Date: 20080613
Docket: T-1117-06
Citation: 2008 FC 733
Ottawa, Ontario, June
13, 2008
PRESENT: The Honourable Mr. Justice Simon Noël
BETWEEN:
National Capital Commission
Applicant
and
Bob Brown and the Canadian Human Rights Commission, and
the Attorney General of Canada (Representing the Department of Public Works and Government Services Canada)
Respondents
and
THE COUNCIL
OF CANADIANS WITH DISABILITIES
Intervener
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT AND JUDGMENT
I Introduction
[1]
This
is an application for judicial review of the decision of the Canadian Human
Rights Tribunal (the Tribunal), dated June 6, 2006, which decided that the National
Capital Commission (the applicant or the “NCC”), and Public Works and Government
Services Canada (“Public Works”) discriminated against Mr. Bob Brown, (the
respondent or Mr. Brown) in the provision of services, on the ground of
disability, contrary to sections 5 and 15 of the Canadian Human Rights Act
(the “Act”), R.S.C. 1985, c. H-6; in that the NCC failed to provide
universal access at the York Street Steps (the “Steps”), between Sussex Drive
and Mackenzie Avenue, in Ottawa and instead installed an elevator at the Daly
Building site, located some 130 meters away from the Steps.
[2]
Upon
the direction of the Tribunal, Public Works was added as a third party
respondent on December 9, 2003. As agent of the Crown and owner of the
Connaught Building, which is located immediately to the South, between the
Steps and the Daly Building elevator, the Tribunal held that there is sufficient
nexus between these two Crown entities to impose on Public Works, a duty to facilitate
the accommodation of Mr. Brown at or adjacent to the Steps.
[3]
This
finding against Public Works is the subject of a separate application for
judicial review in Attorney General of Canada (representing Public Works and
Government Services Canada) v. Bob Brown, the Canadian Human Rights
Commission and the National Capital Commission and Council of Canadians with
Disabilities,
T-1132-06. Both matters were heard together over a period of three days in Ottawa. The reasons that
follow pertain only to the present file. Reasons for judgment in the companion
file, T-1132-06, above, are released concurrently.
[4]
For
ease of reference, the following table of contents sets out the topics that
will be discussed:
Table of Contents
Paragraph
I Introduction 1
A. The Addition of an
intervener 5
II Factual context 6
A. The General Area and the York Street Steps 6
B. NCC’s
pre-construction plans to make the Steps Accessible 12
C. Alternative
accommodation: The Daly site Elevator 23
D. Bob Brown lodges
Human Rights Complaint 28
E.
Proceedings before the Canadian Human Rights Commission
(the “Commission”) 35
i) Investigation
Report 35
ii) Further
investigation: The First Rapson Report June 14, 2001 41
iii) Investigator’s
Report – Supplementary 47
F. NCC efforts
following filing of Human Rights Complaint 48
G. The Second
Rapson Report –May 15, 2003 58
III. The Impugned Decision 60
IV Issues 64
V Relevant legislation 66
VI. Standard of Review 68
A. Dunsmuir:
General principles 69
B. Application
of Dunsmuir to the present file 77
i)
Proper standard of review on the statutory interpretation 78
of the York Street Steps as a
“service” or “facility”
ii) Proper standard of review on
shifting of the onus 81
iii) Proper standard of review on finding
of a duty to consult 82
iv) Proper standard of review of the
local versus the global 90
approach
v) Proper standard of review of
rejection of the
Daly site elevator without proper balancing of factors 92
VII. Analysis 94
A. Did
the Tribunal err in law in determining that the 94
York Street Steps constitute a service or
a facility
within the meaning of section 5 of the
Act?
B. Did
the Tribunal err in law in concluding that 98
when it is established that there is a
prima facie case
of discrimination, the onus does not
shift to the respondent
to demonstrate that accommodation was
undertaken
short of undue hardship?
C. Did
the Tribunal err in fact or law in finding that the duty 105
to accommodate involves a duty to
consult?
D. Did
the Tribunal err in fact or law by limiting its analysis 121
to the bottom of the Steps rather than
approaching its
analysis globally?
E. Did
the Tribunal err in fact or law when it rejected 131
the Daly site elevator without doing the
proper balancing?
VIII Costs 145
IX Conclusion 146
A. The Addition of an intervener
[5]
By
Order of this Court, rendered on January 17, 2007, the Council of Canadians with Disabilities (CCD) was
granted intervener status with full rights of participation, in both files
T-1117-06 and T-1132-06.
II Factual context
A. The General Area and the York Street Steps
[6]
The
NCC is a federal Crown Corporation, mandated by the National Capital Act,
R.S.C. 1985, c. N-4 (the “NCA”). Its objects, purposes and powers are
set out in section 10, which provides as follows at paragraph 10(1)(a):
Objects and
purposes of Commission
10. (1) The
objects and purposes of the Commission are to
(a) prepare
plans for and assist in the development, conservation and improvement of the
National Capital Region in order that the nature and character of the seat of
the Government of Canada may be in accordance with its national significance;
and
[. . .]
|
Mission
de la Commission
10.
(1) La Commission a pour mission :
a)
d’établir des plans d’aménagement, de conservation et d’embellissement de la
région de la capitale nationale et de concourir à la réalisation de ces trois
buts, afin de doter le siège du gouvernement du Canada d’un cachet et d’un
caractère dignes de son importance nationale;
[. . .]
|
[7]
Under
this mandate, the NCC began in the early 1990s to redevelop the general area bordered
by Murray
Street to
the North, Wellington and Rideau Streets to
the South and Mackenzie
Avenue and
Sussex
Drive to
the West and East respectively. The purpose of this long-term urban planning redevelopment
was to revitalize this derelict area of the Nation’s capital and increase
accessibility between upper town -leading to and from the Chateau Laurier,
Parliament Hill and Major’s Hill Park- and lower town, -into the Byward Market.
The Map in Appendix “1” provides an overview of the general area and highlights
the four points of access between upper and lower town.
[8]
As
part of this global plan, going from South to North of this general area, in
early 2000, the NCC leased on a long term basis, the Daly Building site at the
corner of Wellington and Rideau Streets, Mackenzie Avenue and Sussex Drive, to
a private developer, the Claridge Building Corporation. The Connaught Building, the adjacent
property, located north of the Daly
Building site is owned and
operated by Public Works. The NCC has no power and control over the Connaught Building.
[9]
The
lands between York
Street and
Murray
Street are
owned by the U.
S. A. government
on which the new U.S.A. Embassy (U.S. Embassy) now stands. The land between the
Connaught Building and the U.S. Embassy,
located at the intersection of York Street and Sussex
Drive however,
is owned and operated by the NCC. It was used for the construction of the York
Street Steps, to create an additional point of access between upper and lower
town.
[10]
Designed
in 1994 by the same architects of the U.S. Embassy, the Steps were constructed
between September 1998 and June 1999. They consist of 45 steps that follow the
steep embankment, spanning a seven meter rise over 34 meters, between Sussex Drive and Mackenzie Avenue. They begin with 3
steps at the base on Sussex
Drive,
followed by a 3 to 5 feet landing, then six sets of a flight of seven stairs,
each separated by 8 to 10 feet landings.
[11]
Built
as a complement to the new U.S. Embassy, the Steps have become a thoroughfare,
particularly during the festival season of the spring and summer months;
serving as a passageway, among others between the two streets in the nation’s
Capital.
B. NCC’s pre-construction plans to make
the Steps Accessible
[12]
From
the earliest design stages in 1994-1995, the NCC’s in-house and external
architects considered ways to make the York Street Steps universally accessible,
in keeping with the Treasury Board policy to make federal property assets accessible
by 1995. In addition to the principles that would be set out in the NCC’s
Universal Access Policy, September 20, 1996 version, the NCC prepared a working
document in 1995, entitled Barrier Free Site Design
Manual, outlining design guidelines for outdoor sites. These efforts
were based on the accepted seven principles of Universal Design, a copy of
which is found in Appendix “2” of these reasons.
[13]
However,
the site’s unique topographical features would defeat the plans of the NCC to provide
universal access right at the Steps. To illustrate, on November 22, 1994, the NCC
met with representatives from the Federal Interdepartmental Technical Committee
on Accessibility (FITCA), created to oversee the implementation of Treasury
Board policy on accessibility to federal real property. FITCA is made up of
architects from Public Works and NCC among others. The participants at this
meeting included three representatives of FITCA: Claude Charbonneau, Public
Works; John Verity, Public Works and Eric Hébert, FITCA/NCC and four
representatives from the NCC: John Abel; Richard Fujarczuk; Alex Kilgour and
Daniel Miron.
[14]
This
meeting of November 22, 1994 canvassed several matters pertaining to universal
access to the York Street Steps, including the planning context, the physical
context of the site and the program for the Steps at the design stage. Among
the methods considered for achieving universal access to the Steps, there was a
ramp at 8%, a mechanical lift (funicular type) or an elevator.
[15]
The
ramp was ruled out since ramps cannot be higher than 5% and there was no
opportunity given the physical constraints of the site -the width and slope of
the land- to lessen the 8% slope of the ramp. The mechanical options including
a funicular and an elevator were also subject of discussion at the meeting. NCC
staff indicated that based on previous assessments these mechanical options had
been ruled out due to higher initial construction costs and the expense of
ongoing maintenance and operation, as well as the financial implications of
renovation and maintenance in the long term.
[16]
Participants
at this meeting then explored several possible alternatives to the ramp and
mechanical options. The first alternative to universal access was to
collaborate with the U.S. Embassy to provide improved barrier-free access
through or around their site by improving the sidewalks along Sussex Drive and Mackenzie Avenue adjacent to the U.S.
Embassy, the Connaught Building and the Daly
Site. Second, the NCC staff agreed to insist that barrier-free access be
incorporated in the Daly site redevelopment, linking Sussex Drive to Mackenzie Avenue at George Street. Finally, the
participants at the meeting were unanimous in the need for NCC to consult with
advocacy groups for the disabled community to get their input on the best
possible option to provide universal access in the area.
[17]
That
is why the NCC sought opinion from the local group, Disabled Persons’ Community
Resources, and the Canadian Paraplegic Association (CPA National), in order to give
the NCC a sense of the way the York Steps with or without a ramp would be
received when constructed.
[.
. .]
It
was suggested that these advocacy groups will be able to understand and accept
the fact that the construction of an elevator in this location is not feasible
operationally or economically for the NCC. Indeed, the amount of traffic
through this location may not warrant an elevator.
[.
. .]
[18]
On
December 13, 1994, the NCC held a meeting with three representatives of the Disabled
Persons’ Community Resources group, including, J. Black, R. Hubley and Judy Lux,
Co-ordinator Barrier-Free Environment Program, Disabled Persons’ community
Resources. Participants representing the NCC were as follows: J. Abel; A.
Kilgour; D. Miron and E. Hébert also representing FITCA.
[19]
The
Minutes of this meeting reveal, among other things that the input of the
disabled groups was key to the future development of the area. The meeting
arrived at the following conclusion:
3. Conclusions:
The
group concluded that the ramp should be eliminated from the design of the York
Steps in lieu of improved alternative routes along Confederation Boulevard, including wider sidewalks, improved
lighting, rest stops and drinking fountains. The collaboration of the U.S.
Embassy should be sought to seek whatever improvements are possible at the
Sussex-Mackenzie-Murray intersection to facilitate universal accessibility
around the north end of their property. In future plans for the re-development
of the Daly Site, barrier-free access should be incorporated at the north end
of the site to facilitate access to and from George Street.
[20]
In light
of the suggestion of the disabled groups, in a letter dated December 20, 1994,
Mr. John Abel, Director, Design and Land Use Division, NCC wrote to Mr. Ned
Arcement, Minister – Counselor for Administrative Affairs, U.S. Embassy, in
which he presented matters relating to the York Street Steps and building codes.
The letter conveyed the conclusions reached at both meetings with FITCA and the
disability groups. It also announced NCC’s decision to proceed with the design without
the ramp or an elevator. It gave the go ahead for the construction of the Steps
by the same architect who built the U.S. Embassy.
[21]
In addition,
to the consultation meetings and the above-noted correspondence between the
NCC’s architect and the U.S. Embassy, Mr. Éric Hébert, an NCC –FITCA
representative who participated in both the November 22 and December 13th
1994 consultation meetings, wrote to Mr. Alex Kilgour, NCC Architect of the
project. In his letter in French, dated January 9, 1995, Mr. Hébert acknowledged
that it would be difficult to incorporate measures at the site to make the
Steps accessible. As a result, the NCC should consider alternative accommodation
to the Steps in the general area, including widened sidewalks, and universal
access at the anticipated Daly site. These alternative routes would enable all
participants to take part in events held at the popular Major’s Hill Park.
[22]
Based
on the conclusions of the two sets of consultations, first with FITCA, then
with representatives of the disabled community, and keeping in mind the concerns
of Mr. Hébert, and the considerations of the U.S. Embassy and exploration of common
access with the Connaught Building, the NCC proceeded with construction of the
Steps without a ramp or an adjacent elevator, with the undertaking that it
would implement all the recommended improvements, including proper signage, widened
sidewalks, and benches for repose, as well as an elevator at the Daly site.
C. Alternative accommodation: The Daly site Elevator
[23]
The
NCC undertook and included in the final development agreement with the Claridge
Building Corporation, the private developer of the Daly Building site, the
provision for a stand alone universally accessible elevator, which would be
available to the general public 24 hours a day. Article 3 of the Development
Agreement – Sussex/Mackenzie dated April 2002 provides as follows:
3.1 Final
Plans
5. Without
limiting the generality of the foregoing, the Developer covenants and agrees
that the Final Plans shall include: (a) an elevator at the north-east corner
of the site to be constructed in conjunction with the George Street stairs for
the purpose of providing barrier-free access from Sussex Drive to Mackenzie
Avenue at the north end of the Lands; [. . .].
[24]
In a
letter dated May 16, 2003 to Mr. Bill Malhotra, P. Eng, President of Claridge
Homes Corporation, Mr. John Abel, of the NCC, wrote to object to the proposed “LULA”,
limited use/limited application type elevator for the Daly site. The LULA
elevator did not meet the minimum industry standards to install an elevator
with sufficient internal area and easy-to-use controls to meet the needs of
physically disabled individuals. In strong language, Mr. Abel wrote:
On this basis, the proposed
device is not acceptable to the NCC. An elevator is required that meets both
the full dimensional and barrier free standards provided to your consultants,
and it must be sufficiently robust to meet the demands of the outdoor location
and the intensity of use likely during Canada Day or the many other national
events in the Capital.
[25]
Also,
on June 9, 2003, Mr. Abel wrote to Mr. Thomas Schweitzer as a follow-up to the
joint meeting of April 29, 2003 concerning the detailed plans for the
Sussex/Mackenzie South development. Mr. Abel raises the concerns with respect
to the LULA elevator, and states:
We
have recently received confirmation from Claridge that this is being resolved
in favour of an elevator that meets the minimum area of 1725 x 1370 mm.
previously defined by the NCC, rather than a LULA type device.
[26]
This
ongoing correspondence between Mr. Abel and Mr. Schweitzer included a set of the
Developed Design drawing, dated August 1, 2003 to which Mr. Abel responded with
further concerns in a letter dated September 30, 2003. In particular, Mr. Abel
raised the issue that clear and direct views of the elevator at the Sussex Drive level were partially
obstructed from the proposed concierge desk and consequently withheld final
approval of the design until that aspect was corrected.
[27]
In
light of the above correspondence, the defects were rectified and a secure barrier-free
Daly site elevator was installed during the construction of the Daly Building and became fully operational
in the Summer of 2005. However, this would be six years after the construction
of the Steps and the filing of a human rights complaint by Mr. Bob Brown.
D. Bob Brown lodges Human Rights
Complaint
[28]
Mr.
Brown is a quadriplegic since 1972 and uses a wheelchair. He is an active
longtime resident of the Byward Market. Mr. Brown was the Chairperson of the
City of Ottawa
Disability Issues Advisory Committee (the “Committee”), in 1998 when the Steps were
being built.
[29]
This
Committee discussed the plans for the Steps and felt that there were reasons
for concern because the Steps were not accessible to people with physical limitations.
Before long, a public controversy ensued with a letter from Mr. Brown to the
Editor of the Ottawa Citizen, following communications between
Mr. Jim Watson, at the time, Mayor of the City of Ottawa, and Mr. Marcel
Beaudry, the then Chairperson of the NCC.
[30]
The
NCC took immediate action to respond to the controversy both in the media and
with the disabled community. On March 17, 1999, the NCC held a meeting with the
Access Committee of the Disabled Persons Community Resources Group (DPCR), a
non-profit organization that carries out assessments of buildings in
Ottawa-Carleton to improve accessibility to peoples with disabilities.
[31]
After
an overview of its initial designs to include a ramp or an elevating device at
the Steps, and the consultation it had conducted with both in-house and
external architects, as well as the disability groups, the NCC explained that the
Steps were being constructed without universal access because the topographical
features precluded safe and secure universal access measures at the Steps.
[32]
In
addition, the NCC presented its plans to provide alternate reasonable
accommodation by widening the sidewalks and installing visible and improved
signage. But more importantly, the NCC provided evidence of its explicit
undertaking that the Daly site, which was part of the long term redevelopment
of the general area, would have a stand alone universally accessible elevator.
[33]
To Mr.
Brown, this was simply not good enough as it did not address his concerns right
at the Steps. Moreover, the Daly site elevator would not be adjacent to the
Steps but some 130 meters away; thereby creating a distinction and difficulty
for persons with disabilities in violation of the principles of Universal
Design, including principles 1 and 6:
PRINCIPLE
ONE: Equitable Use: The design is useful and marketable to people with diverse
abilities.
[.
. .]
PRINCIPLE
SIX: Low Physical Effort: The design can be used efficiently and comfortably
and with a minimum of fatigue.
[See
Appendix “2” of these reasons.]
[34]
As a
result, on August 31, 1999, Mr. Brown filed a human rights complaint with the
Canadian Human Rights Commission alleging that the NCC is discriminating
against him on the ground of disability by denying him access to services and
facilities right at the Steps that are customarily available to the general
public. Mr. Brown’s complaint stated in part as follows:
I
use a wheelchair.
The
area of Sussex Drive and Mackenzie Avenue
is not accessible to wheelchair users.
[…]
The
specific area that I am concerned with is the York Street Steps. [. . .]
I
have been advised that the Daly site development includes an elevator which is
located on the north side of the property. This proposed remedy is not
suitable. The accessibility would not be equal to that of able-bodied
individuals. The hours of access would be limited and the distance to travel to
gain access to this area is substantially farther than that of able-bodied
persons.
Thus, Mr. Brown’s human rights complaint refers
to the general area and then the York Street Steps.
E. Proceedings before the Canadian Human
Rights Commission (the “Commission”)
i) Investigation Report
[35]
The
Commission investigated Mr. Brown’s human rights complaint of August 31, 1999.
By letter of Defence, dated November 10, 1999, to the Commission, the Chairman
of the NCC outlined the efforts undertaken to provide universal access at this topographically
challenging site. Mr. Beaudry wrote that preliminary sketches were prepared
for the integration of a ramp within the stairs based on established guidelines
and standards. Unfortunately, following consultations with various disability
groups, including FITCA and the Disabled Persons’ Community Resources Group, in
1994, the incorporation of a ramp was not feasible.
[36]
Moreover,
Mr. Beaudry indicated that the option of installing an elevator was reviewed
and rejected when it was determined the only location to install one would
force the users to come out directly onto the vehicular service ramp for the
Connaught building. This option was seen as creating a dangerous conflict with
wheelchairs and vehicles, especially delivery trucks. As a result, the NCC would
incorporate barrier-free access within the development of the Daly Site. “Two
access points –an external elevator located at the north end of the Daly site
and another inside the building will ensure easy access between Mackenzie Avenue and Sussex Drive, approximately 130
meters south of the York Steps.”
[37]
The
investigator made several findings on the accessibility of the York Street
Steps as set out in the following paragraphs of the Investigation Report:
13. [Gerald]
Lajeunesse, [NCC, Chief Landscape Architect], commented that installing an
elevator was not feasible as the only location to install one would force the
users to come out directly onto the vehicular service ramp for the Connaught Building.
[.
. .]
14. The
complainant says that a ramp may not be the best access for wheelchair users,
however believes that an elevator located directly at this site is more
appropriate. He suggests that the proposed accessibility options at the Daly
site, which he indicates is 130 meters south of the Steps, do not afford equal
access. The complainant does not feel that the two organizations consulted by
the respondent are authorized to represent the interests of disabled
individuals such as himself.
[38]
The investigator
also observed that the general area can be accessed by wheelchair users via an
unencumbered sidewalk and the complainant agreed that a ramp was not feasible.
In addition, the implementation of the Steps was not a necessity but an
enhancement to the downtown core area. Finally, other practical alternatives
are being considered as the site develops.
[39]
In
light of these findings, the investigator recommended in a report dated June
13, 2000 that “the Commission dismiss the complaint because, on the evidence,
the allegation of discrimination is unfounded.” The evidence showed that the
Steps are not essential and the area is accessible through alternative routes.
Moreover, the NCC did consider accessibility options through its consultation
process and the parties agreed that access directly at this particular location
was not recommended. Finally, the evidence showed that the site was then under
development and the NCC was committed to improving accessibility in this area.
[40]
By
letter dated June 25, 2000, Mr. Brown wrote to the Commission requesting that
it reconsider the conclusions of the investigation report. The Commission returned
the matter for further investigation, with the following direction:
i.
obtain an expert
opinion on how the location could be made accessible to wheelchair users; and
ii.
obtain sufficient
information from the expert and the respondent to enable the Commission to
determine whether the respondent has met its legal responsibility to
accommodate wheelchair users up to the point of undue hardship.
ii) Further investigation: The
First Rapson Report June 14, 2001
[41]
The
Commission sought expert opinion from the Progressive Accessibility Re-Form Associates
(PARA) represented by Mr. David Rapson, a Project Manager at the
Universal Design Institute, which is a semi-independent non-profit organization
affiliated with the Faculty of Architecture, University of Manitoba. Mr. Rapson
provided two reports, the second of which will be dealt with further in these
reasons.
[42]
The
first Rapson report, dated June 14, 2001 was limited in that Mr. Rapson did not
make a personal visit to the site because such a trip was not funded by the
Commission. This report was based on photographs, and a detailed analysis of
the plans of the general area and of the Connaught Building. Mr. Rapson also relied on second hand
reports from site visits made by third parties, including an Ottawa Designer
and contact person, as well as two members of Mr. Rapson’s review team.
[43]
Based
on these sources and documentation, Mr. Rapson made several findings, entitled
Problem Summary. First, he acknowledged that a proper ramp at the stairs would
be impossible because of the width and slope of the site. Second, an exterior
elevating system would also not be appropriate because of pedestrian flow,
weather conditions, as well as maintenance and other associated costs. Third, the
alternative accessible routes around the site on the sidewalks along Sussex
Drive, Wellington Street, Mackenzie Avenue, and Murray Street seemed to be excessively
long for someone in a wheelchair and the potential elevator down the street was
not “conveniently adjacent” to the site in order to serve persons with
disabilities equitable.
[44]
Fourth,
the NCC did have a consultation process to consider accessibility options.
However, Mr. Brown did not feel that the two organizations consulted by the NCC
were authorized to represent the interests of disabled individuals such as
himself. Mr. Rapson concluded that if that were the case, then it was
incumbent on the NCC to expand the consultation process to encompass a wider
representation of persons and organizations in order to solicit opinions and
comments on the problem site. This, Mr. Rapson felt was a problem not fully
addressed in the NCC’s consultation process.
[45]
Fifth,
Mr. Rapson concluded that NCC did not follow three of the applicable principles
of universal design, including Principles One –Equitable Use; Two –Flexibility
in Use and Six –Low Physical Effort. As a result of these findings, Mr. Rapson
responded to the Commission’s two questions in the following manner:
[.
. .] the first question asked, seems to have an obvious answer.
Consult/negotiate with the owner/manager of the Connaught
building to upgrade the existing entrances/exits and interior elevator (to
current accessibility standards). [. . .]
It
seems that the respondent, in its attempts to follow the concepts of universal
design, was not clear on what universal design encompasses. Base [sic]
upon the information received we feel that the respondent did not meet its
legal responsibility to accommodate wheelchair users up to the point of undue
hardship.
[46]
The
investigator also sought additional information from the NCC, and together with
Mr. Rapson’s findings in his first report, the Investigator prepared a
supplementary report dated June 29, 2001.
iii) Investigator’s Report -
Supplementary
[47]
The
conclusions of the supplementary investigation report are based on the findings
in the first Rapson report as summarized above. As a result of these findings the
investigator’s supplementary report made the following recommendations:
11. Pertaining
to the first question asked by the Commission, PARA [Progressive Accessibility
Re-Form Associates] states that the respondent should consult and negotiate
with the appropriate persons of the Connaught building to upgrade the existing
entrances/exits and interior elevator.
12. Pertaining
to the second question, it is the opinion of PARA that the respondent did not
meet its legal responsibility to accommodate wheelchair users up to the point
of undue hardship.
The complaint was subsequently referred to the
Tribunal.
F. NCC efforts following filing of Human
Rights Complaint
[48]
After
Mr. Brown’s human rights complaint in August 1999, the NCC undertook a complete
review of the location and all possible options to make the Steps accessible
right on site. To that end, on April 23, 2002, the NCC hired the Firm of
Robertson Architects and Associates (the “Consultant”) to provide a fresh look
at the site and to make proposals on how to best make the Steps accessible.
[49]
On
June 17, 2002, Ms. Danica Robertson, Robertson Architects and Associates sent
an e-mail message to Ms. Sherry Berg, the NCC, along with a copy of a five-page
Project Summary prepared for the NCC entitled “York Steps Universal
Accessibility Assessment Study,” dated June 16, 2002. Her colleague Robert
Martin sent an identical e-mail that same day to Mr. Ray Charette, Public
Works. Both messages solicited feedback on the proposal in the Project Summary
described as follows:
The
best option to provide universal accessibility for the site would be an
elevating device accessed from the delivery entrance beside the Connaught building. It could be entered and exited through, or near,
existing doors at the southwest edge of the property. This elevator would
connect the Sussex Street level to the stairs at the landing that
is already accessible by ramp.
[50]
In
reply to Ms. Robertson that same day, Ms. Berg stated as follows:
Danica:
[.
. .]
I
think what you are proposing is a valid option worth pursuing (especially if
there are no site constraints as to why we cannot install it) and we need to
vet it out with them. The Daly site option should be one that can be reviewed
further.
[51]
By
e-mail dated June 27, 2002, Mr. Charette responded as follows to Mr. Martin’s
proposal to install an elevator at the southwest wall of the Steps, near the
Connaught Building Ramp:
Mr.
Martin,
I
have met on site with representatives of the occupant facilities group, as well
as the building security representative to assess this option and a number of
concerns were raised.
·
Increased security
risks to the Connaught building due to potential unauthorized access through
the garage and tunnel exits.
·
The turning radius of
delivery vehicles exiting the tunnel comes within 3 feet of the Southwest wall
(York Stairs).
·
Larger vehicles
needing access to the Tunnel loading dock cannot access from the south lane way
and therefore backup in the north lane way.
These
large tractor-trailers would put the public at risk.
·
There is a high
volume of traffic from the tunnel exit that would create a substantial risk to
the public.
·
The slope of the
ground (exit roadway) towards Sussex may not meet accessibility standards.
In
short, this option would put the public at a substantially high safety risk and
could potentially compromise the building security. Unfortunately, installing
an elevating device at this location does not seem to be an acceptable option.
[52]
As a
result of this feedback to the Project Summary, the Consultants narrowed the
options and released a Draft Report entitled Universal Accessibility Assessment
Study York Street Steps Draft Report, dated July 19, 2002. This Draft Report
was sent to the NCC and representatives of key stakeholder groups by letter
dated July 18, 2002. The recipients were invited to a meeting on July 23, 2002
to discuss the contents of the report, including the following five options:
1)
The continuing use of
the existing alternate routes at the north end or south end of the block;
2)
Building a stair
platform lift at the Steps;
3)
Building an elevating
device accessed from the Connaught Building vehicular ramp;
3)a Relocating the south wall of the
Steps and building an elevating
device
directly adjacent to the Steps; and
4)
Building an elevating
device at the Daly building.
[53]
The
Consultant expressed a preference for option 3)a and provided a detailed budget
outlining a preliminary estimate of $425,616.00, to remove the south wall of
the Steps and install an elevator.
[54]
Acting
upon the advice of one of the Commission’s Conciliators, the NCC did not invite
Mr. Brown to attend this meeting on July 23, 2002. However, members of
disability organizations were present, including: Mr. Brown’s colleague, Mr.
Giles Warren (GW), City of Ottawa Accessibility Advisory Committee; Ms.
Elizabeth Norris (EN), Canadian Paraplegic Association (CPA) National; Ms.
Danielle Vincent (DV), Disabled Persons Community Resources and Ms. Katie
Paialunga (KP), Independent Living Centre. Other participants at this meeting
included: Steve Fulcher (SF), U.S. Embassy; Robert Martin (RM), and Robertson
Architects and Associates; and Danica Robertson (DR), Robertson Architects and
Associates. Finally, there were five representatives of the NCC at the
meeting:
§
Gerry Lajeunesse
(GL);
§
Eric Hebert (EH);
§
John Abel (JA);
§
Richard Furarczuk
(RF) and
§
Shauna Trudeau (ST).
[55]
The
Minutes of the meeting reveal that the participants were unanimous in their
vote in favour of option 4, the Daly Building elevator, which was considered to be a
safer location than if the elevator was installed at the Steps.
[56]
Several
participants provided feedback to the Consultants on the Minutes of the meeting
held on July 23, 2002. These comments became part of the Consultants’ Final
Report to the NCC entitled “Universal Accessibility Assessment Study York
Street Steps.” Excerpts of some of these comments on the Minutes of the meeting
are reproduced below:
a.
Alf Gunter, M.S. Society who was invited but was
unable to attend the meeting wrote as follows by e-mail dated July 25, 2002:
[.
. .]
As
a general comment I would like to congratulate the NCC for taking the
requirements of the Human Rights Commission so seriously. If all levels of the
public and private sectors would follow suit, Canada
would be a mecca for persons with disabilities, rather than lagging behind most
developed nations, including the USA, where the Americans With Disabilities
Act has mandated national standards for more than a decade.
[.
. .]
b.
Stephen Fulcher, U.S. Embassy, by e-mail dated July 23,
2002, wrote as follows:
Robert
and Danica: Thank you for pulling together a diverse team. As a
representative of the U.S. Embassy and neighbor of the York Street Steps, I
concur with the findings of the report and meeting identifying the Daly site as
the best option for universal accessibility. Please keep me informed of any
changes.
c.
Ray Charette, Public Works, by e-mail dated July 24,
2002, wrote as follows:
Thank
you for keeping me informed. Let me know if you require assistance for any
future matter.
d.
Elizabeth Norris, Regional Services Coordinator, CPA
Ontario-Eastern Region, wrote a two-page letter dated, July 26, 2002, pertinent
passages of which are as follows:
Dear
Ms. Robertson and Mr. Martin:
Thank
you for the opportunity to participate in the York Street Steps Accessibility
Study.
[.
. .]
Both
the content of this study and the process by which it was communicated to CPA
Ontario were indicative of a thorough analysis of the barriers in question.
The inclusion of relevant background information such as the Seven Principles
of Universal Design and correspondence attesting to security risks inherent in
particular options laid the groundwork for a constructive and profitable
exchange on July 23rd among organizations representing peoples with
disabilities, the NCC and its consultants.
Clearly,
there are a number of factors, some of which are unique to Ottawa, which have affected the viability of the options under
consideration i.e. vertical lift platform is impracticable in this inhospitable
climate. And, the intensification of security concerns within the last year
have eliminated any possibility of improving access by redirecting people with
mobility impairments through adjacent buildings such as the U.S. Embassy or
Connaught Building.
Based
upon the report and expertise of the various stakeholders present on July 23rd,
the decision to install a multi-purpose stand alone elevating device serving
the market-area appears to be a reasonable and equitable response to the
barrier posed by the York Street Steps. In keeping with the first Principle of
Universal Access Design, it appears to “avoid segregating or stigmatizing
users” –the elevator is to be located in an upscale condominium unit/shopping
complex whereas using the existing Connaught Building service ramp would not
only place users at some physical risk but would likely be perceived as
degrading by passers-by than the on-site option and therefore appears to pose
fewer safety risks to persons with disabilities operating the elevator.
[.
. .]
[57]
The
NCC recognized that access to the Steps remains barred to people like Mr. Brown
who are confined to wheelchairs. Notwithstanding, it maintains that while it
recognized that the Daly building was an imperfect solution, it was the agreed
to best option within its power and control to provide universal access between
Sussex Drive and Mackenzie Avenue, its ultimate goal.
G. The Second Rapson Report –May 15, 2003
[58]
At
the request of the Commission, Mr. Rapson’s second report, dated May 15, 2003
provides a response to the Robertson Architects and Associates Final Report on
the York Street Steps of July 2002. In addition to considering the five
options proposed in the Robertson Final Report, Mr. Rapson added the Connaught Building as an option; a
position acknowledged and adopted by the Tribunal at paragraphs 49-57 of its
decision.
[59]
On
the basis of Mr. Rapson’s testimony before the Tribunal on his findings in both
reports, including his suggestion that the Connaught Building is the best
possible option to provide universal access near the Steps, the Tribunal
interrupted the proceedings, ordered the Commission to add Public Works as a
respondent in December 2003, before rendering its decision on June 6, 2006. It
is this decision that forms the object of the two applications for judicial
review.
III. The Impugned
Decision
[60]
The
Tribunal found that the NCC and Public Works had discriminated against the
Respondent Bob Brown by failing to provide access to persons with disabilities
at the Steps. For the purposes of the present application for judicial review,
the Tribunal concluded as follows:
1)
The NCC is providing
a service within the definition of the Act by both designing and
maintaining the York Street Steps.
2)
The establishment of
a prima facie case of discrimination does not shift the onus to the respondent to
establish a defence. It concluded as follows:
182
The conventional analysis in the law of human rights holds that the Complainant
must establish a prima facie case of discrimination. There must be some
evidence that the Complainant requires accommodation. Once this is established,
the burden of proof in the case shifts to the Respondent, who is required to
establish that this would impose an undue hardship under subsection 15(2).
183
[. . .] In my view, the fundamental burden of proof--sometimes called the
"legal" or the "persuasive" burden--in a case of
discrimination remains on the person alleging the discrimination throughout the
course of the hearing. The prosecuting party must prove its case. The legal
burden does not shift.
3)
The Steps are not
accessible to people with disabilities. The accommodation should be done at the
Steps.
4)
The Daly site
elevator is not reasonable accommodation, as the 130 meters do not require low
physical effort and prove to be inequitable by having to separate disabled
people from their able-bodied counterparts; thereby violating two of the seven
Principles of Universal Design. It stated:
33
Mr. Rapson is of the view that the York Street Steps do not meet the principles
of universal design. They are not, in his view, accessible. The elevator at the
Daly site does not rectify the situation. I have generally accepted Mr.
Rapson's opinion on these issues. I found his evidence thoughtful and measured.
He understood the need to make reasonable compromises.
5)
The construction of
the elevator at the Daly site does not satisfy the Crown’s obligation to
accommodate Mr. Brown and other persons who cannot climb the stairs.
6)
The duty to
accommodate includes a duty to consult. The Tribunal stated:
212
The duty to accommodate includes a duty to consult. The CHRC has submitted that
the NCC "must demonstrate that it followed proper process." This is
probably the major issue in the case.
220
I take it from Grismer that the first obligation to accommodate is
obligation to enter into a proper process of consultation. The Respondent must
inquire into the matter and obtain the views of the persons who require
accommodation. I would go further and say that there is an element of natural
justice in this process. There must be an open exchange of views and the
persons who require accommodation should be given an opportunity to reply to
any concerns that might prevent the Respondent from providing the accommodation
that they are seeking.
7)
The NCC consultation
processes in 1994 and 1999 were selective and insufficient as a result of which
they did not meet the requirements of the duty to accommodate. It said:
218 The
situation before me in the present case concerns the public at large rather
than an individual. There are nevertheless parallels with Grismer. Mr. Brown
and the CHRC say that there was no real investigation of the situation. I do
not accept this. I nevertheless agree that the NCC did not enter into a proper
round of consultations. There was no real airing of the views of the people who
needed the accommodation.
8)
The present
inaccessibility of the Steps stems from the initial decision by the NCC to
design the Steps without proper accommodation.
[61]
With
respect to liability, the Tribunal stated as follows at paragraph 9 of its
decision:
9
The following decision essentially deals with liability. I agreed that I would
only deal with the different proposals to provide accommodation at the York
Street Steps, if that became necessary.
[62]
In
spite of this agreement to bifurcate the decision, the Tribunal did deal with
the issue of remedy. However, the Tribunal recognized that it would be
premature to comment on the kind of accommodation that would be appropriate and
was mindful to advise that the respondents are limited to the provision of
reasonable accommodation. The Tribunal thus directed the parties to return to
their negotiations and provide a schedule for consultations. Once these
negotiations are completed, the NCC is to deliver a formal letter to the
Tribunal setting out its plans to rectify the situation. The other parties were
accorded a period of 30 days to return to the Tribunal if this remedy proved to
be untenable.
[63]
By
Order of this Court, dated November 7, 2006, Mr. Justice Pierre Blais (as he then was) stayed
the Tribunal’s decision; pending the outcome of the two applications for
judicial review.
IV Issues
[64]
This
application for judicial review seeks to determine whether the Daly site
elevator provides reasonable accommodation for the lack of accessibility at the
York Street Steps. In so doing, the applicant NCC challenges several of the
Tribunal’s findings of fact and law, which the Court summarizes as follows:
a.
Did the Tribunal err
in law in determining that the York Street Steps constitute a service or a
facility within the meaning of section 5 of the Act?
b.
Did the Tribunal err
in law in concluding that when it is established that there is a prima facie
case of discrimination, the onus does not shift to the respondent to
demonstrate that accommodation was undertaken short of undue hardship?
c.
Did the Tribunal err
in fact or law in finding that the duty to accommodate involves a duty to
consult?
d.
Did the Tribunal err
in fact or law by limiting its analysis to the bottom of the Steps rather than
approaching its analysis globally?
e.
Did the Tribunal err
in fact or law when it rejected the Daly site elevator without doing the proper
balancing?
[65]
For
the reasons that follow, this application for judicial review shall be allowed
in part. While the Court finds that the Tribunal was correct in law in finding
that the York Street Steps are a facility that provide a service within the
definition of section 5 of the Act, the Court is of the view that the
Tribunal committed four errors of law warranting the intervention of this
Court: first, by not shifting the onus to the respondent (the NCC) to
demonstrate that accommodation was undertaken short of undue hardship; second, by
finding that the duty to accommodate includes a legal duty to consult; third,
by limiting its analysis to the bottom of the Steps instead of adopting a
global approach to the general area; and finally, by dismissing the Daly site
elevator as a reasonable form of accommodation without conducting the proper
balancing of factors.
V Relevant legislation
[66]
Section
5 of the Act provides as follows:
Denial of
good, service, facility or accommodation
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.
|
Refus
de biens, de services, d’installations ou d’hébergement
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.
|
[67]
Paragraph
15(1) (g) sets out the conditions whereby a respondent may put forth a bona
fide defence to a prima facie case of discrimination in
the provision of services. This paragraph states as follows:
Exceptions
15. (1) It is
not a discriminatory practice if
[. . .]
(g) in the
circumstances described in section 5 or 6, an individual is denied any goods,
services, facilities or accommodation or access thereto or occupancy of any
commercial premises or residential accommodation or is a victim of any
adverse differentiation and there is bona fide justification for that denial
or differentiation.
|
Exceptions
15.
(1) Ne constituent pas des actes discriminatoires :
[.
. .]
g)
le fait qu’un fournisseur de biens, de services, d’installations ou de moyens
d’hébergement destinés au public, ou de locaux commerciaux ou de logements en
prive un individu ou le défavorise lors de leur fourniture pour un motif de
distinction illicite, s’il a un motif justifiable de le faire.
|
VI. Standard
of Review
[68]
After
written submissions were filed but before the hearing of this case on April 7
to 9, 2008, the Supreme Court of Canada rendered two decisions in Dunsmuir
v. New
Brunswick (Dunsmuir), 2008 SCC 9 and in Council
of Canadians with Disabilities v. Via Rail Canada Inc. (Via Rail),
2007 SCC 15. The parties were invited to provide supplementary written
submissions addressing the relevance of these decisions to the applications for
judicial review before this Court.
A. Dunsmuir:
General principles
[69]
In
Dunsmuir, above, the Supreme Court of Canada modified the nature
of the standards of review applicable to administrative decisions. There are
now only two standards of review: reasonableness and correctness. (See Dunsmuir,
above, at paragraph 45.)
[70]
The
reasonableness standard is a new construct whereby the Court merged the two
previous standards of reasonableness simpliciter and patent
unreasonableness into one broad standard of reasonableness. The Court provided
the following guidance at paragraph 47, to help reviewing courts identify the
elements of an unreasonable decision:
47 Reasonableness is a deferential
standard animated by the principle that underlies the development of the two
previous standards of reasonableness: certain questions that come before
administrative tribunals do not lend themselves to one specific, particular
result. Instead, they may give rise to a number of possible, reasonable
conclusions. Tribunals have a margin of appreciation within the range of
acceptable and rational solutions. A court conducting a review for
reasonableness inquires into the qualities that make a decision reasonable,
referring both to the process of articulating the reasons and to outcomes. In
judicial review, reasonableness is concerned mostly with the existence of
justification, transparency and intelligibility within the decision-making
process. But it is also concerned with whether the decision falls within a
range of possible, acceptable outcomes which are defensible in respect of the
facts and law.
[71]
This
deferential standard of reasonableness implies that the decision was arrived at
not only through a justifiable, intelligible and transparent process but it
falls within an acceptable range of possible outcomes in light of the facts and
the law of each case. As such, the reasonableness standard applies to questions
of fact, discretion and policy and to questions of mixed fact and law where the
question is factually intensive or where the legal issues cannot readily be separated
from the factual context. See paragraph 51, as well as paragraph 53, which
provides as follows:
53 Where the question is one of fact,
discretion or policy, deference will usually apply automatically (Canada
(Attorney General) v. Mossop, [1993] 1 S.C.R. 554, at pp. 599-600; Dr. Q,
at para. 29; Suresh, at paras. 29-30). We believe that the same standard
must apply to the review of questions where the legal and factual issues are
intertwined with and cannot be readily separated.
[72]
With
respect to the correctness standard of review, the Court preserved it intact.
Questions of jurisdiction, law, constitutional issues and natural justice
remain subject to review on the correctness standard. In such instances, the reviewing
court must determine, at the outset whether the impugned decision was correct
and undertake its own analysis; substituting its own view, the correct answer,
in those instances where the decision is incorrect, as it is enunciated at
paragraph 50:
50 As important as it is that courts
have a proper understanding of reasonableness review as a deferential standard,
it is also without question that the standard of correctness must be maintained
in respect of jurisdictional and some other questions of law. This promotes
just decisions and avoids inconsistent and unauthorized application of law. When
applying the correctness standard, a reviewing court will not show deference to
the decision maker's reasoning process; it will rather undertake its own
analysis of the question. The analysis will bring the court to decide whether
it agrees with the determination of the decision maker; if not, the court will
substitute its own view and provide the correct answer. From the outset, the
court must ask whether the tribunal's decision was correct.
[Emphasis of the Court]
[73]
This
exacting standard of judicial review is a constitutional duty; indispensable to
the respect of the rule of law. Where the standard of correctness is engaged,
reviewing courts have a special responsibility to ensure that administrative decision-making
bodies do not breach their statutory boundaries:
28 By virtue of the rule of law
principle, all exercises of public authority must find their source in law. All
decision-making powers have legal limits, derived from the enabling statute
itself, the common or civil law or the Constitution. Judicial review is the
means by which the courts supervise those who exercise statutory powers, to
ensure that they do not overstep their legal authority. The function of
judicial review is therefore to ensure the legality, the reasonableness and the
fairness of the administrative process and its outcomes.
[74]
Having
established these two standards of review, the Court provided a two-step
process for determining the applicable standard of review. First, the
reviewing Court will look to the existing jurisprudence to determine whether
the question has already been decided in a satisfactory manner. If so, that
settled standard of review is to be adopted. Second, where there is no prior
case law or where the existing case law has not dealt satisfactorily with the standard
of review, the reviewing Court will proceed with an analysis to identify the
proper standard of review, as instructed at paragraph 62:
62 In summary, the process of judicial
review involves two steps. First, courts ascertain whether the jurisprudence
has already determined in a satisfactory manner the degree of deference to be
accorded with regard to a particular category of question. Second, where the
first inquiry proves unfruitful, courts must proceed to an analysis of the
factors making it possible to identify the proper standard of review.
[75]
When
the reviewing Court proceeds to the analysis in the second step, its analysis
should be contextual. Moreover, the new “standard of review analysis” should
examine a number of factors not unlike the four factors of the former
“pragmatic and functional approach” as outlined in paragraph 64:
64 The analysis must be contextual.
As mentioned above, it is dependent on the application of a number of relevant
factors, including: (1) the presence or absence of a privative clause; (2) the
purpose of the tribunal as determined by interpretation of enabling
legislation; (3) the nature of the question at issue, and; (4) the expertise of
the tribunal. In many cases, it will not be necessary to consider all of the
factors, as some of them may be determinative in the application of the
reasonableness standard in a specific case.
[76]
Finally,
at paragraph 142 in his concurring opinion, in Dunsmuir, above, Mr.
Justice Binnie reaffirmed the general principle of segmentation, which stands
for the proposition that where multiple aspects of a tribunal’s decision are
under judicial review, the reviewing judge must examine each issue and arrive
at the appropriate standard of review for each discrete issue raised in the
impugned decision.
B. Application of
Dunsmuir to the present file
[77]
There
is a lack of consensus between the parties on the appropriate standard of
review applicable to the issues that animate this case. While they may agree on
the applicable standard of review on some of the issues, they do not see eye to
eye on others. As such, I shall proceed with a systematic application of the
general principles as outlined in Dunsmuir, above, to each of the issues,
based on the two-step procedure established by the majority and the segmentation
principle espoused by Mr. Justice Binnie.
i) Proper standard of review on the
statutory interpretation of the York Street Steps as a “service” or “facility”
[78]
This
Court must first go back to the applicable jurisprudence in order to determine
the appropriate standard of review. It should be noted at the outset that the
Tribunal’s decision does not deal with universal access to a building, such as a
retail department store, a movie theatre or an office complex but rather it
involves a concrete staircase; providing a passage between two streets.
[79]
Finally,
the applicant NCC would invite the Court to rely on the Supreme Court’s
decision in Canada (Attorney General) v. Mossop, [1993] 1
S.C.R. 554 (Mossop) as determinative of the standard of review. At
paragraph 26, Chief Justice Anton Lamer, writing for the majority, adopted the concurring
reasons of Mr. Justice Gérard LaForest who addressed the question of the standard
of review in relation to decisions of human rights tribunals under the Act, where
he established that Courts maintain their reviewing role in questions of law
unless there is express legislative intent to limit judicial review of
decisions made pursuant to the Act.
[80]
Contrary
to the position of Counsel for Mr. Brown, the Court concludes that Mossop,
above, disposes of this first issue and is applicable to the other issues as
well. Here, the Tribunal was called upon to interpret section 5 of the Act
and in particular determine whether the York Street Steps constitute a
‘service’ or a ‘facility.’ The nature of the question is one of statutory
interpretation. The standard of review is correctness and not reasonableness
as Counsel for Mr. Brown and the Commission submit. The Court will intervene
and substitute its own position only where it has determined that the Tribunal
erred in law in its resolution of this issue.
ii) Proper standard of review on shifting of the onus in
the prima facie test
[81]
Where
addressed, the parties agree that the Tribunal’s finding that the onus in the prima
facie test does not shift to the respondent constitutes an error of law.
The Court shares this view and for the reasons identified in Mossop, above,
the standard of review for general questions of law, such as this, is
correctness.
iii) Proper standard of review on the
finding that the duty to accommodate involves a duty to consult.
[82]
The
Applicant, NCC adopts the position that the Tribunal’s imposition of a legal
duty to consult as a requirement of the duty to accommodate is an error of law;
subject to the correctness standard. The respondent, the Attorney General of
Canada (AGC), on behalf of Public Works agrees.
[83]
For
the AGC, the Act does not impose a legal duty upon respondents to
consult particular persons or investigate particular solutions. In addition, the
AGC submits that in arriving at this novel idea, the Tribunal misinterpreted British
Columbia (Superintendent of Motor Vehicles) v. British Columbia (Council of
Human Rights), [1999] 3 S.C.R. 868 (Grismer), the jurisprudence upon
which it relied. Grismer, above, does not oblige a respondent to ‘enter
into a proper process of consultation.’ (Memorandum of the Attorney General of
Canada, paragraph 18.)
[84]
The
other respondents Brown and the Commission, as well as the intervener, the CCD beg
to differ and are consistent in their view. Counsel for the Commission submits
that all the main issues of this application for judicial review raise fact-laden
questions of mixed fact and law. Consequently, the decision of the Tribunal is
to be reviewed on a standard of reasonableness.
[85]
Relying
on the decision of the Federal Court of Appeal in Sketchley v. Canada (Attorney
General),
[2005] F.C.J. No. 2056, Counsel for the Commission submits that “[w]hile the
NCC argues that the findings are “law-intensive,” the Tribunal’s decision
merely applies the recognized human rights principles to the particular set of
facts in this matter. The Tribunal’s finding of liability flows from the facts
before it and is not, as was the case in Sketchley, “wholly dependent on
its conclusion concerning a particular and discreet question of law.” (See
Memorandum of Fact and Law of the Canadian Human Rights Commission, paragraph
67.)
[86]
Counsel
for the Respondent Brown relies on Dunsmuir, above, to establish that
the standard of reasonableness applies. The Tribunal’s decision raises
“questions that are entirely fact-centric and individualized” and where this
Court may, in the alternative characterize them as questions of mixed fact and
law, deference should be accorded because the legal issues in this case are
intimately intertwined with and cannot readily be separated from the factual
issues.
[87]
Similarly,
Counsel for the intervener argues that the reasonableness standard applies to
the imposition of a duty to consult. It is further argued that this order to
consult is “entitled to considerable deference given that its purpose is to
remedy the systemic discrimination which persons with disabilities experience
as one of the most disadvantaged groups in the country.” Moreover, “[t]he order
to consult sought to bridge the chasm between the federal Government’s theory
and its practice with respect to anti-discriminatory procedures, and it is
fully supported by the evidentiary record and factual findings of the Tribunal”
(See Supplemental submissions of the Intervener Council of Canadians with
Disabilities, paragraph 22).
[88]
The
Court is not persuaded by the arguments of the respondents that the
reasonableness standard applies to this particular issue. In coming to this
conclusion, the Court is mindful of the four factors in the “standard of review
analysis” as indicated at paragraph 63 in Dunsmuir, above. In this
regard, the fourth factor, in other words, the nature of the question dominates
the analysis. By imposing a legal duty to consult on the respondent, the
Tribunal deals with a pure question of law, which has general importance and
indeed far reaching consequences for others in the future and this includes not
only service providers, such as the NCC and Public Works (T-1132-06) but also
employers who are governed by human rights legislation and must grapple with
these serious issues as well. (In addition to Dunsmuir, above, see among
others, Dr. Q. v. College of Physicians and Surgeons of British Columbia, [2003]
1 S.C.R. 226 at paragraph 26 and Sketchley v. Canada (Attorney
General), [2005]
F.C.J. No. 2056 at paragraphs 69, 73, and 78).
[89]
The
Tribunal of its own volition did not confine itself to the four corners of the Act
and attributed to the Supreme Court of Canada a new interpretation of its
human rights jurisprudence as developed in Grismer, above.
Creating a legal duty to consult raises general questions of law, having significant
consequences for subsequent human rights matters and as such requires the
exacting standard of review of correctness.
iv) Proper standard of review of
the local versus the global approach
[90]
This
issue is one of law. The Tribunal was called upon to determine whether the York
Street Steps discriminated against Mr. Brown and in so finding whether the
initiatives undertaken by the NCC to rectify this lack of accessibility at the
steps constituted reasonable accommodation. As such, the Tribunal was required by
law to weigh in the balance all the evidence, including its evaluation of the
witnesses under cross examination before arriving at its conclusion. The Court
concludes therefore that the appropriate standard of review is one of correctness.
[91]
In
order to succeed, the respondents must satisfy the Court that the Tribunal was
correct when it decided not to consider the global picture; encompassing the
redevelopment of the general area and instead limited its analysis to Mr. Brown
at the bottom of the Steps.
v) Proper standard of review of the
rejection of the Daly site elevator without proper balancing
[92]
In
Via Rail, above, the majority of the Supreme Court of Canada dealt with
the importance of human rights Tribunals carrying out the proper balancing in
order to determine whether the respondent has fulfilled its duty to provide
reasonable accommodation short of undue hardship. This balancing act is a contextual
exercise based almost exclusively on the facts. However, the initial decision
to do or not to do this balancing of factors is a question of law. Consequently,
the standard of correctness applies to this question of mixed fact and law.
[93]
In
summary, all five issues will be reviewed on the standard of correctness. The
Court will follow the guidance provided by the Supreme Court of Canada at
paragraph 50 in Dunsmuir, above. Where the Court finds the Tribunal has
erred in law, it will proceed with its own analysis and substitute its views,
the correct answer.
VII. Analysis
A. Did the Tribunal err in law in
determining that the York
Street Steps
constitute a service or a facility within the meaning of section 5 of the Act?
[94]
The
NCC calls into question the Tribunal’s decision not to delve into the meaning
of the words “service” and “facility,” contained in section 5 of the Act. Had
it done so, it is argued, the Tribunal would have come to the realization that
the Steps are not a service, which is the act of doing something, assisting
someone, or providing a good or need. The NCC submits that the Steps are an
inanimate and intangible installation. Moreover, the Tribunal would have
appreciated that the Steps could not be a facility unless they serve a
particular function, ease a course of conduct or accomplish a certain end.
[95]
This
is an untenable argument for two reasons. First, the Tribunal acknowledged
that it would be wrong to characterize the physical Steps as a ‘service’ or a ‘facility’.
However, section 5 of the Act deals with “the provision of goods,
services, facilities or accommodation” and as such, the Tribunal held that the
Steps fell within the purview of the Act because the NCC was providing a
service to the general public by virtue of having constructed and maintained
the Steps.
[96]
Second,
the language of the statute is generous enough to encompass the Steps. Indeed,
the French version of section 5 uses broad language that incorporates
installations such as the Steps. It states:
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 [Emphasis by the Court]
[97]
For
these two reasons, the Court finds that the Tribunal did not err in law either
in its interpretation of section 5 of the Act, or in finding that by
virtue of the construction of the Steps; the NCC was subject to the provisions
of the Act. The Tribunal was correct in its findings on this first issue
and that part of its decision remains undisturbed.
B. Did the Tribunal err in law in
concluding that when it is established that there is a prima facie
case of discrimination, the onus does not shift to the respondent to
demonstrate that accommodation was undertaken short of undue hardship?
[98]
The Tribunal
concluded that the prosecuting party must prove its case and “the legal burden
does not shift.” The parties agree that in so stating, the Tribunal was clearly
wrong and committed an error in law. This is not a correct statement of the
law nor does it reflect the long line of human rights jurisprudence from the Supreme
Court of Canada, which clearly states that once a prima facie case of discrimination
is established, the onus shifts to the respondent to establish a defence or
provide reasonable explanation.
[99]
Madam
Justice Beverley McLachlin, as she then was, writing for the Court in British
Columbia (Public Service Employee Relations Commission) v. British Columbia
Government and Service Employees' Union (B.C.G.S.E.U.) (Meiorin), [1999] 3
S.C.R. 3, said at
paragraph 70:
Ms. Meiorin having established a prima
facie case of discrimination, the burden shifts to the Government to
demonstrate that the aerobic standard is a BFOR. For the reasons below, I
conclude that the Government has failed to discharge this burden and therefore
cannot rely on the defence provided by s. 13(4) of the Code.
See also Ontario (Human Rights Commission) v. Simpsons
Sears Ltd., [1985]
2 S.C.R. 536 at paragraph 28;
Quesnel v. London Educational Health Centre (1995), 28 C.H.R.R. D/474
(Ont. Bd. Inq.) at paragraph 50.
British Columbia (Superintendent of Motor
Vehicles) v. British
Columbia
(Council of Human Rights),
[1999] 3 S.C.R. 868 at paragraphs 20 and 43.
[100] Counsel for Mr. Brown
and the Commission submit that this error of law benefits the applicants the
NCC and Public Works and as such this Court should not intervene. Furthermore,
Counsel for the Commission adds that this error did not adversely affect the
Tribunal’s ultimate finding of liability and therefore should not serve as a
motive to reverse the Tribunal’s decision.
[101] The Court cannot follow
this line of reasoning for several reasons. First, the Court has a
constitutional duty to uphold the rule of law and apply the exacting standard
of review where a Tribunal, as in this case has erred in law. Dunsmuir, above,
instructs us that the reviewing Court must determine at the outset whether the
finding of the Tribunal is correct and if not, the Court is to substitute its
own view, providing the correct answer.
[102] Second, allowed to stand
uncorrected, the Tribunal’s finding will impose a double onus on complainants,
while leaving scott-free respondents who are in a better position to know what
they have or can or ought to have done to rectify situations of prima facie discrimination.
Clearly, this runs counter to the spirit and the letter of the Act and
in particular to the exceptions to discrimination provided in section 15.
[103] Third, this error in law
would introduce an important revolution in human rights jurisprudence, as well
as to the Act. Statutory amendments lie within the purview of
Parliament and not in the province of the Courts or indeed administrative
tribunals, such as the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal. Lastly but as important,
by deciding in such a way, the Tribunal was putting itself in the wrong legal
frame of thinking and as such led it to approach the other remaining issues
wrongly.
[104] For the reasons stated
above, the Court quashes the Tribunal’s finding that the onus does not shift to
the respondent following the determination of a prima facie case of discrimination.
Consequently, the Court restores the law to its prior state in keeping with the
law as settled in Ontario (Human Rights Commission) v. Simpsons Sears Ltd.,
[1985] 2 S.C.R. 536, [1985] S.C.J. No. 74 and reaffirmed in Meiorin, above;
Grismer, above, and more recently affirmed in Via Rail, above.
The Tribunal in the present case erred in law.
C. Did the Tribunal err in fact or
law in finding that the duty to accommodate involves a duty to consult?
[105] Relying on Grismer,
above, the Tribunal stated that the duty to accommodate involves a duty to
consult. The Tribunal also stated that the main issue before it was whether the
process of consultation was legally adequate. It found that it was not. The
process adopted by the NCC did not go far enough to find a solution. What
consultations the NCC did do, were designed to bring participants on side to its
predetermined option of the Daly site elevator.
[106] The Tribunal
found also that the meeting of July 23, 2002 was not only infiltrated by NCC
staff, but the stakeholder participants were not given enough time to consider
the Consultants’ Draft report and the meeting itself was rushed; scheduled to last
but 2.5 hours. Finally, the Tribunal found that the option of rebuilding the
stairs was not on the table and the proposal of the Daly site elevator proceeded
on a false set of assumptions including the following:
§
The Daly
site elevator would constitute reasonable accommodation;
§
The Connaught Building was out of the question;
§
The
parties have to choose between an elevator at the Daly site and an elevator at
the Steps rather than two elevators; one at each site.
[107] As Counsel
for the NCC and the AGC submit, the Tribunal erred when it stated that the
Supreme Court of Canada in Grismer, above, established a duty to
consult as a positive duty on the NCC. The Court shares this position. Grismer,
above, involved the out right refusal of a driver’s licence because of Mr.
Grismer’s medical condition. The Supreme Court of Canada held that the Superintendent
of Motor Vehicles discriminated against the complainant because it had failed
in its duty to accommodate him by demonstrating that to provide him with an
individual assessment would pose undue hardship.
[108] Thus, Grismer,
above, does not introduce a new legal duty to consult but rather a duty to
consider and reasonably assess all forms of accommodation. And herein lays the
error of the Tribunal. By misapprehending the jurisprudence in Grismer,
above, it failed to consider step by step, the new framework of analysis of the
duty to accommodate under section 15 of the Act as instructed in both Meiorin,
above, and Grismer, where Madam Justice McLachlin, as she
then was, stated at paragraph 20:
20 Once the plaintiff establishes
that the standard is prima facie discriminatory, the onus shifts to the
defendant to prove on a balance of probabilities that the discriminatory
standard is a BFOR or has a bona fide and reasonable justification. In order to
establish this justification, the defendant must prove that:
(1) it adopted the standard for a
purpose or goal that is rationally connected to the function being performed;
(2) it adopted the standard in good
faith, in the belief that it is necessary for the fulfillment of the purpose or
goal; and
(3) the standard is reasonably necessary
to accomplish its purpose or goal, in the sense that the defendant cannot
accommodate persons with the characteristics of the claimant without incurring
undue hardship.
[109] As counsel
for the NCC underscores, the Supreme Court of Canada also held in Grismer, above,
that there must be a precise definition of the “goal” in question:
24. Before we can answer these
questions, we must define the Superintendent’s purpose or goal with more
precision. Whether a goal is “rationally connected” to a function, and whether
a standard is “made in good faith” and “reasonably necessary” can only be
assessed in relation to a defined goal.
[110] Applying the Grismer
test to the present case, the goal or purpose of the NCC in constructing
the Steps was to provide a safe universal point of access between upper town
and lower town. In light of the topographical features, costs, as well as safety
and security concerns associated with the different options, it was ill advised
to provide universal access at the Steps. In the circumstances, the NCC came
to the conclusion that it was not feasible to do so. That is the reality as
presented.
[111] Instead,
acting in good faith, the NCC imposed on the Claridge Building Corporation the
immutable lease condition of the installation of a 24hr security monitored
elevator at the Daly site rather than at the Steps. As the correspondence
between Mr. Abel, of the NCC and Mr. Malhotra, of the developer’s group reveals, the
NCC would not settle for anything less, including its rejection of the LULA
model elevator, which would not have provided adequate access for wheelchair
users.
[112] There is
evidence to indicate that the decisions not to provide universal access at the
Steps and to install the Daly site elevator were rationally connected to that
goal of safe universal access. There is also evidence that having regard to the
initial design plans to include a ramp, then an elevator or lift at the site,
all of which were ruled out as unfeasible after consultation with architects
and disability groups, whether reasons of construction and maintenance costs,
concerns of vandalism, or of safety and security and there is further evidence
that could indicate that the NCC showed good faith in seeking out and pursuing
the next best option, which was to install an elevator at the Daly site, albeit
130 meters away. Furthermore, the situation as described appears to indicate
that these were rational considerations, which do not undermine the NCC’s good
faith.
[113] For their
part, Counsel for the respondents Brown and the Commission argue that there is
a duty to consult and the Tribunal’s findings are supported by the evidence and
are consistent with the importance of the procedures to achieve accommodation
that the Supreme Court of Canada has upheld.
[114] Counsel for
the intervener in both written and oral submissions argued that at the heart of
the duty to accommodate lays the presumption of the duty to consult with
peoples with disabilities. This presumption stems from Canada’s national
policies in the field and its international obligations as signatory of the UN
Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, Adopted by UN GA 13
December 2006: UN GAOR Plen., 61st Sess., 76th Mtg., UN
Doc. GA/10554 (2006), which came into force on May 3, 2008.
[115] In addition
to this information, Counsel for the intervener presented a number of cases
from different Canadian human rights tribunals, which have resorted to the use
of consultation measures in remedial orders. These cases are of limited value
to the present issue of the duty to consult. None of these cases states that
there is a duty to consult. Furthermore, in Vlug v. Canadian Broadcasting
Corp., [2000] C.H.R.D. No. 5, the human rights case regarding the lack of
captioning of certain CBC English television programs prompted Chairperson
Mactavish, as she then was, to state:
147 [. . .] In an effort to ensure
that captioning is delivered in a way that best benefits the deaf and hard of
hearing community, I would strongly encourage the CBC to consult with
representatives of the deaf and hard of hearing community on an ongoing basis
with respect to the delivery of captioning services.
[Emphasis by the Court]
[116] “I would
strongly encourage.” That is hardly compelling language anchored in the force
of law. That is why the Court finds that the position of the respondents Brown
and the Commission, as well as the intervener must fail on this point.
[117] The Tribunal made a
legal obligation out of consultation by saying that there is a duty to
consult. Such a duty can be found nowhere in the Act. There is a
responsibility to consult with those immediately involved if the NCC is to meet
its burden under section 15 of the Act. But it is not a legal obligation
to do so. Again, by making such an error of law, the Tribunal limited its own
analysis. For the above-mentioned reasons, the Court finds that the Tribunal
was not correct to say that there is a legal duty to consult. Parliament did
not do so and neither should the Courts.
[118] Furthermore, the
Supreme Court of Canada has on more than one occasion deemed it advisable to
stop short of imposing on employers (and arguably on service providers such as
the NCC) a duty to consult in order to fulfil their legal obligations to
accommodate. Consultations and investigations are commendable and will depend
on the specific circumstances of each case. (See Meiorin, above, at
paragraphs 66 and 73 and Oak Bay Marina Ltd. V. British
Columbia (Human Rights Commission) (2002), 217 D.L.R. (4th)
747 at paragraph 26.)
[119] While
consultations and investigations may be encouraged, they are far from being
mandated by law. The Tribunal has placed too heavy a burden on the NCC to
consult more widely than it has. At any rate, it is not within the purview of
the Tribunal or this Court to change the clear objectives of Parliament. If the
legislator intended to impose such a legal duty to consult with parties in the
process of accommodation to the point of undue hardship, it would certainly not
have remained silent on such an important matter.
[120] Finally, the Tribunal
made several findings of fact pertaining to the consultations that the NCC
undertook both prior to the construction of the Steps and after the filing of
Mr. Brown’s human rights complaint; consultations which it found to be
inadequate. Because the Tribunal committed an error in law in finding that the
duty to accommodate involves a duty to consult it follows that those findings
of fact are erected on a flawed legal foundation.
D. Did the Tribunal err in fact or
law by limiting its analysis to the bottom of the Steps rather than approaching
its analysis globally?
[121] The Tribunal limited
its analysis to the bottom of the Steps rather than looking at the matter
globally. Indeed, at no time does the Tribunal’s decision consider the matter
from the top of the Steps. Moreover, the Tribunal’s limited vision of the
situation with Mr. Brown sitting at the bottom of the Steps took away the
perspective of the big picture; the redevelopment of a derelict general area.
[122] Having regard
to all the facts, the human rights jurisprudence with respect to accommodation and
the concerns of the complainant, the Court finds that had the Tribunal
considered the matter globally, as the Supreme Court of Canada in Via Rail, above,
observed, the Tribunal would have done the proper balancing and taken into
consideration the goals of the NCC to provide universal access between upper
town and lower town where rationally possible to do so, as part of its
long-term urban redevelopment planning.
[123] Moreover, Mr.
Brown indicated in his complaint form that this is a general area of which the
York Street Steps are but one area of concern. In his own words, Mr. Brown
states as follows:
The
area of Sussex Drive and Mackenzie Avenue
is not accessible to wheelchair users. […]
The
specific area that I am concerned with is the York Street Steps.
[.
. .]
[124] While the
facts are distinguishable and the decision postdates the Tribunal’s decision,
the Court relies on the Supreme Court of Canada’s decision in Via Rail,
above, where the majority concluded that in arriving at a determination of
reasonable accommodation up to the point of undue hardship, the reviewing Court
must consider the whole network and not limit itself to a specific area.
Consequently, in that decision, the Supreme Court of Canada did not order Via
Rail, to make every single one of its 139 Renaissance passenger rail cars
accessible to wheelchair users but rather it ordered Via Rail to provide
reasonable accommodation by changing 30 of the 139 cars so that one car per
train would be accessible to persons with disabilities using their own wheelchairs
and that all destinations were provided with such facilities.
[125] Similarly,
the Daly site elevator and the York Street Steps are part of one general area,
not unlike the network of Via Rail’s trains. Like the 139 Renaissance passenger
cars, to which persons using wheelchairs requested access, the general area in
the present matter has 4 points of access between upper town and lower town,
three of which are universally accessible to everyone, one of which has an
elevator as part of the general area. Only one of these four access points,
the Steps, is not accessible because of physical, financial and practical
obstacles. Through the three avenues, all destinations are reachable whether it
is Major’s Hill
Park,
the National Gallery, the Chateau Laurier, or the Market.
[126] To reiterate,
the Steps are but one of four access points between upper town and lower town
of this general area, which is as Mr. Brown wrote in his complaint form, the Sussex
Mackenzie Streets “Area.” The York Street Steps are a specific area as is the
Daly site. Both specific sites are separated by 130 metres. This is the
reality. Out of four access points between Mackenzie Avenue and Sussex Drive, three are
accessible by all.
[127] Someone
coming from the north part of the general area (St. Patrick Street, the
Basilica, the National Gallery, Murray Street and Clarence Street) can access
Mackenzie Drive from Sussex Drive by going around the U.S. Embassy on the north
side and vice versa. Someone coming from the south part of the general area
(Rideau and Wellington Streets, the Chateau Laurier, and George
Street)
could access Mackenzie
Street
from Sussex by going
around the Daly Building on Wellington
Street
or by using the Daly site Elevator. These access points are certainly a way to
ensure, in good part the integration and participation of persons with
disabilities.
[128] This of
course leaves out someone like Mr. Brown who is not of pedestrian means who
arrives at York
Street
wishing to use the steps. Mr. Brown will not have access to the Steps from York Street but he will
still have access to Mackenzie Avenue from three other
options in the general area, one to the North and two to the South, including
the Daly site elevator.
[129] The
respondent Brown argues in favour of installing a second elevator at the Steps.
The Supreme Court of Canada in Via Rail, above, found that in the
circumstances before it, it was not unreasonable to adapt 30 cars out of 139. The
equation can be made in our case, where to make the area universally accessible
with one elevator rather than two constitutes reasonable accommodation. Furthermore,
in our case, access between Mackenzie Avenue and Sussex Drive is
achievable by the widened sidewalks from the north and south parts of the
general area and also by the Daly site elevator. As Madam Justice Abella wrote
for the majority in Via Rail, above at paragraph 224, the Tribunal is
required to consider the entire context; the “environment” in which the alleged
discriminatory practice arises:
224 It has never been the case that
all forms of disability are engaged when a particular one is said to raise an
issue of discrimination. While there are undoubtedly related conceptual
considerations involved, they may nonetheless call for completely different
remedial considerations. A reasonable accommodation “,” undue hardship or
"undue obstacle" analysis is, necessarily, defined by who the
complainant is, what the application is, what environment is being complained
about, what remedial options are required, and what remedial options are
reasonably available. Given the nature of the application and the parties
before it, the Agency would have acted unreasonably in seeking representations
about all conceivable forms of disability. Ironically, the Court of Appeal
questioned the breadth of CCD's application as it was. [Emphasis of the Court]
[130] To sum up, reviewed
on the correctness standard of review, the Tribunal erred in limiting its
analysis to the bottom of the Steps rather than looking at the situation
globally. In light of this error in law, the Court shall intervene and
substitute its view, the correct answer. Based on the law, the determination
of reasonable accommodation requires a global approach and is not limited to a
specific area. The analysis must take into consideration several factors, such
as who the complainant is, what the application is about, and the environment;
among others. In our case, all these factors have to be taken into
consideration. The Tribunal erred in law when it failed to follow this global
approach.
E. Did the Tribunal err in fact
or law when it rejected the Daly site elevator without doing the proper
balancing?
[131] The goal of
human rights legislation is not perfection. Rather as the human rights jurisprudence
instructs, human rights law is an evolving contextual analysis anchored in
common sense and flexibility on all parties, including the decision maker, the
complainant and the respondent. Paragraphs 123 and 124, of Via Rail,
provide guidance in this regard:
123 What constitutes undue hardship
depends on the factors relevant to the circumstances and legislation governing
each case: Chambly, at p. 546; Meiorin,
at para. 63. The factors informing a respondent's duty to accommodate "are
not entrenched, except to the extent that they are expressly included or
excluded by statute": Meiorin, at para. 63.
124 In all cases, as Cory J. noted in
Chambly, at p. 546, such
considerations "should be applied with common sense and flexibility in the
context of the factual situation presented in each case".
[132] In order to
dismiss the Daly site elevator outright as the Tribunal did, it was required by
law to undertake a proper balancing of the various factors, indispensable to an
assessment of the elevator’s suitability as an alternative, providing reasonable
accommodation short of undue hardship.
[133] The Tribunal
decided that the Daly site was not a reasonable accommodation. The Daly
elevator was not located at or in close proximity to the Steps but rather 130 metres
away, such that even half of that distance would be too much to be deemed
reasonable. In the eyes of the Tribunal, this distance was not only too far but
it undermined the dignity of peoples with disabilities and violated two of the
principles of universal access, effort and equitable use. The only alternative
option had to be in proximity to the Steps, not the U.S. Embassy but the Connaught Building. That is why
it brought Public Works into play.
[134] The Tribunal also
rejected the Daly site elevator outright because it decided that the consultations
of 1994 and 2002 were not adequate and were influenced by the NCC. It felt that
the consultation process did not sufficiently consider all the options (for
example going through the Connaught Building); having decided to
assess the situation only from the bottom of the Steps. It therefore ordered
that consultations would resume and the parties are to asses the alternatives
in the Connaught Building and an
elevator along the wall.
[135] The Court
recognizes that the Daly site elevator breached two of the Principles of
Universal Access. The location of the Daly elevator violates principle one, in
that it is not equitable. Peoples with motor limitations are not able to climb
the steps and must therefore proceed along the adapted sidewalks either North
around the U.S. Embassy or South to the Daly site elevator. Able-bodied
pedestrians do not have to make such detours. Also, the Steps violate principle
six, in that it requires physical effort to make the detours.
[136] However, notwithstanding
these two violations of the principles of universal access, the Daly elevator respects
the other five principles. Five out of seven, in the Court’s humble opinion, is
something to be considered by any decision maker. Here too, the Court is
reminded of Mr. Justice Cory’s observations in Chambly, above.
Human rights cases do not demand nor do they expect perfection. That is why
common sense and flexibility should prevail at all times.
[137] Moreover, as
indicated in Via Rail, at paragraphs 133-34, it is necessary to keep in
mind that the duty to accommodate is limited by the words “reasonable” and
“short of undue hardship.” The weighing of the reasonableness of a proposed
accommodation varies with the context. Again, flexibility and common sense are
called for. In our case, the Tribunal did not do the weighing of the
reasonableness of the Daly site elevator. It excluded it automatically because
of the 130-meter distance from the York Street Steps. The Tribunal closed its
mind to other reasonable options unless as it favoured, such options were at or
in close proximity to the steps.
[138] In Via
Rail, above, at paragraph 225, the Supreme Court of Canada exhorts decision
makers to weigh the competing interests:
225 The threshold of "undue hardship"
is not mere efficiency. It goes without saying that in weighing the competing
interests on a balance sheet, the costs of restructuring or retrofitting are
financially calculable, while the benefits of eliminating discrimination tend
not to be. What monetary value can be assigned to dignity, to be weighed
against the measurable cost of an accessible environment? It will always seem
demonstrably cheaper to maintain the status quo and not eliminate a
discriminatory barrier.
[139] The Tribunal
therefore rejected the Daly site elevator as a reasonable form of accommodation.
It did so without doing the proper balancing. As a matter of fact, because of
its finding that it was to be in the proximity and that the distance of 130
metes was too far, it stopped its analysis of weighing the different factors
such as security, 24 hour access, safety, costs, among others.
[140] The Court
finds that based on the totality of the evidence before the Tribunal, it was
not correct for the Tribunal to proceed or conclude in the manner that it did. The
Court considers that had it proceeded in the correct fashion, the Tribunal
would have been alive to the fact that from the earliest planning stages of
this urban redevelopment, the NCC was fully aware and anxious to fulfil its public
duty to accommodate all members of the public wishing to use the Steps to move
between Mackenzie Avenue and Sussex Drive at the points of access at Major
Hill’s Park and York Street.
[141] Had the
Tribunal applied the tripartite analysis in Grismer, above, it would
also have been moved by the evidence before it that the NCC had tried but was
unable to provide accommodation to persons with disabilities at the Steps, not
because of some wilful disregard for the rights of people with disabilities but
because of the documented obstacles of safety, costs and security imposed by
the very topography of the site. Surely nothing could be more concrete an
example of a bona fide justification for not providing
accommodation at the Steps.
[142] Having failed
to follow the Grismer principles and apply common sense and flexibility,
the Tribunal utterly dismissed the four consultation processes the NCC
undertook, three times before the construction of the Steps and once, after Mr.
Brown filed his human rights complaint. Had the Tribunal undertaken this analysis,
it would also not have ignored the various alternatives the NCC considered as
proposed by both its in-house architects and universal access experts but also
by independent architectural consultants and disability groups.
[143] The Court
finds that it is not enough to say the elevator down the street at the Daly
site is not reasonable accommodation simply because the Respondent Brown seeks
to have accommodation right at the Steps. The professional and expert reports
conclude that this was not feasible. The next best thing was for the NCC to do
all within its power and reasonably possible to provide alternate reasonable
accommodation. The Tribunal simply states that it did not. The evidence does
not support this conclusion.
[144] The Court
also finds that the NCC met its duty to accommodate by fully considering all possible
options first at the site and then when this was demonstrably unfeasible, it
turned to the nearest option within its power and control. The next best thing
was to provide accommodation not only within close proximity but also within
the law, on its own premises. It would have been illegal for the NCC to
encroach on the property of the U.S. Embassy, just as it would be out of its power
to provide accommodation to the South inside the Connaught Building. In
any event, the evidence shows that the internal use of the Connaught Building as an
alternative was not feasible and doable, as Mr. Rapson acknowledged in his testimony.
The Court concludes that the NCC did what was within its power to do and
provided reasonable accommodation after consultation with disability
representatives and after studied expert opinion.
VIII Costs
[145] Because of
the legal public issues at stake and the parties involved, no costs will be
awarded.
IX Conclusion
[146] After a careful
review of the evidence, including the transcripts of the hearings before the
Tribunal, the Court is of the opinion that based on the topographical features
of the site; the NCC has discharged its obligations to provide accommodation by
demonstrating that it was impossible to do so at the site. Moreover, while this
is not perfect, the NCC implemented reasonable accommodation at the nearest property
under its ownership and control. It is trite law that the duty to accommodate is
not an absolute endeavour anchored in an ideal world of perfection. It calls,
like the facts of this case compel, for reasonableness, flexibility and a
healthy dose of common sense.
[147] In our case,
the Tribunal changed the process to determine accommodation as provided in
sections 5 and 15 of the Act. The Tribunal changed the prima facie
test by shifting the onus away from the respondent. It also saw in the
legislation a duty to consult which is not specifically mentioned. The Tribunal
also looked at the situation with a limited point of view when it should have
viewed it globally. The Tribunal also failed to do the proper balancing of the
different access points. It limited its analysis to the specific area at the
bottom of the Steps and simply rejected the Daly site elevator option and
thereby limited the accommodation to the proximity of the York Street Steps.
[148] Consequently,
the Court concludes that while the Tribunal was correct in its determination
with respect to the Steps being a service or a facility, the Court does not
agree with its findings of law on the four other issues in this case and therefore
substitutes its views as follows:
i.
The onus
does shift to the respondent (the NCC) following the determination of a prima
facie case of discrimination;
ii.
The duty
to accommodate does not include a legal duty to consult;
iii.
The
determination of reasonable accommodation requires a global approach that
considers several factors including the complainant, the nature of the
complaint, the environment as observed in Via Rail, above; and
iv.
The
determination of reasonable accommodation requires that the decision maker
conduct a weighing of the different interests based on the circumstances of the
case.
JUDGMENT
THE COURT ORDERS AND
ADJUDGES THAT:
- This
application for judicial review is allowed in part;
- The
decision of the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal dated June 6, 2006 is quashed
and in light of the errors of law, the following is substituted as the correct
decision:
1. the York
Street Steps are a facility that provide a service to the general public;
2.
the onus
shifts to the respondent following the determination of a prima facie
case of discrimination to establish a defence short of undue hardship;
3.
the duty
to accommodate does not include a duty to consult;
4.
the
analysis of reasonable accommodation requires looking at the situation globally;
and
5.
the assessment
of reasonable accommodation is possible only after a proper balancing of the
factors. In this case, the Court finds that based on all the circumstances, the
Daly site elevator is a reasonable alternative form of accommodation to the
York Street Steps.
- No
costs are awarded.
“Simon Noël”
APPENDICES
1. MAP Accessibility between
Upper Town and Lower Town
2. Principles of Universal Design
FEDERAL COURT
SOLICITORS OF RECORD
DOCKET: T-1117-06
STYLE OF CAUSE: NATIONAL
CAPITAL COMMISSION
Applicant
and
BOB
BROWN and the CANADIAN HUMAN RIGHTS COMMISSION and the ATTORNEY
GENERAL
OF CANADA (representing the
DEPARTMENT
OF PUBLIC WORKS AND GOVERNMENT SERVICES CANADA
Respondents
and
THE
COUNCIL OF CANADIANS WITH DISABILITIES
Intervener
PLACE OF
HEARING: Ottawa
DATE OF
HEARING: 7-8-9
April 2008
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
AND JUDGMENT: The Honourable Mr.
Justice Simon Noël
DATED: June
13, 2008
APPEARANCES:
Mr. Lynn
Harnden
Mr. Sébastien
Huard
|
FOR THE APPLICANT
|
Mr. David
Baker
Mr. Faisal
Bhabha
|
FOR THE RESPONDENT
|
Mr. Philippe
Dufresne
Ms. Ikram
Warsame
|
FOR THE RESPONDENT
|
Mr. Alain
Préfontaine
Ms. Zoe Oxaal
|
FOR THE RESPONDENT
|
Ms. Debra
McAllister
|
FOR INTERVENER
|
SOLICITORS
OF RECORD:
Mr. Lynn
Harnden
Mr. Sébastien
Huard
Emond Harnden
Barristers
& Solicitors
Ottawa, Ontario
|
FOR THE APPLICANT
|
Mr. David
Baker
Bakerlaw
Toronto,
Ontario
|
FOR THE RESPONDENT
|
Mr. Philippe
Dufresne
Canadian Human
Rights Commission
Ottawa, Ontario
|
FOR THE RESPONDENT
|
John H. Sims
Q.C.
Deputy
Attorney General of Canada
Ottawa,
Ontario
|
FOR THE RESPONDENT
|
ARCH
Disability Law Centre
Toronto, Ontario
|
FOR INTERVENER
|
APPENDIX “1”
MAP
Accessibility between Upper Town and Lower Town
APPENDIX “2”
Principles
of Universal Design
Universal Design
is the design of products and environments to be useable by all people, to the
greatest extend possible, without the need for adaptation or specialized
design.
The following
seven principles and guidelines have been accepted as the rules of Universal
design:
PRINCIPLE ONE:
Equitable Use: The design is useful and marketable to people with diverse
abilities.
PRINCIPLE TWO:
Flexibility in Use: The design accommodates a wide range of individual
preferences and abilities.
PRINCIPLE THREE:
simple and Intuitive Use: Use of the design is easy to understand, regardless
of the user's experience, knowledge, language skills, or current concentration
level.
PRINCIPLE FOUR:
Perceptible Information: The design communicates necessary information
effectively to the user, regardless of ambient conditions or the user's sensory
abilities.
PRINCIPLE FIVE:
Tolerance for Error: The design minimizes hazards and the adverse consequences
of accidental or unintended actions.
PRINCIPLE SIX:
Low Physical Effort: The design can be used efficiently and comfortably and
with a minimum of fatigue.
PRINCIPLE SEVEN:
size and space of approach and Use: Appropriate size and space is provided for
approach, reach, manipulation, and use regardless of user's body size, posture,
or mobility.