating to the foreign national, taking into account the best interests of a
child directly affected.
|
25 (1) […] le ministre doit, sur demande d’un étranger se trouvant
au Canada qui demande le statut de résident permanent et qui soit est
interdit de territoire […], soit ne se conforme pas à la présente loi, et
peut, sur demande d’un étranger se trouvant hors du Canada […] qui demande un
visa de résident permanent, étudier le cas de cet étranger; il peut lui
octroyer le statut de résident permanent ou lever tout ou partie des critères
et obligations applicables, s’il estime que des considérations d’ordre
humanitaire relatives à l’étranger le justifient, compte tenu de l’intérêt
supérieur de l’enfant directement touché.
|
[72]
The majority opinion in Kanthasamy turns
in large part on the fact that section 25 of the IRPA explicitly requires an
H&C officer to consider the affected children’s best interests. Writing for
the majority at paragraph 40 of Kanthasamy, Justice Abella noted:
Where, as here,
the legislation specifically directs that the best interests of a child who is
“directly affected” be considered, those interests are a singularly significant
focus and perspective […].
[73]
Even with the need to give the affected
children’s best interests “a singularly significant
focus and perspective” in the section 25 analysis, it does not follow
that the affected children’s best interests must outweigh other considerations
in the analysis. Immediately prior to paragraph 40 in Kanthasamy, Justice
Abella quotes at length from Baker. In the passage quoted, Justice L’Heureux-Dubé
wrote (Baker at para. 75):
[…] for the exercise of the discretion [by
an H&C decision-maker] to fall within the standard of reasonableness, the
decision-maker should consider children’s best interests as an important
factor, give them substantial weight, and be alert, alive and sensitive to
them. That is not to say that children’s best interests must always outweigh
other considerations, or that there will not be other reasons for denying an
H&C claim even when children’s interests are given this consideration.
However, where the interests of children are minimized, in a manner
inconsistent with Canada’s humanitarian and compassionate tradition and the
Minister’s guidelines, the decision will be unreasonable.
[74]
In light of the foregoing, I disagree with Mr.
Lewis and the intervener that Kanthasamy requires that a full-blown best
interests of the child analysis be undertaken before a child’s parent(s) may be
removed from Canada or that such children’s best interests must outweigh other
considerations in the analysis. In my view, the holding in Kanthasamy applies
only to H&C decisions made under section 25 of the IRPA and, even there,
does not mandate that the affected children’s best interests must necessarily
be the priority consideration.
[75]
As for the requirements of paragraph 3(3)(f)
of the IRPA and the Children’s Convention more generally, I believe that Munar
correctly characterizes the impact of these provisions on the type of analysis
to be undertaken by an enforcement officer.
[76]
Paragraph 3(3)(f) of the IRPA sets
out a rule of construction, providing that the IRPA is to be “construed and applied in a manner that complies with
international human rights instruments to which Canada is signatory”.
This Court and the Supreme Court of Canada have held that this provision does
not import international instruments to which Canada is a signatory into
domestic law, but, rather, provides a contextual foundation for interpretation
and gives rise to a presumption that the legislation should be interpreted in a
manner consistent with Canada’s international obligations: B010 v. Canada
(Citizenship and Immigration), 2015 SCC 58 at para. 49, [2015] 3
S.C.R. 704; Okoloubu v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
2008 FCA 326 at paras. 34-37, 301 D.L.R. (4th) 591; and de Guzman v. Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), 2005 FCA 436 at paras. 82-89,
262 D.L.R. (4th) 13.
[77]
Contrary to what the intervener asserts, the
Children’s Convention does not prescribe that the best interests of the child
is to be the priority consideration for all administrative decision-makers
tasked with making decisions that might impact children. Rather, Article 3 of
the Convention provides in relevant part that “[i]n all
actions concerning children […], the best interests of the child shall be a
primary consideration” [emphasis added]. Thus, Article 3 of the
Children’s Convention requires the best interests of the child be a priority,
but not the sole priority consideration. This is to be contrasted with the role
ascribed to the best interests of the child in adoption proceedings under Article
21 of the Children’s Convention, which provides that in such proceedings the
best interests of the child shall be “the paramount
consideration”.
[78]
The United Nations Committee on the Rights of
the Children recognizes the difference between these two obligations in its General
comment No. 14 (2013) on the right of the child to have his or her best
interests taken as a primary consideration, CRC/C/GC/14 (29 May 2013),
stating at paragraphs 38 and 39 as follows:
In respect of
adoption (art. 21), the right of best interests is further strengthened; it is
not simply to be “a primary consideration” but “the paramount consideration”
[…]. [Emphasis in original.]
However, since
article 3 […] covers a wide range of situations, the Committee recognizes the
need for a degree of flexibility in its application. […]
[79]
Section 25 of the IRPA provides the mechanism
under which children’s best interests are to be fully assessed in accordance
with Canada’s obligations under the Children’s Convention. In Kanthasamy the
Supreme Court has detailed what this assessment entails.
[80]
It was open to Mr. Lewis to make an application
under section 25 of the IRPA at any point after his daughter was born. Had he
done so, his daughter’s best interests would probably already have been fully evaluated
by an H&C officer in the context of such an application. However, he
neglected to make an application under section 25 of the IRPA until shortly
before his scheduled removal. In my view, this does not entitle him to
forestall his removal. Were it otherwise, a large loophole would be opened in
the IRPA, resulting in longer stays in Canada for those subject to lawful
removal orders. In many cases, such delay is probably not in anyone’s best
interests.
[81]
The impact of the Children’s Convention on the
type of assessment to be undertaken by enforcement officers was squarely addressed
by this Court in Baron. There, this Court unequivocally held at
paragraph 47 that the Children’s Convention does not mandate that a full-blown
best interests of the child analysis be undertaken by an enforcement officer or
that removal be delayed due to an untimely H&C application. Rather, in
adopting the statements in Simoes, this Court in Baron recognized
that it is only where a timely H&C application is still pending due to a
backlog in processing that a deferral may be warranted.
[82]
Thus, neither Kanthasamy nor the
Children’s Convention required the Enforcement Officer in this case to
undertake a full-blown assessment of the best interests of Mr. Lewis’ daughter
or to grant the requested deferral until Mr. Lewis’ last minute H&C
application was decided by a ministerial delegate. Rather, the Enforcement
Officer was only required to consider the short-term best interests of the
child.
[83]
In previous cases, such short-term best interests
have been found to include matters such as the need for a child to finish a
school year during the period of the requested deferral (see, e.g. Munar
at para. 40; Khamis at para. 30) or maintaining the well-being of
children who require specialized ongoing medical care in Canada (see, e.g. Danyi
at paras. 36-40). In addition, as noted in Munar at paragraphs 40-42, the
short-term needs of a child that an enforcement officer must consider include
ensuring that there will be someone to care for the child after his or her
parent(s) are removed if the child is to remain in Canada.
[84]
In my view, these sorts of considerations continue to
be appropriate under the current wording in section 48 of the IRPA as there is
no meaningful difference in effecting removal as soon as possible – versus as
soon as is reasonably practicable – when a child’s vital short-term best
interests are concerned.
[85]
Here, the Enforcement Officer was faced with the
situation of an indigenous child whose sole custodial parent was to be removed
from Canada. These facts raise special considerations that impact the child’s vital
short-term best interests.
[86]
More specifically, I agree with the intervener that
aboriginal children are doubtless among the most vulnerable in Canada and end
up in foster care with far greater frequency than non-indigenous children. For
example, in 2011, 48% of children under 14 years of age and 30% of older
teenagers in foster care in Canada were indigenous and more than half of these
children were fostered by non-indigenous caregivers: see Statistics Canada, Insights
on Canadian Society: Living arrangements of Aboriginal children aged 14 and
under (April 13, 2016), Catalogue no. 75-006-X at pp. 6-7, 10, as
cited by the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada in Honouring the
Truth, Reconciling for the Future (Truth and Reconciliation Commission of
Canada: Winnipeg, 2015) at p. 186. I also agree with the intervener that the
well-being of an indigenous child will be enhanced if he or she maintain some
connection with his or her culture, heritage and, ideally, territory, to help
foster a sense of belonging and pride. The Children’s Convention recognizes the
importance of such a connection and states in Article 30:
In those States in which ethnic, religious or linguistic minorities
or persons of indigenous origin exist, a child belonging to such a minority or
who is indigenous shall not be denied the right, in community with other
members of his or her group, to enjoy his or her own culture, to profess and
practise his or her own religion, or to use his or her own language.
[87]
The importance of giving meaning to this
provision in the context of federal policies and programs aimed at ensuring the
well-being of indigenous children across Canada was acknowledged by the
Standing Senate Committee on Human Rights in an April 2007 Final Report: Children:
The Silenced Citizens – Effective Implementation of Canada’s International
Obligations with Respect to the Rights of Children at pp. 169, 176-177,
184-185.
[88]
These issues give rise to both short and long-term interests
in the present case given the impact that removal for the period of the
requested deferral would have on the child’s connection to her indigenous
roots. Thus, even on a short-term basis, the Enforcement Officer had to be
alert, alive and sensitive to these issues and was required to give them brief reasonable
consideration.
(4)
Was the Enforcement Officer’s Decision
Reasonable
[89]
I therefore turn to the last issue raised by the
parties – the reasonableness of the Enforcement Officer’s decision in the
present case. The Enforcement Officer recognized that it was important to Mr.
Lewis’ daughter that she maintain “a close connection
with her Aboriginal community, its culture and traditions” during the
period of the requested deferral. Accepting that the child would go with her
father to Guyana, the Enforcement Officer reasoned that the child “may return to Canada at any time to participate in ‘dances,
pow wows, speakers and special events, as well as native Aboriginal centres and
Native art shows’” and that “she may enter
Canada whenever her legal guardian permits it to visit her mother, her mother’s
family and the Gwich’in band in Yellowknife”.
[90]
With respect, the assumption that the child
could return to Canada is pure speculation and therefore unreasonable. Her
father is inadmissible and so likely could not accompany his then 8 year-old daughter
on a return trip. The Enforcement Officer does not explain how it would be
feasible for the child to make the journey back to Canada on her own, and there
is no suggestion that anyone else would be able to accompany her. Perhaps more
importantly, given her father’s age, economic circumstances, skill set, lack of
connections in Guyana and the conditions prevalent in that country, as well as
the situation of the child’s mother, there is no basis for concluding that
anyone would be able to purchase an airline ticket for the child to return to
Canada or guarantee that her basic living requirements are met if she were to
return to Canada without Mr. Lewis.
[91]
Finally, although the Enforcement Officer was
quoting from Mr. Lewis’ affidavit in mentioning “dances,
pow wows, speakers and special events, as well as native Aboriginal centres and
Native art shows” to characterize the type of connection it was
important for the child to maintain with her indigenous roots, this description
belittles the profound nature of the degree of connection to culture, heritage
and territory that is likely important and desirable for an indigenous person
to maintain. Thus, the Enforcement Officer’s treatment of these issues was insensitive,
which Baker instructs is the antithesis of the requisite analysis of the
best interests of a child.
[92]
In short, having accepted that it was important
for the child to maintain a connection with her indigenous roots during the
period of the requested deferral, it was incumbent on the Enforcement Officer
to realistically and sensitively assess whether this was possible if she were
to accompany her father to Guyana. It seems to me that, based on the facts
before the Enforcement Officer, there was no realistic basis for concluding
that the child could maintain any such connection if she were in Guyana.
[93]
As for the Federal Court’s suggestion that the Enforcement
Officer’s decision should be upheld as there was no basis to conclude that the
child would be leaving Canada, I find this conclusion to be entirely without
merit as the facts indicate precisely the opposite. The CBSA was prepared to
purchase a ticket to Guyana for the child and the Enforcement Officer accepted
that the child would be accompanying Mr. Lewis when he returned to Guyana.
[94]
I thus conclude that the Enforcement Officer’s
decision was unreasonable.
V.
Proposed Disposition
[95]
I would therefore answer both certified questions
in the negative as follows:
a. Do the
principles set out by the Supreme Court of Canada in R. v Gladue, R.
v Ipeelee, and R. v Anderson apply, mutatis mutandis, to
removals under section 48 of the IRPA such that there must be a full
consideration of the impact on an Aboriginal child of the removal from Canada
of her non-citizen custodial parent prior to the execution of the removal
order?
Answer:
No.
b. Does Section 7 of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms
mandate Gladue-like consideration of the impact of the removal of an
Aboriginal child’s custodial parent prior to the execution of the removal
order?
Answer: No.
[96]
I would, however, allow this appeal and, making
the decision that the Federal Court ought to have made, would set aside the
decision of the Enforcement Officer and, provided Mr. Lewis’ H&C
application is still outstanding, would remit Mr. Lewis’ deferral application
to another CBSA Officer for re-determination in accordance with these reasons.
Given the passage of time, Mr. Lewis should be afforded the opportunity to make
additional submissions to provide an update on his situation and the situation
of his child before a decision is made on the re-determination. There is no
basis for an award of costs under section 22 of the Federal Courts
Citizenship, Immigration and Refugee Protection Rules, SOR/93-22.
“Mary J.L. Gleason”
“I agree.
David Stratas J.A.”
“I agree.
Wyman W. Webb J.A.”