Date: 20100520
Docket: T-516-09
Citation: 2010 FC 555
Ottawa, Ontario, May 20, 2010
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice O'Keefe
BETWEEN:
CANADIAN
HUMAN RIGHTS COMMISSION
Applicant
and
JIM PANKIW, KEITH DREAVER,
NORMA FAIRBAIRN,
SUSAN GINGELL, PAMELA IRVINE, JOHN MELENCHUK,
RICHARD ROSS, AILSA WATKINSON,
HARLAN WEIDENHAMMER and CARMAN WILLETT
Respondents
and
SPEAKER OF THE HOUSE OF COMMONS
Intervener
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND JUDGMENT
O’KEEFE J.
[1]
This
case is about printed brochures called householders that Members of Parliament
typically send to households within their constituency. Householders enable Members
of Parliament to maintain their visibility in their constituencies by reporting
on the Member’s parliamentary activities and thoughts on issues. The resources
for producing householders are provided by the House of Commons. Each Member of
Parliament is entitled to send out four householders per year.
[2]
This
is an application for judicial review in respect of a decision by the Canadian
Human Rights Tribunal (the tribunal) dated March 6, 2009, dismissing the
complaints filed against the respondent, former MP Jim Pankiw. The complainants
alleged that the respondent’s householders contained discriminatory views about
First Nations people contrary to sections 5, 12 and 14 of the Canadian Human
Rights Act, R.S.C. 1985, c. H-6 (the Act).
[3]
The
Canadian Human Rights Commission (the Commission or the applicant) now submits
that the tribunal erred in finding that the sending of householders by a Member
of Parliament did not constitute a “service customarily available to the public”
as per section 5 of the Act.
[4]
The
applicant requests the tribunal decision be quashed and remanded to the same or
a differently constituted tribunal for a determination consistent with the
reasons of this Court.
Background Facts to the
Tribunal’s Decision
[5]
During
2002 and 2003, Jim Pankiw, then an independent Member of Parliament for the
federal riding of Saskatoon-Humbolt, sent householders to his constituents
which gave rise to the complaints that the content was discriminatory. Some
constituents were deeply offended by these messages from their MP. Nine members
of this group, including several individuals of First Nations’ ancestry, sought
recourse under the Act. On various dates in 2003, they filed complaints with
the Commission alleging that the householders expressed discriminatory views
about First Nations people.
Relevant Legislation
[6]
Race
is a prohibited ground of discrimination under section 3 of the Act. Pursuant
to section 5, the Act provides redress for those who experience adverse
treatment or harassment in the provision of services, based on the fact that
they are of Aboriginal descent (among other grounds). Section 5 states:
5. It is a discriminatory practice in the
provision of goods, services, facilities or accommodation customarily
available to the general public
(a) to deny,
or to deny access to, any such good, service, facility or accommodation to
any individual, or
(b) to differentiate
adversely in relation to any individual,
on a
prohibited ground of discrimination.
|
5.
Constitue un acte discriminatoire, s’il est fondé sur un motif de distinction
illicite, le fait, pour le fournisseur de biens, de services, d’installations
ou de moyens d’hébergement destinés au public :
a)
d’en priver un individu;
b)
de le défavoriser à l’occasion de leur fourniture.
|
[7]
The
Act also sanctions the publication of notices that express discrimination or
incite others to discriminate, in regard to Aboriginal people. Section 12 provides:
12. It is a
discriminatory practice to publish or display before the public or to cause
to be published or displayed before the public any notice, sign, symbol,
emblem or other representation that
(a) expresses
or implies discrimination or an intention to discriminate, or
(b) incites or
is calculated to incite others to discriminate
if the
discrimination expressed or implied, intended to be expressed or implied or
incited or calculated to be incited would otherwise, if engaged in, be a
discriminatory practice described in any of sections 5 to 11 or in section
14.
|
12.
Constitue un acte discriminatoire le fait de publier ou d’exposer en public,
ou de faire publier ou exposer en public des affiches, des écriteaux, des
insignes, des emblèmes, des symboles ou autres représentations qui, selon le
cas :
a)
expriment ou suggèrent des actes discriminatoires au sens des articles 5 à 11
ou de l’article 14 ou des intentions de commettre de tels actes;
b)
en encouragent ou visent à en encourager l’accomplissement.
|
[8]
Section
14 of the Act clarifies when harassment constitutes a discriminatory practice:
14.(1) It is a discriminatory practice,
(a) in the
provision of goods, services, facilities or accommodation customarily
available to the general public,
(b) in the
provision of commercial premises or residential accommodation, or
(c) in matters
related to employment,
to harass an
individual on a prohibited ground of discrimination.
|
14.(1)
Constitue un acte discriminatoire, s’il est fondé sur un motif de distinction
illicite, le fait de harceler un individu :
a) lors de la
fourniture de biens, de services, d’installations ou de moyens d’hébergement
destinés au public;
b) lors de la
fourniture de locaux commerciaux ou de logements;
c) en matière
d’emploi.
|
[9]
The
complainants and the Commission argued that the householders were
discriminatory violations of section 12. They also argued that the
communication by means of the householders constitutes a service customarily
available to the public within section 5 of the Act. Further, according to the
complainants and the Commission, the householders denigrate First Nations
people on the basis of their race and this constitutes adverse differentiation
on the basis of a prohibited ground. Therefore, they argued that the respondent
violated section 5 of the Act when he sent out the householders.
[10]
The
Commission has since abandoned its submissions under section 12. Thus, that
aspect of the tribunal’s decision is not before the Court for review.
The Tribunal’s Decision
[11]
The
tribunal’s decision, reported at Dreaver v. Pankiw, [2009] C.H.R.D. No.
8, first dealt with the question of whether creating and mailing householders
amounts to a service within section 5 of the Act. The tribunal answered this
question in the negative. The key question in determining whether actions by a
public official constitute a service under subsection 5(b) of the Act is
whether the activity provides a benefit or assistance to people. A related
question is whether the characterization of the activity as a service is
compatible with the essential nature of the activity (at paragraph 23). The tribunal
reasoned that while some constituents may derive some benefit from householders,
this is not their fundamental purpose. It is the sender of the document who is
its prime beneficiary. Householders convey political messages and elicit
feedback to enable the Member of Parliament to know he has support. They are
not a service under section 5 (paragraphs 24 to 29).
[12]
Even
if householders could be considered a service under section 5 of the Act, the
next step under the test set out in Gould v. Yukon Order of Pioneers,
[1996] 1 S.C.R. 571, is to determine whether the service creates a public
relationship between the service provider and the end user. The creation of the
content of the householders did not result in such a relationship because the
public was not provided with an opportunity to participate. The part of the
process that most clearly gave rise to the respondent’s relationship with the
public was the distribution of the householder, but here there was no adverse
differentiation in the distribution process (paragraphs 30 to 35).
[13]
The
tribunal then considered section 5 in the context of other provisions of the Act.
Section 5 deals with discrimination in the provision of services while sections
12 and 13 deal with discrimination in the communication of messages. The tribunal
would deal with section 12 separately and the complainants had already acknowledged
that section 13 did not apply. Thus, section 5 should not be extended to
include written communications such as the householders since to do so would be
to extend the limitations Parliament placed on discriminatory communications
(paragraphs 40 to 44).
[14]
On
the issue of section 12 of the Act, the tribunal found that section 12 did not
encompass written statements like those at issue in the present case
(paragraphs 45 to 54).
[15]
Since
the tribunal found that the householders did not constitute a service customarily
available to the public under section 5, the tribunal dismissed the allegation
that the respondent had engaged in a discriminatory act under section 14,
without looking at the merits of the allegations (at paragraphs 55 and 56).
Issue
[16]
The
issue is as follows:
Was it unreasonable for the
tribunal to determine that householders do not constitute a service customarily
available to the public?
Applicant’s Written
Submissions
[17]
The
applicant submits that the appropriate standard of review is reasonableness
since the tribunal has developed particular expertise in the application of the
law in a specific statutory context and the tribunal was interpreting its own
statute with which it has particular familiarity. However, the applicant
submits that the Act, as human rights legislation, must be given a large and
liberal interpretation consistent with its quasi-constitutional status. The tribunal
erred in applying a narrow interpretation.
[18]
The
applicant submits that the tribunal made an error of fact when it determined
that householders are partisan political messages. This finding was
inconsistent with the way it described householders at the beginning of its
reasons.
[19]
The
applicant submits that what constitutes a service is varied and is not limited
to the traditional definition of the word. Services are not restricted to
marketplace activities. Indeed, most activities undertaken by a public body for
the public good should be presumed to be services. Not all actions accepted as services
by courts and tribunals include something of benefit being held out as a
service or offered to the public. Here, the tribunal narrowed the definition of
services by adding an additional requirement that the sole beneficiary of the
service be the client. This contradicts a recent decision of the Federal Court
of Appeal. That the provider of the service also benefits does not exclude the action
from being considered a service. A householder, a document prepared by a public
official and paid for by public funds which informs constituents, is a service
in the same way that a weather bulletin is. The tribunal’s finding that it was
not was unreasonable and unsupported by the evidence. Even if householders are
also meant to influence voters, it does not follow that its distribution is not
a service.
[20]
With
regard to the requirement that a service must be customarily available to the
public, the applicant submits that the tribunal’s finding that the householders
do not create a public relationship between the provider and the user merely
because the public does not participate in their content is unreasonable. There
is no requirement for a service to have public participation; virtually all
actions by a public body will meet the test for being customarily available to
the public. In addition, even though the tribunal found that there was no
discrimination in the provision of the householders under section 5, the tribunal
erred by not carrying on to determine whether there was harassment in the
provision of the householders under section 14.
[21]
Finally,
the applicant submits that the tribunal erred when it flatly determined that
section 5 of the Act excludes all written communications. Many examples of
services accepted by courts, such as a weather bulletin put out by Environment
Canada, are clearly written.
Written Submissions of
the Respondent and Intervener
[22]
The
respondent, Jim Pankiw and the intervener agree that the standard of review
should be reasonableness. While human rights legislation is to be given a large
and liberal interpretation, this does not permit a departure from the rules of
statutory interpretation to extend to the application of the Act beyond what
the language of the statute will bear.
[23]
The
respondent and intervener submit that the tribunal’s decision that householders
are not a service within section 5 of the Act was consistent with the law and
the evidence presented to the tribunal and falls within the range of possible
acceptable outcomes. There is nothing to suggest that the decision was not
intelligible.
[24]
The
first task before the tribunal was to determine the nature and purpose of householders,
a question of fact to be accorded the highest degree of deference. The tribunal
found that householders are communications characterized as informative and
political. This was a reasonable finding. Besides this communication, there was
no other activity, program or benefit that would suggest that some service was
being provided. The tribunal then considered, after extensive review of the
case law, that a service requires some benefit or assistance to be bestowed on
the recipient, and thus, that a mere communication could not constitute a
service. The tribunal also analyzed the appropriate interpretation of the term services
in its context, appearing in conjunction with goods and accommodation in
section 5 and considered the overall scheme of the Act. Deference requires the
Court to avoid consideration of whether other possible interpretations might
have been available or even preferable, but rather to determine whether the tribunal’s
ultimate decision was unreasonable.
[25]
The
respondent and intervener submit that even if the term service could be
extended beyond the broadest limits the words can bear, constitutional
considerations would constrain and delimit the bounds of reasonableness in the
circumstances of political communications like householders. The interpretation
advocated for by the Commission would extend the meaning of services to include
communications and therefore allow the examination of the content of communications
between Members of Parliament and their constituents. This would be a prima
facie infringement of section 2 of the Charter. Since there are no
limits or tests established by section 5 of the Act, such an infringement could
not be saved by section 1. It would also infringe the right of constituents to
make a fully informed decision when voting, violating section 3 of the Charter
and would limit political discourse and infringe the underlying constitutional
principle of democracy. Freedom of expression can only be limited by human
rights acts’ provisions that include clear language. Section 13 of the Act
limits certain types of mere communications but has unique features that insure
minimum impairment of the freedom of expression.
Analysis and Decision
Standard of Review
[26]
The
jurisprudence is settled. When reviewing the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal’s interpretation
of a provision of its enabling statute, the Act, the standard of review is
reasonableness (see Dunsmuir v. New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9, [2008] 1
S.C.R. 190, [2008] S.C.J. No. 9 (QL) at paragraph 54, Vilven v. Air Canada,
2009 FC 367, [2009] F.C.J. No. 475 (QL) at paragraphs 61 to 74, Canadian
Federal Pilots Assn. v. Canada (Attorney General), 2009 FCA 223, [2009]
F.C.J. No. 822 (QL) at paragraph 50. The tribunal is specifically empowered to
determine questions of law (see the Act at subsection 50(2)).
[27]
Issue
Was it unreasonable for the
tribunal to determine that householders do not constitute a service customarily
available to the public?
The
reasonableness standard was articulated by the Supreme Court of Canada recently
in Dunsmuir above, and again in Canada
(Citizenship and Immigration) v. Khosa,
2009 SCC 12, [2009] S.C.J. No. 12 (QL). Accordingly, courts reviewing
tribunal decisions under the reasonableness standard are to show deference.
Deference requires respect for the decision making process with regard to both
facts and law. In analyzing the written reasons of a tribunal, the court is to
look only for justification, transparency and intelligibility and to look at
whether the outcome falls within the range of possible acceptable outcomes (see
Dunsmuir at paragraph 47 and Khosa at paragraphs 25 and 59).
[28]
As a preliminary
matter, there is no basis to interfere with the tribunal’s finding of fact that
householders are communications characterized as informative and political.
Courts are to afford administrative fact finding a high degree of deference. It
was entirely open to the tribunal to make this initial finding.
[29]
The prime issue in
this case is the interpretation of certain provisions within the Act. After a
significant analysis of the case law on services and analyzing the role of
section 5 within the scheme of the Act, the tribunal determined that services
within the context of section 5 of the Act are limited to activities, the
essential nature of which is to provide a benefit or assistance to people. The
tribunal provided the following synthesis of its interpretation:
23 What emerges from this analysis of
the law is that to determine whether actions by a public official constitute a
"service" under s. 5(b) of the CHRA, one must ask whether the
activity provides a benefit or assistance to people. A related question is
whether the characterization of the activity as a service is compatible with
the essential nature of the activity.
[30]
The
tribunal determined that services are not limited to marketplace activities and
include some actions by government or public officials in the performance of
their functions.
[31]
The
applicant has provided a well reasoned argument that services within the
context of section 5 of the Act should include a broader range of government
actions and argues that most actions undertaken by public servants should at the
very least be presumed to be services. The applicant also argues that the tribunal,
by putting emphasis on the essential nature of the activity, fashioned for
itself a new requirement, which would further restrict what could be classified
as a service.
[32]
I
am prepared to accept that the tribunal took an approach which attempted to
clarify and better define what is meant by the term services and that their
analysis resulted in an incremental narrowing of that definition. Given the
unclear state of the case law on this point, clarification was needed.
Endeavouring to do so was therefore intelligible and justified. There is no allegation
or indication that the tribunal set about its task with the intention of
producing a narrow interpretation. All materials and jurisprudence cited and
used were known to the parties before the tribunal and were fully argued. The
decision making process appears to have been quite transparent.
[33]
The
applicant disputes the substantive result of the tribunal’s interpretation and
offers a preferable, or as the applicant sees it, the correct interpretation.
In my view, this is not enough. Deference requires the Court to avoid
consideration of whether other possible interpretations may have been
available, or even preferable. As noted by Mr. Justice Binnie in Khosa
above, at paragraph 59:
…Reviewing courts cannot substitute their
own appreciation of the appropriate solution, but must rather determine if the
outcome falls within "a range of possible, acceptable outcomes which are
defensible in respect of the facts and law" (Dunsmuir, at para. 47). There
might be more than one reasonable outcome. However, as long as the process and
the outcome fit comfortably with the principles of justification, transparency
and intelligibility, it is not open to a reviewing court to substitute its own
view of a preferable outcome.
[34]
The
task before the applicant is to establish that the tribunal’s interpretation
was unreasonable in the sense that it lacked justification, transparency or
intelligibility, or to establish that the tribunal’s ultimate conclusion was
unreasonable in the sense that it fell outside the range of reasonable possible
outcomes. The applicant has not provided a basis for establishing either.
[35]
In
any event, I am satisfied that the tribunal was not unreasonable in its
interpretation of the law or in its conclusion.
[36]
Of
primary assistance to the tribunal was the decision in Canada (Attorney
General) v. Watkin, 2008 FCA 170, 378 N.R. 268, where the Federal
Court of Appeal had recently addressed the precise issue of what constitutes a service
within section 5 of the Act. The Watkin Court analyzed the
issue thoroughly against the standard of correctness because it had come to the
Court as a jurisdictional matter and had not been addressed by the tribunal (at
paragraph 23).
[37]
The
Watkin
Court expressly
rejected the idea that all government actions come within section 5 (at paragraph
26). With reference to Gould v. Yukon Order of Pioneers, [1996] 1 S.C.R.
571, [1996] S.C.J. No. 29, the Watkin Court stated:
…the first step to be performed in
applying section 5 is to determine whether the actions complained of are
"services" (see Gould, supra, per La Forest J., para.
60). In this respect, "services" within the meaning of section 5
contemplate something of benefit being "held out" as services and
"offered" to the public (Gould, supra, per La Forest
J., para. 55).
[38]
At
paragraph 28, the Court offered some examples of government actions that would
constitute a service.
Public authorities can and do engage in
the provision of services in fulfilling their statutory functions. For example,
the Canada Revenue Agency provides a service when it issues advance income tax
rulings; Environment Canada provides a service when it publicizes weather and
road conditions; Health Canada provides a service when it encourages Canadians
to take an active role in their health by increasing their level of physical
activity and eating well; Immigration Canada provides a service when it advises
immigrants about how to become a Canadian resident. That said, not all government
actions are services.
[39]
It
would appear from the agreed statement of facts that a Member of Parliament may
send out up to four householders per year. This seems to me to say that it is
up to the Member to decide how many, if any, householders the Member will send
out to his or her constituents.
[40]
The
tribunal also grappled with a line of cases indicating that mayoral proclamations
constitute a service customarily available to the public (for example see Okanagan
Rainbow Coalition v. Kelowna (City), 2000 BCHRT
21). The tribunal noted that in those cases, the proclamation had been
specifically sought by an individual or group from the community (decision at
paragraph 20).
[41]
The
tribunal also dealt with cases where the grant of citizenship (clearly a benefit
to the recipient) had been held not to be a service (see Forward v. Canada (Citizenship
and Immigration), 2008 CHRT 5). The tribunal reasoned that this was arguably
correct because characterizing it as a mere service would be to ignore the
fundamental role of citizenship in defining the relationship between
individuals and the state (decision at paragraph 22).
[42]
In
my view, this process was the very exercise one would expect the tribunal to go
through when attempting to reconcile inconsistent case law. It was an
intelligible fine tuning exercise. The analysis led the tribunal to determine
that not only must a service require something of benefit or assistance being
held out, but one may also inquire whether that benefit or assistance was the
essential nature of the activity.
[43]
I
do see this as adding to or clarifying the law as it stood post-Watkin.
In my view, it is not inconsistent with Watkin above. On the contrary,
it is entirely consistent. Each of the four examples of government services in Watkin
above, can be said to provide, as their essential nature, a benefit or
assistance.
[44]
Next,
the tribunal intelligibly applied this question to the householders which were
the subject of the decision and considered the benefits that recipients may
derive from receiving such publications (at paragraphs 29 and 30). The tribunal,
however, determined that the primary nature of householders was not to benefit
the constituents, but to convey the Member of Parliament’s political views and
to receive feedback. To this extent, it was the sender of the householder who
was the primary beneficiary and thus, householders were not a service.
[45]
While
it may have been open to the tribunal to come to different factual or legal
conclusions, I see no basis upon which to intervene in its determination.
[46]
The
tribunal also looked to the scheme of the Act for a further intelligible
justification for why the content of householders would not fall within the
ambit of section 5 of the Act. Even if a communication could be considered a service,
section 5 was only meant to apply to the provision of the service, not its
content. This was a logical conclusion.
[47]
Section
5 applies to the provision of a service. Yet the complainants at the tribunal
and the applicant here wish to attack the content of the householders, not the
provision of the householders. Parliament specifically drafted sections 12 and
13 of the Act to apply to communications. Section 12 expressly applies to the
publishing or displaying of any “notice, sign, symbol, emblem or other representation”
but does not apply to the content of written material such as newspaper
articles (see Re Warren and Chapman, (1984), 11 D.L.R. (4th) 474 (Man.
Q.B.), Saskatchewan
(Human Rights Commission) v. Engineering Students' Society (1989), 56
D.L.R. (4th) 604 (Sask. C.A.)). Section 13 of the Act is the only section which
expressly applies to the content of communications, but was carefully limited
by Parliament to communications that are transmitted telephonically via the internet
and was further limited to such communications “likely to expose a person or
persons to hatred or contempt by reason of the fact that that person or those
persons are identifiable on the basis of a prohibited ground of
discrimination”. The applicant concedes that neither section 12 nor section 13
would apply to the content of householders. It is logical to conclude, as the tribunal
did, that if Parliament intended the Act to apply to the content of written
communications, such as householders, it would have done so expressly. Stretching
the definition of services in the context of section 5 to encompass the content
of written communications would be to rewrite the Act.
[48]
The
applicant finally argues that the tribunal should have gone on to consider
whether the householders violated section 14 of the Act. In my view, that was
not necessary and the tribunal was justified in giving short shrift to the
section 14 analysis. While section 14 differs from section 5 in its
application, its construction is similar, in that services has the same meaning
in both sections; a point conceded by the Commission before the tribunal,
The Tribunal has concluded that the
Householders do not constitute "services customarily available to the
general public". In closing argument, the Commission conceded that if the
Householders were found not to constitute "services" then s. 14 would
not apply. The Tribunal agrees. Since the Householders were not services, there
can be no harassment in the provision of services on the basis of a prohibited
ground. Section 14 does not apply in the present case.
[49]
The
respondent and
intervener provide further justification for the tribunal’s interpretation by
asserting that the broader interpretation proffered by the applicant would
conflict with the right to freedom of expression contained in section 2 of the Charter.
On this basis, the respondent and intervener assert that the alternative
interpretation suggested by the applicant would have been an unreasonable one.
[50]
The
applicant simply responds by stating that human rights legislation by its very
nature contemplates some encroachment of the freedoms listed under section 2 of
the Charter and that to prohibit any encroachment would render
the legislation ineffective (see Hudler v. London (City), [1997]
O.H.R.B.I.D. No. 23 at paragraph 70).
[51]
The
tribunal, in the present case, did not feel that it was necessary to tackle
this Charter argument and nor do I. I do accept that the avoidance of a
conflict with the Charter may further justify the tribunal’s ultimate
conclusion. It is trite law that where there are two possible interpretations
of a statute, an interpretation which does not infringe the Constitution is to be
preferred over one that does (see Eaton v. Brant County Board of Education,
[1997] 1 S.C.R. 241, [1996] S.C.J. No. 98 (QL) at paragraph 3), Slaight
Communications Inc. v. Davidson, [1989] 1 S.C.R. 1038, [1989] S.C.J. No. 45
(QL), Owens v. Saskatchewan (Human Rights Commission), 2006 SKCA 41, 267
D.L.R. (4th) 733). However, I cannot speculate as to what role such a
constitutional consideration may have played in the tribunal’s decision making
process, which is the primary focus of a judicial review application. In any
event, since I have already determined that the tribunal’s decision making process
and ultimate decision were reasonable, it is unnecessary to delve into an
analysis whether an alternative interpretation may or may not have resulted in
a Charter violation.
[52]
For
the reasons above, I would dismiss the application for judicial review.
[53]
In
a section 5 analysis, after an action by any public body has been determined to
be a service, it is not always necessary to then require that the service
create a public relationship between the service provider and the end user.
While this may have been the approach taken by the Supreme Court in Gould
above at paragraph 69, such an approach is to be limited to the nature of the
facts in that case. A service by any public body will generally meet the test
of being customarily available to the public.
[54]
Since
householders were not a service, it was unnecessary for the tribunal to
determine whether householders were customarily available to the public.
Therefore, this error is immaterial to the disposition of this judicial review.
[55]
Because
of the nature of this application and because it is about an issue of public
interest, there shall be no order as to costs.
JUDGMENT
[56]
IT
IS ORDERED that the application for judicial review is dismissed and there
shall be no order as to costs.
“John
A. O’Keefe”
ANNEX
Relevant
Statutory Provisions
Canadian
Human Rights Act,
R.S.C. 1985, c. H-6
5. It is a
discriminatory practice in the provision of goods, services, facilities or
accommodation customarily available to the general public
(a) to deny,
or to deny access to, any such good, service, facility or accommodation to
any individual, or
(b) to
differentiate adversely in relation to any individual,
on a
prohibited ground of discrimination.
12. It is a
discriminatory practice to publish or display before the public or to cause
to be published or displayed before the public any notice, sign, symbol,
emblem or other representation that
(a) expresses
or implies discrimination or an intention to discriminate, or
(b) incites or
is calculated to incite others to discriminate
if the
discrimination expressed or implied, intended to be expressed or implied or
incited or calculated to be incited would otherwise, if engaged in, be a
discriminatory practice described in any of sections 5 to 11 or in section
14.
13.(1) It is a discriminatory practice for
a person or a group of persons acting in concert to communicate
telephonically or to cause to be so communicated, repeatedly, in whole or in
part by means of the facilities of a telecommunication undertaking within the
legislative authority of Parliament, any matter that is likely to expose a
person or persons to hatred or contempt by reason of the fact that that
person or those persons are identifiable on the basis of a prohibited ground
of discrimination.
14.(1) It is a
discriminatory practice,
(a) in the
provision of goods, services, facilities or accommodation customarily
available to the general public,
(b) in the
provision of commercial premises or
residential
accommodation, or
(c) in matters
related to employment,
to harass an
individual on a prohibited ground of discrimination.
|
5.
Constitue un acte discriminatoire, s’il est fondé sur un motif de distinction
illicite, le fait, pour le fournisseur de biens, de services, d’installations
ou de moyens d’hébergement destinés au public :
a) d’en priver
un individu;
b) de le
défavoriser à l’occasion de leur fourniture.
12.
Constitue un acte discriminatoire le fait de publier ou d’exposer en public,
ou de faire publier ou exposer en public des affiches, des écriteaux, des
insignes, des emblèmes, des symboles ou autres représentations qui, selon le
cas :
a) expriment
ou suggèrent des actes discriminatoires au sens des articles 5 à 11 ou de
l’article 14 ou des intentions de commettre de tels actes;
b) en
encouragent ou visent à en encourager l’accomplissement.
13.(1)
Constitue un acte discriminatoire le fait, pour une personne ou un groupe de
personnes agissant d’un commun accord, d’utiliser ou de faire utiliser un
téléphone de façon répétée en recourant ou en faisant recourir aux services
d’une entreprise de télécommunication relevant de la compétence du Parlement
pour aborder ou faire aborder des questions susceptibles d’exposer à la haine
ou au mépris des personnes appartenant à un groupe identifiable sur la base
des critères énoncés à l’article 3.
14.(1)
Constitue un acte discriminatoire, s’il est fondé sur un motif de distinction
illicite, le fait de harceler un individu :
a) lors de la
fourniture de biens, de services, d’installations ou de moyens d’hébergement
destinés au public;
b) lors de la
fourniture de locaux commerciaux ou de logements;
c) en matière
d’emploi.
|