Docket: T-1521-15
Citation:
2016 FC 1016
Ottawa, Ontario, September 8, 2016
PRESENT: The
Honourable Mr. Justice Fothergill
BETWEEN:
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CORY NEWTON
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Applicant
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and
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THE ATTORNEY
GENERAL OF CANADA AND THE COMMISSIONER OF CORRECTIONS AND THE HEAD OF THE
ONTARIO REGIONAL PHARMACY
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Respondents
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JUDGMENT AND REASONS
I.
Introduction
[1]
Cory Newton is an inmate of Warkworth
Institution, a federal penitentiary located in Ontario. He submitted a
grievance to the Senior Deputy Commissioner of the institution concerning the
refusal of the Correctional Service of Canada [CSC] to pay for prescribed
medication pursuant to s 86(1)(a) of the Corrections and Conditional Release
Act, SC 1992, c 20 [CCRA]. The Senior Deputy Commissioner denied Mr.
Newton’s grievance because the medication is available “over
the counter” [OTC], and is not covered by most federal, provincial or
territorial drug plans available to the general public. Mr. Newton has sought
judicial review of that decision.
[2]
For the reasons that follow, I have concluded
that the Senior Deputy Commissioner reasonably found that Mr. Newton’s
medication was not covered by the CSC drug plan. The application for judicial
review is therefore dismissed.
II.
Background
[3]
Mr. Newton is serving an indeterminate sentence
at Warkworth Institution. In August 2012, he was diagnosed with dry age-related
macular degeneration [AMD], which may cause impaired central vision and
eventual blindness. Mr. Newton’s optometrist recommended that Mr. Newton
receive Vitalux/Omega. On August 22, 2012, the institutional physician wrote a
prescription for Vitalux, which was substituted with the generic drug Ocuvite
by the regional pharmacy. Mr. Newton received the tablets the same day, and
continued to receive them free of charge until July 2013, when he was informed
that he would have to pay for the tablets himself. On January 2, 2015, Mr.
Newton filed a third level grievance in which he alleged that he should receive
the Ocuvite tablets free of charge as “essential health
care” under s 86(1)(a) of the CCRA.
III.
Decision under Review
[4]
Mr. Newton’s grievance was denied by the Senior
Deputy Commissioner on April 20, 2015. In her decision, the Senior Deputy
Commissioner acknowledged that Mr. Newton’s condition had been diagnosed in
August 2012, that an optometrist had recommended Vitalux/Omega tablets, and
that the institutional physician had written a prescription accordingly.
[5]
However, based on her review of the Ocuvite
website, the Senior Deputy Commissioner found that the tablet is part of a “family of eye vitamins & mineral supplements.” She
also received advice from CSC National Headquarters that Ocuvite is not covered
by the CSC “as per community standards as it is
considered an OTC medication that is not covered by most publicly funded
Federal, Provincial or Territorial drug plans.”
[6]
In response to Mr. Newton’s claim that he could
not afford Ocuvite tablets, the Senior Deputy Commissioner referred to
Commissioner’s Direction 860, Offender’s Money, and observed that Mr.
Newton had a responsibility to budget his finances to ensure that he had funds
for authorized expenditures. She also noted that, pursuant to another
directive, inmates receive a credit of $4.00 per pay period for the purchase of
health and hygiene products, and that Mr. Newton was employed within the
institution and was receiving “Level A pay”.
[7]
The Senior Deputy Commissioner concluded that
there are no available treatments for Mr. Newton’s medical condition, and
because Ocuvite is considered an OTC medication that is not funded by other
public drug plans, it is not funded by the CSC. She therefore denied Mr. Newton’s
grievance.
IV.
Issues
[8]
This application for judicial review raises the
following issues:
A.
Is the affidavit of Ian Irving admissible in
these proceedings?
B.
Is the decision of the Senior Deputy
Commissioner to deny Mr. Newton’s grievance reasonable?
V.
Analysis
A.
Is the affidavit of Ian Irving admissible in
these proceedings?
[9]
The Respondent filed the affidavit of Ian
Irving, Regional Manager, Clinical Services for the Ontario Region of CSC. The
affidavit provides information regarding CSC’s legislative and policy mandate
for the provision of health services to inmates, CSC’s National Formulary of
medications available to inmates, and Mr. Newton’s ineligibility to receive
Ocuvite tablets in accordance with CSC’s Formulary.
[10]
As a general rule,
in an application for judicial review the evidentiary record before the Court
is restricted to the evidentiary record that was before the decision-maker (Association of Universities and Colleges of Canada v Canadian
Copyright Licensing Agency (Access Copyright), 2012
FCA 22 [Association of Universities and Colleges] at para 19). The
essential purpose of judicial review is the review of decisions, not the
determination, by trial de novo, of questions that were not adequately
canvassed in evidence at the tribunal or trial court (Association of
Universities and Colleges at para 19, citing Gitxsan Treaty Society v
Hospital Employees’ Union, [2000] 1 FC 135 (FCA) at pages 144-45; Kallies
v Canada, 2001 FCA 376 at para 3; and Bekker v Canada, 2004 FCA 186
at para 11).
[11]
As the Federal Court of Appeal held in Association
of Universities and Colleges at para 20, “[t]here
are a few recognized exceptions to the general rule against this Court
receiving evidence in an application for judicial review, and the list of
exceptions may not be closed. These exceptions exist only in situations where
the receipt of evidence by this Court is not inconsistent with the differing
roles of the judicial review court and the administrative decision-maker.” Three exceptions recognized by the Court of
Appeal are: (a) an affidavit that provides general background in circumstances
where that information might assist the court in understanding the issues
relevant to the judicial review; (b) an affidavit that is necessary to bring to
the attention of the judicial review court procedural defects that cannot be
found in the evidentiary record of the administrative decision-maker; and (c)
an affidavit that highlights the complete absence of evidence before the
administrative decision-maker when it made a particular finding.
[12]
The Respondent attempted to portray Mr. Irving’s
affidavit as general background information
that may assist the Court. However, the Respondent relied on CSC policy
documents included as exhibits to the affidavit to argue that vitamin and
mineral supplements such as Ocuvite are explicitly excluded from CSC’s
Formulary. The Respondent therefore took the position that Ocuvite could not be
provided to inmates free of charge, even when prescribed by a physician.
[13]
The Respondent’s reliance on Mr. Irving’s
affidavit goes well beyond the provision of background information, and offers
a further basis upon which the decision of the Senior Deputy Commissioner might
be upheld. The Senior Deputy Commissioner based her decision on two fundamental
considerations: (a) Ocuvite is a vitamin and mineral supplement that
alleviates, but does not cure, AMD; and (b) Ocuvite is an OTC medication that
is not covered by most publicly-funded federal, provincial or territorial drug
plans. The Respondent cannot “bootstrap” the
decision of the Senior Deputy Commissioner with an analysis that does not
appear in her decision (Ontario (Energy Board) v Ontario Power Generation
Inc, 2015 SCC 44 at para 64). Mr. Irving’s affidavit is not admissible for
this purpose.
B.
Is the decision of the Senior Deputy
Commissioner to deny Mr. Newton’s grievance reasonable?
[14]
The Senior Deputy Commissioner’s decision is
subject to review by this Court against the standard of reasonableness (Shortreed
v Warkworth Institution, 2013 FC 304 at paras 21-22; Yu v Canada
(Attorney General), 2012 FC 970 at para 15; Kim v. Canada (Attorney
General), 2012 FC 870 at para 33). The Court will intervene only if the
decision falls outside the “range of possible,
acceptable outcomes which are defensible in respect of the facts and law”
(Dunsmuir v New Brunswick, 2008 SCC 9 at para 47).
[15]
Subsection 86(1) of the CCRA provides as
follows:
86 (1) The
Service shall provide every inmate with
(a) essential
health care; and
(b) reasonable access to non-essential mental health care that
will contribute to the inmate’s rehabilitation and successful reintegration
into the community.
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86
(1) Le Service veille à ce que chaque détenu reçoive les soins de santé
essentiels et qu’il ait accès, dans la mesure du possible, aux soins qui
peuvent faciliter sa réadaptation et sa réinsertion sociale.
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[16]
The Senior Deputy Commissioner accepted that Mr.
Newton had been diagnosed with AMD, and that he had been prescribed medication
by a physician. The Senior Deputy Commissioner found that there are currently
no medical treatments available for this condition. She acknowledged that Mr.
Newton’s optometrist had nevertheless recommended the use of a mineral or
vitamin supplement, and that this had been prescribed by the institutional
physician.
[17]
Mr. Newton argues that eyesight is of such
primary importance that the provision of Ocuvite free of charge is properly
regarded as “essential health care”. In addition to s 86(1) of the CCRA, he
relies on s 215(1) of the Criminal Code, RSC 1985, c C-46 (duty of
persons to provide necessaries). But Mr. Newton’s condition cannot be
considered life-threatening. Nor is Ocuvite a cure.
[18]
The Senior Deputy Commissioner accepted the
advice she received from CSC National Headquarters that Ocuvite is not covered
by CSC because it is an OTC medication that is not covered by most Canadian
publicly-funded drug plans. Mr. Newton did not dispute this characterization of
the drug.
[19]
In my view, it was reasonable for the Senior
Deputy Commissioner to accept the advice of CSC National Headquarters that a
mineral or vitamin supplement that is not covered by most federal provincial or
territorial drug plans is similarly not covered by the CSC drug plan. Mr. Newton
did not suggest that CSC inmates should receive a higher level of health care
than is available to non-incarcerated Canadians under other publicly-funded
drug plans.
[20]
This is sufficient to dispose of the
application for judicial review. However, I note that the CSC Formulary
provides that “[d]rugs which are not openly listed or
do not meet all Formulary criteria may be approved in special circumstances.
Requests for exceptions will require the Benefits with Criteria and
Non-Formulary Medication Request form (CSC-SCC 1415) from the attending
physician.”
[21]
Mr. Newton’s optometrist described his
recommendation to the institutional physician as a “non-formulary
request”. Mr. Newton may therefore wish to initiate the formal process
for requesting that his prescription be covered by CSC in light of his special
circumstances. While the CSC Formulary excludes “[n]on-prescription
multivitamin / mineral supplements as routine dietary supplements”, this
restriction may not extend to multivitamin or mineral supplements prescribed by
a physician for the management of AMD.
VI.
Conclusion
[22]
The application for judicial review is
dismissed. Counsel for the Respondent advised the Court that her client was not
seeking costs, and accordingly none are awarded.