Trinity Western University v. College of Teachers, [2001] 1
S.C.R. 772, 2001 SCC 31
British Columbia College of Teachers Appellant
v.
Trinity Western University and
Donna Gail Lindquist Respondents
and
The Evangelical Fellowship of Canada,
the Ontario Secondary School Teachers’ Federation,
the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops,
the British Columbia Civil Liberties Association,
EGALE Canada Inc.,
the Christian Legal Fellowship,
the Seventh-Day Adventist Church in Canada and
the Canadian Civil Liberties
Association Interveners
Indexed as: Trinity Western University v. British
Columbia College of Teachers
Neutral citation: 2001 SCC 31.
File No.: 27168.
2000: November 9; 2001: May 17.
Present: McLachlin C.J. and L’Heureux‑Dubé,
Gonthier, Iacobucci, Major, Bastarache, Binnie, Arbour and LeBel JJ.
on appeal from the court of appeal for british columbia
Administrative law -- Judicial review --
Jurisdiction -- British Columbia College of Teachers -- Private institution
with religious affiliations applying to College for permission to assume full
responsibility for teacher education program – College denying application –
Whether College had jurisdiction to consider discriminatory practices of
private institution in dealing with its application – Teaching
Profession Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 449, s. 4.
Administrative law -- Judicial review -- Standard
of review – British Columbia College of Teachers – Private institution with
religious affiliations applying to College for permission to assume full
responsibility for teacher education program – College denying application –
Whether College’s decision justified – Standard of review applicable to
College’s decision -- Manner of resolving potential conflict between religious
freedoms and equality rights.
Trinity Western University (“TWU”) is a private institution in B.C.,
associated with the Evangelical Free Church of Canada. TWU
established a teacher training program offering baccalaureate degrees in
education upon completion of a five-year course, four years of which were spent
at TWU, the fifth year being under the aegis of Simon Fraser University
(“SFU”). TWU applied to the B.C. College of Teachers (“BCCT”) for permission
to assume full responsibility for the teacher education program. One of the
reasons for assuming complete responsibility for the program was TWU’s desire
to have the full program reflect its Christian world view. The BCCT refused to
approve the application because it was contrary to the public interest for the
BCCT to approve a teacher education program offered by a private institution
which appears to follow discriminatory practices. The BCCT was concerned that
the TWU Community Standards, applicable to all students, faculty and staff,
embodied discrimination against homosexuals. Specifically, the concern stemmed
from the list of “practices that are
biblically condemned”, which encompassed “sexual sins including . . .
homosexual behaviour”. TWU community members were asked to sign a document in
which they agreed to refrain from such activities. On application for
judicial review, the B.C. Supreme Court found that it was not within the
BCCT’s jurisdiction to consider whether the program follows discriminatory
practices under the public interest component of the Teaching Profession Act
and that there was no reasonable foundation to support the BCCT’s decision with
regard to discrimination. The court granted an order in the nature of
mandamus, allowing approval of the TWU proposed teacher education program for
a five-year period subject to a number of conditions. The Court of Appeal
found that the BCCT had acted within its jurisdiction, but affirmed the trial
judge’s decision on the basis that there was no reasonable foundation for the
BCCT’s finding of discrimination.
Held (L’Heureux-Dubé J.
dissenting): The appeal should be dismissed.
Per McLachlin C.J. and
Gonthier, Iacobucci, Major, Bastarache, Binnie, Arbour and LeBel JJ.: The
BCCT had jurisdiction to consider discriminatory practices in dealing with the
TWU application. The suitability for entrance into the profession of teaching
must take into account all features of the education program at TWU and the
power to establish standards provided for in s. 4 of the Teaching Profession
Act must be interpreted in light of the general purpose of the statute. Public schools are meant to develop civic virtue and responsible
citizenship and to educate in an environment free of bias, prejudice and
intolerance. It would not be correct, in this context, to limit the scope of
s. 4 to a determination of skills and knowledge. The standard of correctness
must be applied to the BCCT’s decision to consider discriminatory practices
because it was determinative of jurisdiction and beyond the expertise of the
members of the BCCT.
The absence of a privative clause, the expertise of
the BCCT, the nature of the decision and the statutory context all favour a
correctness standard of review on the issue of whether the BCCT’s decision is
justified. While this case deals with the discretion of an
administrative body to determine the public interest, the BCCT
is not the only government actor entrusted with policy development.
Furthermore, its expertise does not qualify it to interpret the scope of
human rights nor to reconcile competing rights. The Court of
Appeal was wrong in applying a lower standard to the findings of the BCCT with
regard to the existence of discriminatory practices and whether any such
practices create a perception that the BCCT condones this discrimination or
create a risk that graduates of TWU will not provide a discrimination-free
environment for all public school students. The existence of discriminatory
practices is based on the interpretation of the TWU documents and human rights
values and principles. This is a question of law that is concerned with human
rights and not essentially educational matters.
At the heart of the appeal is how to reconcile the
religious freedoms of individuals wishing to attend TWU with the equality
concerns of students in B.C.’s public school system, concerns that may be
shared by society generally. While TWU is a private institution that is
exempted, in part, from the B.C. human rights legislation and to which the Canadian Charter of Rights and
Freedoms does not apply, the
BCCT was entitled to look to these instruments to determine whether it would
be in the public interest to allow public school teachers to be trained at TWU.
Any potential conflict between
religious freedoms and equality rights should be resolved through the proper
delineation of the rights and values involved. Properly defining the scope of
the rights avoids a conflict in this case. Neither freedom of religion nor the
guarantee against discrimination based on sexual orientation is absolute. The proper place to draw the line is generally
between belief and conduct. The freedom to hold beliefs is broader than the
freedom to act on them. Absent concrete evidence that training teachers at TWU
fosters discrimination in the public schools of B.C., the freedom of
individuals to adhere to certain religious beliefs while at TWU should be
respected. Acting on those beliefs, however, is a different matter. If a teacher in the public
school system engages in discriminatory conduct, that teacher can be subject to
disciplinary proceedings before the BCCT. In this way, the scope of the
freedom of religion and equality rights that have come into conflict can be circumscribed
and thereby reconciled.
Here, by not taking into account the impact of its decision on the
right to freedom of religion of the members of TWU, the BCCT did not weigh the
various rights involved in its assessment of the alleged discriminatory
practices of TWU. Consideration of human rights values in
the present circumstances encompasses consideration of the place of private
institutions in our society and the reconciling of competing rights and
values. Freedom of religion, conscience and association coexist with the right
to be free of discrimination based on sexual orientation. Even though the
requirement that students and faculty adopt the Community Standards creates
differential treatment since it would probably prevent homosexual students and
faculty from applying, one must consider the true nature of the undertaking and
the context in which this occurs. Many Canadian universities have traditions
of religious affiliations. Religious public education rights are enshrined in s.
93 of the Constitution Act, 1867 . Moreover, a religious
institution is not considered to breach B.C. human rights legislation where it
prefers adherents of its religious constituency. It cannot be reasonably
concluded that private institutions are protected but that their graduates are de
facto considered unworthy of fully participating in public activities.
While homosexuals may be discouraged from attending TWU, a private institution
based on particular religious beliefs, they will not be prevented from becoming
teachers. Clearly, the restriction on freedom of religion must be justified by
evidence that the exercise of this freedom of religion will, in the
circumstances of this case, have a detrimental impact on the public school
system. There is nothing in the TWU Community Standards, which are limited to
prescribing conduct of members while at TWU, that indicates that graduates of
TWU will not treat homosexuals fairly and respectfully. The evidence to date is that graduates from the
joint TWU-SFU teacher education program have become competent public school
teachers, and there is no evidence before this Court of discriminatory
conduct. In addition, there is no basis for the inference that the
fifth year of the TWU program conducted under the aegis of SFU corrected any
attitudes which were the subject of the BCCT’s concerns. On the evidence, the
participation of SFU had nothing to do with the apprehended intolerance from
its inception to the present. Rather, the cooperation was intended to support a
small faculty in its start-up stage.
The order of mandamus was justified because the
exercise of discretion by the BCCT was fettered by s. 4 of the Act and because
the only actual reason for denial of certification was the consideration of
discriminatory practices. In considering the religious precepts of TWU instead
of the actual impact of these beliefs on the public school environment, the
BCCT acted on the basis of irrelevant considerations. It therefore acted
unfairly.
Per L’Heureux-Dubé J.
(dissenting): This case is about providing the best possible educational
environment for public school students in British Columbia. The Teaching
Profession Act confers jurisdiction on the BCCT to consider discriminatory
practices in evaluating TWU’s application. The BCCT’s statutory mandate gives
it a broad discretion to set standards for the approval of teacher education
programs, as well as for their graduates. The presence of discrimination is
relevant and within the BCCT’s jurisdiction.
The standard of patent unreasonableness is the
appropriate standard of review for the BCCT’s decision. While Pushpanathan’s
privative clauses factor does not apply to this case, the other relevant
factors all weigh in favour of patent unreasonableness. First, the BCCT has
relative expertise in the area of setting standards for admission into the
teaching profession. Deference should be accorded to self-governing
professional bodies like the BCCT. Second, on the question of the purpose of the
Act as a whole and of the particular provision at issue, the BCCT’s decision
concerning TWU’s teacher education program goes to the heart of the Teaching
Profession Act’s raison d’être and should only be disturbed by
judges, who lack the specialized expertise of teachers, if it is patently
unreasonable. The BCCT is entrusted with policy development. This
policy-making mandate is reflected in the words of s. 4 of the Act. Moreover,
the BCCT has wide discretion to review teacher training programs under the Act.
Its polycentric decision in this case was made pursuant to s. 21(i) of the
Act, which involves the application of vague, open-textured principles,
requiring curial deference. Finally, the BCCT’s decision is fact-based,
concerning an issue the nature of which implicates the tribunal’s expertise.
Determining how TWU’s program may affect its graduates’ preparedness to teach
in the public schools is a factual rather than a legal inquiry and requires
the specialized expertise of the BCCT’s members, the majority of whom have
classroom experience.
The BCCT fulfills the role of gatekeeper to the
profession of public school teaching. Statutory interpretation of the BCCT’s
“public interest” responsibilities should be purposive and contextual, not
nebulous. It is a misconception to characterize the BCCT’s decision as being a
balancing or interpretation of human rights values, an exercise that is beyond
the tribunal’s expertise. Equality is a central component of the public
interest that the BCCT is charged with protecting in the classrooms of the
province. The BCCT was required to consider the value of equality in its
assessment of the impact TWU’s program will have on the classroom environment.
The BCCT was not acting as a human rights tribunal and was not required to
consider other Charter or human rights values such as freedom of
religion which are not germane to the public interest in ensuring that teachers
have the requisites to foster supportive classroom environments in public
schools. The BCCT’s inquiry was reasonably limited to its area of educational
expertise.
The BCCT’s decision not to accredit a free-standing
TWU teacher-training program should be upheld. The BCCT’s conclusion that
TWU’s Community Standards embodies a discriminatory practice is not patently
unreasonable. Signing the contract makes the student or employee complicit in
an overt, but not illegal, act of discrimination against homosexuals and
bisexuals. It is not patently unreasonable for the BCCT to treat TWU students’
public expressions of discrimination as potentially affecting the public school
communities in which they wish to teach. Although tolerance is also a
fundamental value in the Community Standards, the public interest in the
public school system requires something more than mere tolerance.
The BCCT was not patently unreasonable in concluding
that, without spending a year under the auspices of SFU, TWU graduates, due to
their signature of the Community Standards contract, could have a negative impact
on the supportive environment required in classrooms. The BCCT could
reasonably find that without a fifth year of training outside the supervision
of TWU there would be an unacceptable pedagogical cost in terms of reduced
exposure of TWU students to diversity and its values. It is reasonable to
insist that graduates of accredited teacher training programs be equipped to
provide a welcoming classroom environment, one that is as sensitive as possible
to the needs of a diverse student body.
The modern role of the teacher has developed into a
multi-faceted one, including counselling as well as educative functions.
Evidence shows that there is an acute need for improvement in the experiences
of homosexual and bisexual students in Canadian classrooms. Without the
existence of supportive classroom environments, homosexual and bisexual
students will be forced to remain invisible and reluctant to approach their
teachers. They will be victims of identity erasure. The students’ perspective
must be the paramount concern and, even if there are no overt acts of
discrimination by TWU graduates, this vantage point provides ample
justification for the BCCT’s decision. The BCCT’s decision is a reasonable
proactive measure designed to prevent any potential problems of student,
parent, colleague, or staff perception of teachers who have not completed a
year of training under the supervision of SFU, but have signed the Community
Standards contract. The courts, by trespassing into the field of pedagogy,
deal a setback to the BCCT’s efforts to ensure the sensitivity and empathy of
its members to all students’ backgrounds and characteristics.
The respondents’ Charter claims should be
dismissed. The effect of the BCCT’s decision is to restrict TWU students’
expression. Assuming that TWU’s expression is also fettered, these violations
are saved under s. 1 . First, the objective behind the BCCT’s decision to
protect the classroom environment in public schools is pressing and
substantial. Second, the BCCT’s decision satisfies the proportionality test.
The burden placed on expression is rationally connected to the BCCT’s goal of
ensuring a welcoming and supportive atmosphere in classrooms. By falling
within an acceptable range of solutions, the BCCT’s decision also minimally
impairs s. 2 (b). The extent of the violation’s deleterious effects on
TWU and its students is more than offset by the salutary gains that will
plausibly accrue in classrooms. With respect to s. 2 (d), since no
unjustified individual rights violations were found in this case, and since TWU
students are not unconstitutionally restrained from exercising their individual
rights collectively, the respondent student’s s. 2 (d) claim must also
fail.
Assuming without deciding that TWU can advance a s. 2(a)
claim, the impugned state action does not offend religious freedom but
accommodates it. The BCCT’s decision permits the existence of schools such as
TWU which have a religious orientation. There is also no impairment of the
respondent student’s s. 2(a) rights. Her assertion of religious freedom
should be appraised under s. 15. Based on the guidelines assembled and applied
in Law, no violation of the student’s s. 15 equality rights has been
established. The distinction and differential treatment resulting from the
BCCT’s decision are not based on the student’s religion. There is every
indication that the BCCT would be as concerned if a private secular institution
were to require a discriminatory practice. Furthermore, a subjective-objective examination of Law’s four
contextual factors reveals that the student’s human dignity is not demeaned by the
BCCT’s
decision to attach consequences to TWU students’ signature of the Community Standards
contract.
Cases Cited
By Iacobucci and Bastarache JJ.
Applied: Pushpanathan v. Canada
(Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), [1998] 1 S.C.R. 982; referred to: Ross v. New Brunswick School
District No. 15, [1996] 1 S.C.R. 825; U.E.S.,
Local 298 v. Bibeault, [1988] 2 S.C.R. 1048; Pezim
v. British Columbia (Superintendent of Brokers), [1994] 2 S.C.R. 557; Canada (Director of Investigation and Research)
v. Southam Inc., [1997] 1 S.C.R. 748; Saumur v.
City of Quebec, [1953] 2 S.C.R. 299; R.
v. Big M Drug Mart Ltd., [1985] 1 S.C.R. 295; Vriend v.
Alberta, [1998] 1 S.C.R. 493; Egan v. Canada, [1995] 2 S.C.R. 513; M.
v. H., [1999] 2 S.C.R. 3; Little Sisters Book and Art Emporium v. Canada
(Minister of Justice), [2000] 2 S.C.R. 1120, 2000 SCC 69; P. (D.) v. S.
(C.), [1993] 4 S.C.R. 141; B. (R.) v. Children’s Aid Society of
Metropolitan Toronto, [1995] 1 S.C.R. 315; Dagenais v. Canadian
Broadcasting Corp., [1994] 3 S.C.R. 835; Ontario Human Rights
Commission v. Simpsons-Sears Ltd., [1985] 2 S.C.R. 536; Khalil v. Canada (Secretary of State), [1999] 4 F.C. 661; Apotex
Inc. v. Canada (Attorney General), [1994] 1 F.C. 742, aff’d [1994] 3 S.C.R.
1100.
By L’Heureux-Dubé J. (dissenting)
Ross v. New Brunswick School District No. 15, [1996] 1 S.C.R. 825; R. v. Jones, [1986] 2 S.C.R. 284; Pushpanathan
v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), [1998] 1 S.C.R.
982; Casson v. British Columbia College of Teachers, [2000] B.C.J. No.
1038 (QL); Pearlman v. Manitoba Law Society Judicial Committee, [1991] 2
S.C.R. 869; Pezim v. British Columbia (Superintendent of Brokers),
[1994] 2 S.C.R. 557; Lindsay v. Manitoba (Motor Transport) (1989), 62
D.L.R. (4th) 615; Hill v. Church of Scientology of Toronto, [1995] 2
S.C.R. 1130; Cuddy Chicks Ltd. v. Ontario (Labour Relations Board),
[1991] 2 S.C.R. 5; Baker v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
[1999] 2 S.C.R. 817; P. (D.) v. S. (C.), [1993] 4 S.C.R. 141; B.
(R.) v. Children’s Aid Society of Metropolitan Toronto, [1995] 1 S.C.R.
315; Canada (Attorney General) v. Public Service Alliance of Canada,
[1993] 1 S.C.R. 941; Canadian Union of Public Employees, Local 963 v. New
Brunswick Liquor Corp., [1979] 2 S.C.R. 227; Bob Jones University v.
United States, 461 U.S. 574 (1983); Egan v. Canada, [1995] 2 S.C.R.
513; M. v. H., [1999] 2 S.C.R. 3; Brillinger v. Brockie (2000),
37 C.H.R.R. D/15; R. v. Sharpe, [2001] 1 S.C.R. 45, 2001 SCC 2; Edmonton
Journal v. Alberta (Attorney General), [1989] 2 S.C.R. 1326; Thomson
Newspapers Co. v. Canada (Attorney General), [1998] 1 S.C.R. 877; Winnipeg
Child and Family Services v. K.L.W., [2000] 2 S.C.R. 519, 2000 SCC 48; R.
v. Oakes, [1986] 1 S.C.R. 103; RJR-MacDonald Inc. v. Canada (Attorney
General), [1995] 3 S.C.R. 199; Adler v. Ontario, [1996] 3 S.C.R. 609;
Professional Institute of the Public Service of Canada v. Northwest
Territories (Commissioner), [1990] 2 S.C.R. 367; Canadian Egg Marketing
Agency v. Richardson, [1998] 3 S.C.R. 157; Law v. Canada (Minister of
Employment and Immigration), [1999] 1 S.C.R. 497; Corbiere v. Canada
(Minister of Indian and Nothern Affairs), [1999] 2 S.C.R. 203; Lovelace
v. Ontario, [2000] 1 S.C.R. 950, 2000 SCC 37; Harrison v. University of
British Columbia, [1990] 3 S.C.R. 451.
Statutes and Regulations Cited
Alberta Act, R.S.C. 1985, App. II, No.
20, s. 17.
Bylaws of the British Columbia
College of Teachers, Bylaw 5 -- Teacher Education Programs Committee.
Canadian Charter of Rights and
Freedoms, ss. 1 , 2 , 15 .
Constitution Act, 1867, s. 93 .
Human Rights Act, S.B.C. 1984, c. 22, s. 19.
Human Rights Code, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 210, s. 41.
Manitoba Act, 1870, R.S.C. 1985, App.
II, No. 8, s. 22.
Newfoundland Act, R.S.C. 1985, App. II, No. 32, Terms of Union of Newfoundland with
Canada, Term 17.
Saskatchewan Act, R.S.C. 1985, App. II,
No. 21, s. 17.
School Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 412, ss.
171(1), 174(1).
School Regulation, B.C. Reg. 265/89,
s. 11.
Teaching Profession Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c.
449, ss. 4, 21(b), (c), (i), 23(1)(d), (e), (f), (l), 24(1)
[am. 1997, c. 29, s. 39], (2), 40.
Authors Cited
Canada. Health Canada. The
Experiences of Young Gay Men in the Age of HIV: A Review of the Literature.
Ottawa: Minister of Supply and Services Canada, 1996.
Eskridge, William N. Jr. Gaylaw:
Challenging the Apartheid of the Closet. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard
University Press, 1999.
Fontaine, Janet H. “The Sound of
Silence: Public School Response to the Needs of Gay and Lesbian Youth”. In
Mary B. Harris, ed., School Experiences of Gay and Lesbian Youth: The
Invisible Minority. New York: The Haworth Press, 1997, 101.
Kroll, Ian T., and Lorne B.
Warneke. “The Dynamics of Sexual Orientation & Adolescent Suicide: A
Comprehensive Review and Developmental Perspective” (May 1995).
Lahey, Kathleen A. Are We
“Persons” Yet? Law and Sexuality in Canada. Toronto: University of Toronto
Press, 1999.
MacDougall, Bruce. “Silence in the
Classroom: Limits on Homosexual Expression and Visibility in Education and the
Privileging of Homophobic Religious Ideology” (1998), 61 Sask. L. Rev.
41.
Mathison, Carla. “The Invisible
Minority: Preparing Teachers to Meet the Needs of Gay and Lesbian Youth”
(1998), 49 Journal of Teacher Education 151.
Nichols, Sharon L. “Gay, Lesbian,
and Bisexual Youth: Understanding Diversity and Promoting Tolerance in Schools”
(1999), 99 Elementary School Journal 505.
APPEAL from a judgment of the British Columbia Court
of Appeal (1998), 59 B.C.L.R. (3d) 241, 116 B.C.A.C. 1, 190 W.A.C. 1, 169
D.L.R. (4th) 234, 58 C.R.R. (2d) 189, [1999] 7 W.W.R. 71, [1998] B.C.J. No.
3029 (QL), dismissing the appellant’s appeal from a judgment of the British
Columbia Supreme Court (1997), 41 B.C.L.R. (3d) 158, 2 Admin. L.R. (3d) 12, 47
C.R.R. (2d) 155, [1998] 4 W.W.R. 550, [1997] B.C.J. No. 2076 (QL), granting the
respondents’ application for judicial review. Appeal dismissed, L’Heureux‑Dubé
J. dissenting.
Thomas R. Berger, Q.C.,
Gary A. Nelson and Erin F. Berger, for the appellant.
Robert G. Kuhn, Kevin
G. Sawatsky and Kevin L. Boonstra, for the respondents.
David M. Brown and Adrian
C. Lang, for the intervener the Evangelical Fellowship of Canada.
Susan Ursel and Maurice
A. Green, for the intervener the Ontario Secondary School Teachers’
Federation.
William J. Sammon, for
the intervener the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops.
Timothy J. Delaney and James
Gopaulsingh, for the intervener the British Columbia Civil Liberties
Association.
Kenneth W. Smith and Pam
MacEachern, for the intervener EGALE Canada Inc.
Dallas K. Miller, Q.C.,
and Corina Dario, for the intervener the Christian Legal Fellowship.
Gerald D. Chipeur and Barbara
B. Johnston, for the intervener the Seventh-Day Adventist Church in Canada.
Andrew K. Lokan and Heather
E. Bowie, for the intervener the Canadian Civil Liberties Association.
The judgment of McLachlin C.J. and Gonthier,
Iacobucci, Major, Bastarache, Binnie, Arbour and LeBel JJ. was delivered by
1
Iacobucci and Bastarache JJ.
— Trinity Western University (“TWU”) is a private institution located in Langley, British Columbia and incorporated
under the laws of British Columbia. It succeeded Trinity Western College in
1985; that junior college was itself the successor of a private society founded
in 1962. TWU is associated with the Evangelical Free Church of Canada. It is
an accredited member of the Association of Universities and Colleges of Canada
and the Council for Christian Colleges and
Universities. TWU confers six baccalaureate degrees and offers four masters programs. Donna
Lindquist was a third year student at TWU who had planned to attend the Teacher
Education Program at TWU in January of 1998.
2
In 1985, TWU established a teacher training program offering
baccalaureate degrees in education upon completion of a five-year course, four
years of which were spent at TWU, the fifth year being under the aegis of Simon
Fraser University. In 1987, TWU applied to B.C.’s Minister of Education for permission to
assume full responsibility for the teacher education program. Although there
appears to have been approval in principle in Cabinet, the Minister did not act
on the request because of the creation in that year of the British Columbia
College of Teachers (“BCCT”) which would become the appropriate body to
consider the application. TWU applied to the BCCT in January of 1988, but the
College was not ready to consider the application. The application was
therefore withdrawn and presented again in January of 1995. One of the reasons
for assuming complete responsibility for the program was the desire of TWU to
have the full program reflect the Christian world view of TWU.
3
The philosophy of TWU is specifically described in a document entitled
“Responsibilities of Membership in the Community of Trinity Western
University”. It is implemented through the adoption of “Community Standards”
which are intended to reflect the preferred lifestyle of persons belonging to
the TWU community; they apply both off and on campus and are the object of a
statement of acceptance by students, faculty and staff. An extract of the
application made in 1995 is instructive:
Trinity Western is a relatively unique Canadian
university in that it offers academically responsible education within a
distinctive Christian context. Its mission is to equip Christians to serve God
and people throughout society. TWU’s educational program, like those in public
universities, is based on a particular worldview perspective. At TWU, that
worldview is a Christian one. It includes (but is not limited to) a deep
respect for integrity and authenticity, responsible stewardship of resources,
the sanctity of human life, compassion for the disadvantaged, and justice for
all. This provides a framework for the leadership development that is
emphasized throughout TWU’s program. Although its program is oriented towards
those who profess the Christian faith, the university welcomes anyone who
wishes to pursue a liberal arts education and is willing to be part of the
Trinity Western community. While maintaining structural ties with its founding
denomination, the Evangelical Free Church, the university serves the needs of
the whole Christian community. Both the faculty and the student body represent
a wide range of denominational backgrounds.
4
The “Community Standards” document that students attending TWU must sign
contains the following paragraph, which is at the root of the present
controversy:
Refrain from practices that are
biblically condemned. These include but are not limited to drunkenness
(Eph. 5:18), swearing or use of profane language (Eph. 4:29, 5:4; Jas 3:1-12),
harassment (Jn 13:34-35; Rom. 12:9-21; Eph. 4:31), all forms of dishonesty
including cheating and stealing (Prov. 12:22; Col. 3:9; Eph. 4:28), abortion
(Ex. 20:13; Ps. 139:13-16), involvement in the occult (Acts 19:19; Gal. 5:19),
and sexual sins including premarital sex, adultery, homosexual behaviour,
and viewing of pornography (I Cor. 6:12-20; Eph. 4:17-24; I Thess. 4:3-8; Rom.
2:26-27; I Tim. 1:9-10). Furthermore married members of the community agree to
maintain the sanctity of marriage and to take every positive step possible to
avoid divorce. [Emphasis added.]
Faculty and staff are required to sign a “Community Standards” document that contains a similar paragraph, including the prohibition
of homosexual behaviour.
5
Following established policies, the
BCCT appointed a program approval team (“PAT”) to assess the TWU application.
The PAT recommended the approval of the application for accreditation with
conditions on March 21, 1996. On April 19, 1996, the Teacher Education
Programs Committee (“TEPC”) approved the PAT report but modified some of the
conditions. On May 17, 1996, the Council of the BCCT rejected the report and
recommendations. The motion was passed on two grounds: TWU did not meet the
criteria stated in the BCCT bylaws and policies;
and approval would not be in the public interest because of discriminatory
practices of the institution. TWU applied for a reconsideration. After
obtaining a legal opinion on the issue, the Council confirmed its denial of the
application on June 29, 1996. The motion adopted on June 29 gives the
following reason for the denial:
That Trinity Western University’s appeal in regard to the College’s
denial of its application for approval of a Teacher Education Program be denied
because Council still believes the proposed program follows discriminatory
practices which are contrary to the public interest and public policy which the
College must consider under its mandate as expressed in the Teaching Profession
Act.
6
The BCCT gave no written reasons explaining its initial denial of the
application or rejection on reconsideration. The May 22, 1996 letter of the
Registrar of the BCCT to TWU however refers to discriminatory practices and
“specifically the requirement for students to sign a contract of
‘Responsibilities of Membership in the Trinity Western University Community’”. The only other written explanation for
denial of the application comes from the Fall 1996 quarterly newsletter of the
BCCT, where the whole matter becomes abundantly clear. The BCCT writes:
Both the Canadian Human Rights Act and the B.C.
Human Rights Act prohibit discrimination on the ground of sexual
orientation. The Charter of Rights and the Human Rights Acts express the
values which represent the public interest. Labelling homosexual behaviour as
sinful has the effect of excluding persons whose sexual orientation is gay or
lesbian. The Council believes and is supported by law in the belief that
sexual orientation is no more separable from a person than colour. Persons of
homosexual orientation, like persons of colour, are entitled to protection and
freedom from discrimination under the law.
7
On application for judicial review of the BCCT decision, Davies J. of
the Supreme Court of British Columbia ((1997), 41 B.C.L.R. (3d) 158) found that
it was not within the BCCT’s jurisdiction to consider whether the program
follows discriminatory practices under the public interest component of the Teaching
Profession Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 449. He was of the view that matters of
public interest in the Act relate to teaching standards and could not be
extended to cover religious beliefs. Davies J. also found that there was no
reasonable foundation to support the decision of the BCCT with regard to discrimination.
The decision of the Supreme Court of British Columbia was affirmed by a
majority of the Court of Appeal ((1998), 59 B.C.L.R. (3d) 241), Rowles J.A.
dissenting.
8
The appellant before this Court describes the nature of the appeal in
these terms:
This case is really an administrative law case.
Did the Council exceed its jurisdiction, when it denied approval to TWU’s
five-year B.Ed. program, by taking into account TWU’s discriminatory
practices? Was this an extraneous consideration? This is a question of law,
and the standard of correctness applies.
If the Council was entitled to consider
“discriminatory practices”, was there evidence of such practices and of
discriminatory ramifications . . . ? Here the test is whether
the decision of the Council was patently unreasonable.
We believe this approach is convenient and
will adopt it, except for the determinations
of the applicable standards of review.
I. Relevant Constitutional, Statutory and Non-Statutory
Provisions
9
Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms
1. The Canadian Charter of Rights and
Freedoms guarantees the rights and freedoms set out in it subject only to
such reasonable limits prescribed by law as can be demonstrably justified in a
free and democratic society.
2. Everyone has the following fundamental
freedoms:
(a) freedom of conscience and religion;
(b) freedom of thought, belief, opinion and expression,
including freedom of the press and other media of communication;
. . .
(d) freedom of association.
15. (1) Every individual is equal before
and under the law and has the right to the equal protection and equal benefit
of the law without discrimination and, in particular, without discrimination
based on race, national or ethnic origin, colour, religion, sex, age or mental
or physical disability.
Teaching Profession Act, R.S.B.C. 1996,
c. 449
4 It
is the object of the college to establish, having regard to the public
interest, standards for the education, professional responsibility and
competence of its members, persons who hold certificates of qualification and
applicants for membership and, consistent with that object, to encourage the
professional interest of its members in those matters.
21 Subject
to this Act, the council must govern and administer the affairs of the college
and, without limiting that duty, the council may do the following:
. . .
(b) appoint an employee of the
college as an evaluator with authority to evaluate and decide whether persons
applying for a certificate of qualification or for membership in the college
have complied with this Act and the bylaws of the college;
(c) delegate to a committee of
the college the authority set out in paragraph (b), either in addition to or in
substitution for one or more evaluators appointed under that paragraph;
. . .
(i) approve, for certification
purposes, the program of any established faculty of teacher education or school
of teacher education.
23 (1) The
council may make bylaws consistent with this Act and the School Act as
follows:
. . .
(d) respecting the training and
qualifications of teachers and establishing standards, policies and procedures
with respect to the training and qualifications including, but not limited to,
professional, academic and specialist standards, policies and procedures;
(e) respecting the issue of
certificates of qualification . . .
(f) respecting the standards of
fitness for the admission of persons as members of the college;
. . .
(l) giving effect to and
implementing the powers of the council set out in this Act;
24 (1) The
registrar of the college must file with the minister a copy of each bylaw made
by the council, certified under the seal of the college, within 10 days after
it is made.
(2) The Lieutenant Governor in
Council may disallow a bylaw respecting the training, qualification or
certification of teachers within 60 days after the filing of it under
subsection (1).
40 A
member may appeal to the Supreme Court any decision, determination or order of
the qualifications committee, discipline committee or council that affects the
member and, from a decision, determination or order of the Supreme Court, may
appeal to the Court of Appeal with leave of a justice of that court.
School Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 412
171(1) The minister must appoint an education advisory council to
advise the minister on policy matters respecting education.
. . .
174(1) The Lieutenant Governor in Council may appoint one or more
boards of examiners consisting of 2 or more members, and a board of examiners
so appointed must include at least one representative of the Ministry of
Education, Skills and Training and one person appointed to represent the universities
named in the University Act and the Trinity Western University Act.
School Regulation, B.C. Reg. 265/89
11 The Education Advisory Council may advise the minister on
overall policies of the education system including, without limitation, the
following areas:
(a) curriculum and assessment;
(b) the teaching profession;
(c) system governance;
(d) finance.
Bylaws of the British Columbia College of Teachers, Bylaw 5 –
Teacher Education Program Committee
5.C. Approval of Teacher Education Programs
5.C.01 Pursuant to the
Teaching Profession Act, the Council of the College may approve for certification
purposes the teacher education programs or revision to the programs of the
Faculties of Education at universities recognized by statute in British
Columbia as degree granting institutions.
5.C.02 The Council shall
establish criteria for the approval for certification purposes of teacher
education programs.
5.C.03 For existing teacher
education programs that meet or are working towards meeting the criteria for
approval established under Bylaw 5.C.02, approval may be granted on a
continuing basis on the recommendation of the Teacher Education Programs
Committee.
5.C.04 The Council may from time
to time review the teacher education programs of Faculties of Education
approved under Bylaw 5.C.03.
5.C.05 For new teacher education
programs offered by institutions recognized by statute in British Columbia as
degree granting institutions, approval may be granted on an interim basis for a
maximum of five years and will be based on:
(a) the criteria for approval established under Bylaw
5.C.02;
(b) the recommendation of the
Teacher Education Programs Committee following a review process.
Policies of
the British Columbia College of Teachers
P5.C Approval of
Teacher Education Programs
P5.C.01 Criteria for the
Approval for Certification Purposes of Teacher Education Programs
. . .
(b) Programs must meet the following criteria:
1.0 Context
1.1 Have an appropriate
institutional setting in terms of depth and breadth of personnel, research and
other scholarly activity and commitment to teacher education.
2.0 Selection
2.0 Have defined selection and
admission policy that recognizes the importance of academic standing, interest
in working with young people and suitability for entrance into the profession
of teaching.
3.0 Content
. . .
3.2 Have content which provides
for a minimum of 36 credit/semester hours of professional education and
pedagogical course work. This must include a minimum of 12 weeks of supervised
student teaching, the major part of which normally must be undertaken in public
schools. The program should recognize the advantages of an extended practicum
in one school.
3.3 Have content which provides
a base of pedagogical knowledge informed by current research.
3.4 Have content which provides
a base of pedagogical skills that is informed by principles of effective
practice and current research.
3.5 Have content which
recognizes the diverse nature of our society and which addresses throughout the
program philosophical, ethical, and societal concerns with specific attention
to the following areas:
3.5.1 English as a Second Language (ESL)
3.5.2 First Nations Issues
3.5.3 Gender Equity
3.5.4 Multiculturalism and Racism
3.5.5 Students with Special Needs
. . .
4.0 Integration of Theory and
Practice
. . .
4.3 Recognizes that the
integration of theory and practice is enhanced by:
. . .
4.3.2 Ensuring that those who teach pedagogical
skills and supervise practica have recent experience or significant involvement
in school classrooms.
. . .
P5.C.03 Process for the
Approval for Certification Purposes of New Teacher Education Programs
1. The Teacher Education
Programs Committee shall oversee the process of program approval.
2. A Program Approval
Sub-Committee consisting of three members of the Teacher Education Programs
Committee shall meet as needed to prepare recommendations concerning program
approval.
3. Approval of New Programs:
a. Each proposal will be reviewed
by the Program Approval Sub-Committee and the Teacher Education Programs
Committee. Following a satisfactory initial review, a separate Program
Approval Team will be established to consider the proposal. Each Program
Approval Team shall be appointed by Council upon recommendation of the Teacher
Education Programs Committee.
b. Each Program Approval Team
shall consist of three members including:
i. A member of the Teacher
Education Programs Committee.
ii. A teacher educator, who is
not an employee or part of the governing structure of the institution making
the application, appointed in consultation with the Deans of the Faculties of
Education with approved programs and the institution making the application.
iii. A member of the College of
Teachers named in consultation with the British Columbia Teachers’ Federation.
A staff person or consultant will be assigned to
assist the team.
c. The Program Approval Team will
make a recommendation for approval or denial of approval to the Teacher
Education Programs Committee. If approval is recommended, the Program Approval
Team will also recommend a term for interim approval as defined in Bylaw 5.C.05
and may recommend conditions that must be met prior to consideration of
continuing program approval.
d. In the final year of interim
approval, the College shall establish a Program Approval Team to make
recommendations regarding further interim approval or approval on a continuing
basis.
II. Relevant Provisions in TWU Documents
10
Responsibilities of Membership in the Community of Trinity Western
University (Student version; Otherwise Referred to as Community Standards)
preamble
Trinity Western is a Christian university distinguished by a clear
mission:
The mission of Trinity Western University, as an arm of the church, is
to develop godly Christian leaders: positive, goal-oriented university
graduates with thoroughly Christian minds; growing disciples of Jesus Christ
who glorify God through fulfilling The Great Commission, serving God and people
in the various marketplaces of life.
. . .
Membership in the Trinity Western community is obtained through
application and invitation. Those who accept an invitation to join the
community agree to uphold its standards of conduct. . . .
. . .
Individuals who are invited to become members of this community but
cannot with integrity pledge to uphold the application of these standards are
advised not to accept the invitation and to seek instead a living-learning situation
more acceptable to them.
core values and community standards
. . .
Because the Community Standards are intended to reflect a preferred
lifestyle for those who belong to this community rather than “campus rules”,
they apply both on and off campus. All members of the community are responsible
to:
- conduct
themselves as responsible citizens.
- engage
in an honest pursuit of biblical holiness.
- make
the university’s mission their own mission.
- limit
the exercise of their christian liberty in accordance with the university’s
mission and the best interest of other members of the community.
application of the community standards to
students
It is recognized that not every student will have personal convictions
wholly in accord with the following application of these standards. However,
all students are responsible to:
. . .
- obey
jesus’ commandment to his disciples . . . echoed by the apostle paul
. . . to love one another. In general this involves showing
respect for all people regardless of race or gender and regard for human life
at all stages. It includes making a habit of edifying others, showing
compassion, demonstrating unselfishness, and displaying patience.
- refrain
from practices that are biblically condemned. These include but are not limited to drunkenness (Eph. 5:18), swearing
or use of profane language (Eph. 4:29, 5:4; Jas 3:1-12), harassment (Jn
13:34-35; Rom. 12:9-21; Eph. 4:31), all forms of dishonesty including cheating
and stealing (Prov. 12:22; Col. 3:9; Eph. 4:28), abortion (Ex. 20:13; Ps.
139:13-16), involvement in the occult (Acts 19:19; Gal. 5:19), and sexual sins
including premarital sex, adultery, homosexual behaviour, and viewing of
pornography (I Cor. 6:12-20; Eph. 4:17-24; I Thess. 4:3-8; Rom. 2:26-27; I Tim.
1:9-10). Furthermore married members of the community agree to maintain the
sanctity of marriage and to take every positive step possible to avoid divorce.
. . .
This application of the Community Standards is not
offered as a legalistic definition of right and wrong. Rather, it provides
concrete examples of a commitment to the mission of Trinity Western University
and a commitment to fellow members of this academic community. Certain
expectations may not be commanded by Scripture, but nonetheless, they are desirable and
essential if all members of the community are to achieve their personal goals.
Consequently, all students are required to commit themselves to follow this
application of the Community Standards and maintain the integrity of that
commitment.
Responsibilities of Membership in the Community of Trinity Western
University (Faculty and staff version; Otherwise
Referred to as Community Standards)
The Community Standards are essentially the same as
those for students, however the Application provision differs as follows:
application of the community
standards
to faculty, staff and
administration
The University asserts from the outset that the
existence of separate application statements is not for the purpose of creating
different standards for different community groups. Thus, the same core values
and biblical principles underlie both statements. This portion of the
Community Standards statement applies these common values and principles in an
appropriate manner to the situations which present themselves to employees
which may differ from those of students. Employees will at all times affirm
and support the application statement for students.
Consistent with the Preamble and Core Values of this
document, employees are expected to:
. . .
- obey
jesus’ commandment to his disciples . . . echoed by the apostle paul
. . . to love, cherish, and serve the needs of one another. This command requires total respect for all people regardless of
race, gender, location, status, or stage of life and of course, precludes
harming another person physically or maligning another’s character through
gossip, slander, or careless talk. It also includes making a habit of edifying
others, showing compassion, demonstrating unselfishness, and displaying
patience.
- refrain from practices which are biblically condemned. These
would include such matters as
drunkenness (Eph. 5:18) and other forms of substance abuse, use of profane or
unedifying language (Eph. 4:29, 5:4; Jas. 3:1-12), all forms of harassment (Jn
13:34-35; Rom. 12:9-21; Eph. 4:31), all forms of dishonesty including
cheating, stealing and misrepresentation (Prov. 12:22; Col. 3:9; Eph. 4:28),
abortion (Ex. 20:13; Ps. 139:13-16), gluttony, involvement in the occult (Acts
19:19; Gal. 5:19), and sexual sins including immodesty, the viewing of
pornography, premarital and extramarital sex, common law relationships, and
homosexual behaviour (I Cor. 6:12-20; Eph. 4:17-24; I Thess. 4:3-8; Rom.
2:26-27; I Tim. 1:9-10). Furthermore, married members of the community agree to
maintain the sanctity of marriage and to take every positive step possible to
avoid divorce.
- treat with utmost seriousness the position of trust and influence
which an employee holds in his/her relationships with students, and to model at
all times wise, discreet and respectful behaviour. This is especially
important for faculty whose direct relationship of authority with students must
be exercised with an attitude of integrity and service. Employees agree as
well to affirm the application of the University’s Community Standards to
students.
Explanation of Community Standards Code Provided to Students
When you decided to attend TWU you signed on to live
by different standards than the rest of the world does. The “rules”, or
Community Standards, are not meant to be the bane of your existence, but to
create an atmosphere that is consistent with our profession of faith.
You might not absolutely agree with the Standards.
They might not be consistent with what you believe. However, when you decided
to come to TWU, you agreed to accept these responsibilities. If you cannot
support and abide by them, then perhaps you should look into UIG [University of
Instant Gratification] or AGU [Anything Goes University].
Statement of Faith (for Faculty)
As a Christian university, Trinity Western openly
espouses a unifying philosophical framework to which all faculty and staff are
committed without reservation. The University identifies with and is committed
to historic orthodox Christianity as expressed by the official Statement of
Faith. . . .
. . .
¨ I agree without reservation with the above Statement of Faith
and agree to support that position at all times before the students and friends
of Trinity Western University.
¨ I agree with reservation with the above Statement of Faith.
(Specify all reservations on separate sheet.)
Date________________________ Signed________________________
¨ I feel I cannot sign the above Statement of Faith for the
reasons specified. (Specify all reasons on separate sheet.)
TWU Statement of Academic Freedom
Accordingly, Trinity Western University maintains that
arbitrary indoctrination and simplistic, prefabricated answers to all questions
are incompatible with a Christian respect for truth, a Christian understanding
of human dignity and freedom, and quality Christian educational techniques and
objectives.
On the other hand, Trinity Western University rejects
as incompatible with human nature and revelational theism a definition of
academic freedom which arbitrarily and exclusively requires pluralism without
commitment, denies the existence of any fixed points of reference, maximizes
the quest for truth to the extent of assuming it is never knowable, and implies
an absolute freedom from moral and religious responsibility to its community.
Rather, for itself, Trinity Western University is
committed to academic freedom in teaching and investigation from a stated
perspective, i.e., within parameters consistent with the confessional basis of
the constituency to which the University is responsible, but practised in an
environment of free inquiry and discussion and of encouragement to integrity in
research. Students also have freedom to inquire, right of access to the broad
spectrum of representative information in each discipline, and assurance of a
reasonable attempt at a fair and balanced presentation and evaluation of all
material by their instructors. Truth does not fear honest investigation.
III. Analysis
(1) Is
Consideration of Discriminatory Practices within the Jurisdiction of the BCCT?
11
The BCCT is empowered under s. 4 of the Teaching Profession
Act (the “Act”) to “establish, having regard to the public interest,
standards for the education, professional responsibility and competence of its
members, persons who hold certificates of qualification and applicants for
membership and . . . to encourage the professional interest of its
members”. It is this reference to the public interest that is invoked by the
BCCT as justification for considering the TWU admissions policy in deciding on
the certification of its teacher education program. The BCCT argues that
teaching programs must be offered in an environment that reflects human rights
values and that those values can be used as a guide in the assessment of the
impact of discriminatory practices on pedagogy. Although the BCCT did not take
into account the existence of special institutions such as TWU in designing its
bylaws and policies, it claims that all
institutions who wish to train teachers for
entry into the public education system must satisfy the BCCT that they
will provide an institutional setting that
appropriately prepares future teachers for the public school environment, and
in particular for the diversity of public school students.
12
TWU argues that the BCCT was not created to render judgment on the
acceptability of religious beliefs nor to enforce human rights legislation in
an attempt to eradicate potential discrimination in the school system. It is
of the view that a contextual interpretation of the words “public interest” in
s. 4 indicates that the powers of the BCCT are limited to establishing
standards ensuring that teachers are properly trained, competent and of good
character. According to TWU, the BCCT is not authorized to decide whether the
religious beliefs of TWU students and staff may give rise to a risk of
discrimination or to a perception within the public that those students will
discriminate when employed within the public education system.
13
Our Court accepted in Ross v. New Brunswick School District
No. 15, [1996] 1 S.C.R. 825, that teachers are a medium for the
transmission of values. It is obvious that the pluralistic nature of society
and the extent of diversity in Canada are important elements that must be
understood by future teachers because they are the fabric of the society within
which teachers operate and the reason why there is a need to respect and
promote minority rights. The suitability for entrance into the profession of
teaching must therefore take into account all features of the education program
at TWU. We agree with Rowles J.A. that
“[i]t is clear from the terms ‘professional responsibility and competence of
its members’ that the College can consider the effect of public school teacher
education programs on the competence and professional responsibility of their
graduates” (para. 197). The power to establish standards provided for in s. 4
of the Act must be interpreted in light of the general purpose of the statute
and in particular, the need to ensure that “the fulfilment of public functions
is undertaken in a manner that does not undermine public trust and confidence”
(Ross, supra, at para. 84). Schools are meant to develop
civic virtue and responsible citizenship, to educate in an environment free of
bias, prejudice and intolerance. It would not be correct, in this context, to
limit the scope of s. 4 to a determination of skills and knowledge.
14
We are therefore of the view
that the BCCT had jurisdiction to consider discriminatory practices in dealing
with the TWU application. All parties accepted that the standard of
correctness applied to this decision because it was determinative of
jurisdiction and beyond the expertise of the members of the Council.
(2) Was
the Decision of the BCCT Council Justified?
(a) The Standard of Review
15
Before this question can be answered, we
must decide what is the appropriate standard of review in these
circumstances. As mentioned earlier, the appellant is of the view that the
standard of patent unreasonableness applies. There is no substantive argument
made in the appellant’s factum on this issue, but its position is basically the
same as that of the intervener, the Ontario Secondary School Teachers’
Federation. In essence, the view of these parties is that the BCCT is a
specialized tribunal with considerable expertise in the field of education. It
is expressly granted wide discretion in deciding what factors to take into
account when approving education programs. Determining criteria as to whether
a program is appropriate for the public school system is a polycentric policy
decision involving balancing multiple factors and competing interests. The
Legislature contemplated that such decisions should be left to the Council.
The respondent TWU argues that a correctness standard applies because the
purpose of the decision is the protection of minorities and promotion of human
rights. The expertise of the Council does not extend to human rights issues;
the Council is predominantly comprised of school teachers with no experience in
balancing competing interests in society. Furthermore, there is no privative
clause applicable and s. 40 of the Act provides for a right of appeal. The Act
also allows the Lieutenant Governor in Council to disallow a bylaw passed by
the BCCT.
16
In the Court of Appeal, Goldie J.A. considered the pragmatic and
functional approach first adopted in U.E.S., Local 298 v. Bibeault,
[1988] 2 S.C.R. 1048, and held that the lack of a privative clause, the
lack of expertise in human rights issues of the BCCT and the purpose of the
legislation indicated a standard of correctness. He nevertheless found that
the misconception of TWU’s world view and the error in finding intolerant
behaviour were errors of fact and patently unreasonable. Rowles J.A., in her
dissent, divided the question of jurisdiction and the existence of
discriminatory practices generally, which were questions of law, and the
effects of discriminatory practices, or whether the certification was in fact
contrary to the public interest, which were questions of fact, applying
different standards in each case. She applied the correctness standard to the
first division and the reasonableness simpliciter standard to the
second.
17
In Pushpanathan v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
[1998] 1 S.C.R. 982, Bastarache J. summarized
the recent jurisprudence of the Court on the standards of review to provide a framework for easy reference by
judges and lawyers. Bastarache J.
insisted on the fact that, under the pragmatic and functional approach, the
focus of the inquiry is still on the particular provision being interpreted by
the tribunal and that some provisions will require more deference than others,
although they are found in the same Act. Pushpanathan did not modify Pezim
v. British Columbia (Superintendent of Brokers), [1994] 2 S.C.R.
557, and Canada (Director of Investigation and Research) v. Southam
Inc., [1997] 1 S.C.R. 748. It proposes the use of the same four basic
factors. Dealing for instance with the expertise factor, it is worth noting
that Pezim was concerned with the discretion of a securities commission
to determine what was in the public interest; in that case, the Court found
that, where the tribunal plays an important policy development role, a higher
degree of judicial deference is warranted. In the present instance, we are
also dealing with the discretion of an administrative body to determine the
public interest. The present context is, however, very different. We have already mentioned that s. 171(1) of
the School Act states that the Minister of Education must appoint an
education advisory council to “advise the minister on policy matters respecting
education”. Section 11 of the School Regulation expands upon the role
of the education advisory council and provides that it may advise the minister
on “overall policies of the education system including, without limitation, the
following areas: . . . (b) the teaching profession”. Even if bylaws
on discriminatory practices were adopted by the BCCT by virtue of the s. 4
public interest provision, pursuant to s. 24 of the Teaching Profession Act,
these bylaws would have to be filed with the minister within 10 days and would
be subject to disavowal. Therefore, the
BCCT is not the only government actor entrusted
with policy development. Furthermore, its expertise does not qualify it to
interpret the scope of human rights nor to reconcile competing rights. It
cannot be seriously argued that the determination of good character, which is
an individual matter, is sufficient to expand the jurisdiction of the BCCT to
the evaluation of religious belief, freedom of association and the right to
equality generally. As mentioned in Pushpanathan, the expertise of the
tribunal must be evaluated in relation to the issue and the relative expertise
of the court itself. The BCCT asked for a legal opinion before its last denial
of the TWU application; it relied on someone else’s expertise with regard to the
issue before us. It has set standards for teachers, but this has never
included the interpretation of human rights codes. The absence of a privative
clause, the expertise of the BCCT, the nature of the decision and the statutory
context all favour a correctness standard.
18
We mentioned earlier that a lower standard had been applied by
the Court of Appeal on the findings of the BCCT with regard to the existence of
discriminatory practices and, if they are present, whether they have created a
perception that the BCCT condones this discriminatory conduct. The lower
standard was also applied to the BCCT finding that the school system has or has
not created a risk that graduates of TWU will not provide a discrimination-free
environment for all students. We do
not believe that different standards
should apply in these circumstances. The existence of discriminatory practices
is based on the interpretation of the TWU documents and human rights values and
principles. This is a question of law that is concerned with human rights and
not essentially educational matters.
19
The perception of the public regarding the religious beliefs of TWU
graduates and the inference that those beliefs will produce an unhealthy school
environment have, in our view, very
little to do, if anything, with the particular expertise of the members of the
BCCT. We believe it is particularly
important to note here that we are not in a situation where the Council is
dealing with discriminatory conduct by a teacher, as in Ross. The
evidence in this case is speculative,
involving consideration of the potential future beliefs and conduct of
graduates from a teacher education program taught exclusively at TWU. By
contrast, in Ross the actual conduct of the teacher had, on the
evidence, poisoned the atmosphere of the school (Ross, supra, at
paras. 38-40 and 101). More importantly, the Council is not particularly well
equipped to determine the scope of freedom of religion and conscience and to
weigh these rights against the right to equality in the context of a
pluralistic society. The public dimension of religious freedom and the right
to determine one’s moral conduct have been recognized long before the advent of
the Charter (see Saumur v. City of Quebec, [1953] 2 S.C.R. 299,
at p. 329) and have been considered to be legal issues. The accommodation of
beliefs is a legal question discussed in R. v. Big M Drug Mart Ltd.,
[1985] 1 S.C.R. 295, and Ross. Perceptions were a concern in Ross,
but they were founded on conduct, not simply beliefs. The respondent in this
case argued that the refusal of accreditation would create the perception that
the BCCT does not value freedom of religion and conscience and endorses
stereotypical attributes with regard to TWU graduates. All this to say that
even if it was open to the BCCT to base its decision on perception rather than
evidence of actual discrimination or of a real risk of discrimination, there is
no reason to give any deference to that decision.
(b) The Evidence of Discrimination
20
There are in reality two elements to be considered under this heading:
Are the internal documents of TWU illustrative of discriminatory practices? If
so, are these discriminatory practices sufficient to establish a risk of
discrimination sufficient to justify that graduates of TWU should not be
admitted to teach in the public schools?
21
The BCCT relied on the internal documents of TWU as evidence of
discrimination against homosexuals. It concluded that the inclusion of
homosexual behaviour in the list of biblically condemned practices demonstrates
intolerance and that this cannot be overridden by the adoption of other
values. Both the program and the practices of TWU, the declarations required
of students and faculty in particular, were condemned because they reflected
the beliefs of the signatories. According to the BCCT, discrimination against
homosexuals had been institutionalized; see majority decision of Goldie J.A.,
at para. 58.
22
The majority of the Court of Appeal was of the view that the BCCT
misapprehended the evidence at the first stage by defining the world view of
the TWU too narrowly. It pointed out that the TWU documents make no reference
to homosexuals or to sexual orientation, but only to practices that the
particular student is asked to give up himself, or herself, while at TWU.
These practices include drunkenness, profanity, harassment, dishonesty,
abortion, the occult and sexual sins of a heterosexual and homosexual nature.
There is no evidence before this Court that
anyone has been denied admission because of refusal to sign the document or was
expelled because of non-adherence to it. On
the other hand, there is evidence that
not all students admitted to TWU adhere to the Christian world view.
23
The appellant argues that there is no distinction between homosexual
persons and homosexual behaviour, and that reference to sinners is a
condemnation of anyone who engages in homosexual practices; practices and
identity are related. The BCCT points out
that stealing and cheating are a behavioural choice, while sexual orientation
is not. The question therefore is not whether students have been denied
admission to TWU on the basis of their sexual orientation, but whether a homosexual
student could in good faith sign the declaration and consider that he or she is
accepted by the TWU community on an equal basis.
24
The respondent says that the position of the BCCT is simply based on
moral disapprobation of the religious beliefs of TWU students and faculty. It
ignores the record of graduates and especially the fact that the TWU Community
Standards require students and faculty to show respect to all people, to become
aware of all different philosophical and social perspectives, and to teach
tolerance as a first principle; see factum, at para. 79.
25
Although the Community Standards are expressed in terms of a code of
conduct rather than an article of faith, we
conclude that a homosexual student would not be tempted to apply for
admission, and could only sign the so-called student contract at a considerable
personal cost. TWU is not for everybody; it is designed to address the needs
of people who share a number of religious convictions. That said, the admissions policy of TWU alone
is not in itself sufficient to
establish discrimination as it is understood in our s. 15 jurisprudence. It is
important to note that this is a private institution that is exempted, in part,
from the British Columbia human rights legislation and to which the Charter does not apply. To state that
the voluntary adoption of a code of conduct based on a person’s own religious
beliefs, in a private institution, is sufficient to engage s. 15 would be
inconsistent with freedom of conscience and religion, which co-exist with the
right to equality.
26
This is not to say that the BCCT
erred in considering equality concerns pursuant to its public interest
jurisdiction. As we have already stated, concerns about equality were
appropriately considered by the BCCT under the public interest component of s.
4 of the Teaching Profession Act. The importance of equality in
Canadian society was discussed by Cory J. for the majority of
this Court in Vriend v. Alberta, [1998] 1 S.C.R. 493, at para. 67:
The rights
enshrined in s. 15(1) of the Charter are fundamental to Canada. They
reflect the fondest dreams, the highest hopes and finest aspirations of Canadian
society. When universal suffrage was granted it recognized to some extent the
importance of the individual. Canada by the broad scope and fundamental
fairness of the provisions of s. 15(1) has taken a further step in the
recognition of the fundamental importance and the innate dignity of the
individual. That it has done so is not only praiseworthy but essential to
achieving the magnificent goal of equal dignity for all. It is the means of
giving Canadians a sense of pride. In order to achieve equality the intrinsic
worthiness and importance of every individual must be recognized regardless of
the age, sex, colour, origins, or other characteristics of the person. This in
turn should lead to a sense of dignity and worthiness for every Canadian and the
greatest possible pride and appreciation in being a part of a great nation.
27
The equality guarantees in the Charter
and in B.C.’s human rights legislation include protection against
discrimination based on sexual orientation. In Egan v. Canada,
[1995] 2 S.C.R. 513, this Court unanimously affirmed that sexual orientation is
an analogous ground to those enumerated in s. 15(1) of the Charter . In
addition, a majority of this Court explicitly recognized that gays and
lesbians, “whether as individuals or couples, form an identifiable minority who
have suffered and continue to suffer serious social, political and economic
disadvantage” (para. 175, per Cory J.; see also para. 89, per
L’Heureux-Dubé J.). This statement was recently affirmed by a majority of this
Court in M. v. H., [1999] 2 S.C.R. 3, at para. 64. See also Vriend,
supra, and Little
Sisters Book and Art Emporium v. Canada (Minister of Justice), [2000] 2 S.C.R. 1120, 2000 SCC 69.
While the BCCT was not directly applying either the Charter or the
province’s human rights legislation when making its decision, it was entitled to
look to these instruments to determine whether it would be in the public
interest to allow public school teachers to be trained at TWU.
28
At the same time, however, the BCCT is also required to consider
issues of religious freedom. Section 15 of the Charter protects equally
against “discrimination based on . . . religion”. Similarly, s. 2(a)
of the Charter guarantees that “[e]veryone has the following fundamental
freedoms: . . . freedom of conscience and religion”. British Columbia’s
human rights legislation accommodates religious freedoms by allowing religious
institutions to discriminate in their admissions policies on the basis of
religion. The importance of freedom of religion in Canadian society was
elegantly stated by Dickson J., as he then was, writing for
the majority in Big M Drug Mart, supra, at pp. 336-37:
A truly free society is one which
can accommodate a wide variety of beliefs, diversity of tastes and pursuits,
customs and codes of conduct. A free society is one which aims at equality
with respect to the enjoyment of fundamental freedoms and I say this without
any reliance upon s. 15 of the Charter . Freedom must surely be founded
in respect for the inherent dignity and the inviolable rights of the human
person. The essence of the concept of freedom of religion is the right to
entertain such religious beliefs as a person chooses, the right to declare
religious beliefs openly and without fear of hindrance or reprisal, and the
right to manifest religious belief by worship and practice or by teaching and
dissemination. But the concept means more than that.
Freedom can primarily be
characterized by the absence of coercion or constraint. If a person is
compelled by the state or the will of another to a course of action or inaction
which he would not otherwise have chosen, he is not acting of his own volition
and he cannot be said to be truly free. One of the major purposes of the Charter
is to protect, within reason, from compulsion or restraint. Coercion includes
not only such blatant forms of compulsion as direct commands to act or refrain
from acting on pain of sanction, coercion includes indirect forms of control
which determine or limit alternative courses of conduct available to others.
Freedom in a broad sense embraces both the absence of coercion and constraint,
and the right to manifest beliefs and practices. Freedom means that, subject
to such limitations as are necessary to protect public safety, order, health,
or morals or the fundamental rights and freedoms of others, no one is to be
forced to act in a way contrary to his beliefs or his conscience.
What may appear good and true to a
majoritarian religious group, or to the state acting at their behest, may not,
for religious reasons, be imposed upon citizens who take a contrary view. The Charter
safeguards religious minorities from the threat of “the tyranny of the majority”.
It is interesting to note that this passage presages the very situation
which has arisen in this appeal, namely, one where the religious
freedom of one individual is claimed to interfere with the fundamental
rights and freedoms of another. The issue at the heart of this appeal is how
to reconcile the religious freedoms of individuals wishing to attend TWU with
the equality concerns of students in B.C.’s public school system, concerns that
may be shared with their parents and society generally.
29
In our opinion, this is a case where any potential conflict should be
resolved through the proper delineation of the rights and values involved. In
essence, properly defining the scope of the rights avoids a conflict in this
case. Neither freedom of religion nor the guarantee against discrimination
based on sexual orientation is absolute. As L’Heureux-Dubé J. stated in P.
(D.) v. S. (C.), [1993] 4 S.C.R. 141, at p. 182, writing for the majority
on this point:
As the Court has reiterated many times, freedom of religion, like any freedom,
is not absolute. It is inherently limited by the rights and freedoms of
others. Whereas parents are free to choose and practise the religion of
their choice, such activities can and must be restricted when they are against
the child’s best interests, without thereby infringing the parents’ freedom of
religion. [Emphasis added.]
30
Similarly, Iacobucci and Major JJ.
concluded in B. (R.) v. Children’s Aid Society of Metropolitan
Toronto, [1995] 1 S.C.R. 315, at para. 226, that:
Just
as there are limits to the ambit of freedom of expression (e.g. s. 2(b)
does not protect violent acts: R. v. Zundel, [1992] 2 S.C.R. 731, at pp.
753 and 801; R. v. Keegstra, [1990] 3 S.C.R. 697, at pp. 732 and 830),
so are there limits to the scope of s. 2(a), especially so when this
provision is called upon to protect activity that threatens the physical or
psychological well-being of others. In other words, although the freedom of
belief may be broad, the freedom to act upon those beliefs is considerably
narrower, and it is the latter freedom at issue in this case. [Emphasis
added.]
31
In addition, the Charter must be read as a whole, so that one
right is not privileged at the expense of another. As Lamer C.J. stated for
the majority of this Court in Dagenais v. Canadian Broadcasting Corp.,
[1994] 3 S.C.R. 835, at p. 877:
A hierarchical approach to rights, which places some over others, must
be avoided, both when interpreting the Charter and when developing the
common law. When the protected rights of two individuals come into conflict . .
. Charter principles require a balance to be achieved that fully
respects the importance of both sets of rights.
32
Therefore, although the BCCT was right to evaluate the impact of TWU’s
admission policy on the public school environment, it should have considered
more. The Human Rights Code, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 210, specifically
provides for exceptions in the case of religious institutions, and the
legislature gave recognition to TWU as an institution affiliated to a
particular Church whose views were well known to it. While the BCCT says that
it is not denying the right to TWU students and faculty to hold particular
religious views, it has inferred without any concrete
evidence that such views will limit consideration of social issues by
TWU graduates and have a detrimental effect on the learning environment in
public schools. There is no denying that the decision of the BCCT places a
burden on members of a particular religious group and in effect, is preventing
them from expressing freely their religious beliefs and associating to put them
into practice. If TWU does not abandon its Community Standards, it renounces
certification and full control of a teacher education program permitting access
to the public school system. Students are likewise affected because the
affirmation of their religious beliefs and attendance at TWU will not lead to
certification as public school teachers unless they attend a public university
for at least one year. These are important considerations. What the BCCT was
required to do was to determine whether the rights were in conflict in reality.
33
TWU’s Community Standards, which are limited to prescribing conduct of
members while at TWU, are not sufficient to support the conclusion that
the BCCT should anticipate intolerant behaviour in
the public schools. Indeed, if TWU’s
Community Standards could be sufficient in themselves to justify denying
accreditation, it is difficult to see how the same logic would not result in
the denial of accreditation to members of a particular church. The
diversity of Canadian society is partly reflected in the multiple religious
organizations that mark the societal landscape and this diversity of views
should be respected. The BCCT did not
weigh the various rights involved in its assessment of the alleged discriminatory
practices of TWU by not taking into account the impact of its decision on the
right to freedom of religion of the members of TWU. Accordingly, this Court must.
34
Consideration of human rights values in these circumstances encompasses
consideration of the place of private institutions in our society and the reconciling of competing rights and values. Freedom of religion,
conscience and association coexist with the right to be free of discrimination
based on sexual orientation. Even though the requirement that students and
faculty adopt the Community Standards creates unfavourable differential
treatment since it would probably prevent homosexual students and faculty from
applying, one must consider the true nature of the undertaking and the context
in which this occurs. Many Canadian universities, including St. Francis Xavier
University, Queen’s University, McGill University and Concordia University
College of Alberta, have traditions of religious affiliations. Furthermore, s.
93 of the Constitution Act, 1867 enshrined religious public education
rights into our Constitution, as part of the historic compromise which made
Confederation possible. Section 17 of the Alberta Act, R.S.C. 1985,
App. II, No. 20, and Saskatchewan Act, R.S.C. 1985, App. II, No. 21, s.
22 of the Manitoba Act, 1870, R.S.C. 1985, App. II, No. 8, and Term 17
of the Terms of Union of Newfoundland with Canada as confirmed by the Newfoundland
Act, R.S.C. 1985, App. II, No. 32, were to the same effect. Although the
constitutional protections were altered
by constitutional amendment in Newfoundland in 1998 and eliminated in Quebec in 1997, they remain in effect in Ontario,
Alberta, Saskatchewan and Manitoba.
35
Another part of that context is the Human Rights Act, S.B.C.
1984, c. 22, referred to by the Court of Appeal and the respondents (now the Human
Rights Code), which provides, in s. 19 (now s. 41), that a religious
institution is not considered to breach the Act where it prefers adherents of
its religious constituency. It cannot be reasonably concluded that private
institutions are protected but that their graduates are de facto considered
unworthy of fully participating in public activities. In Ontario Human
Rights Commission v. Simpsons-Sears Ltd., [1985] 2 S.C.R. 536, at p. 554,
McIntyre J. observed that a “natural corollary to the recognition of a right
must be the social acceptance of a general duty to respect and to act within
reason to protect it”. In this particular case, it can reasonably be inferred
that the B.C. legislature did not consider that training with a Christian
philosophy was in itself against the
public interest since it passed five bills in favour of TWU between 1969 and
1985. While homosexuals may be discouraged from attending TWU, a private
institution based on particular religious beliefs, they will not be prevented
from becoming teachers. In addition, there is nothing in the TWU Community
Standards that indicates that graduates of TWU will not treat homosexuals
fairly and respectfully. Indeed, the evidence
to date is that graduates from the joint TWU-SFU teacher education program have
become competent public school teachers, and there is no evidence before this
Court of discriminatory conduct by any graduate. Although this evidence is not
conclusive, given that no students have yet graduated from a teacher education
program taught exclusively at TWU, it is instructive. Students
attending TWU are free to adopt personal rules of conduct based on their
religious beliefs provided they do not interfere with the rights of others.
Their freedom of religion is not accommodated if the consequence of its
exercise is the denial of the right of full participation in society. Clearly,
the restriction on freedom of religion must be justified by evidence that the
exercise of this freedom of religion will, in the circumstances of this case,
have a detrimental impact on the school system.
36
Instead, the proper place to
draw the line in cases like the one at bar is generally between belief and
conduct. The freedom to hold beliefs is broader than the freedom to act on
them. Absent concrete evidence that training teachers at TWU fosters discrimination
in the public schools of B.C., the freedom of individuals to adhere to certain
religious beliefs while at TWU should be respected. The BCCT, rightfully, does
not require public universities with teacher education programs to screen out
applicants who hold sexist, racist or homophobic beliefs. For better or for
worse, tolerance of divergent beliefs is a hallmark of a democratic society.
37
Acting on those beliefs, however, is a very different matter. If a teacher in the public school system engages in discriminatory
conduct, that teacher can be subject to disciplinary proceedings before the
BCCT. Discriminatory conduct by a public school teacher when on duty should
always be subject to disciplinary proceedings. This Court has held, however,
that greater tolerance must be shown with respect to off-duty conduct. Yet
disciplinary measures can still be taken when discriminatory off-duty conduct
poisons the school environment. As La Forest J. stated for a unanimous Court
in Ross, supra, at para. 45:
It is on the basis of the position
of trust and influence that we hold the teacher to high standards both on and
off duty, and it is an erosion of these standards that may lead to a loss in
the community of confidence in the public school system. I do not wish to be
understood as advocating an approach that subjects the entire lives of teachers
to inordinate scrutiny on the basis of more onerous moral standards of
behaviour. This could lead to a substantial invasion of the privacy rights and
fundamental freedoms of teachers. However, where a “poisoned” environment
within the school system is traceable to the off‑duty conduct of a
teacher that is likely to produce a corresponding loss of confidence in the
teacher and the system as a whole, then the off‑duty conduct of the
teacher is relevant.
In this way, the scope of the freedom of religion and equality
rights that have come into conflict in this appeal can be circumscribed and
thereby reconciled.
38
For the BCCT to have properly denied
accreditation to TWU, it should have based its concerns on specific evidence. It
could have asked for reports on student teachers, or opinions of school
principals and superintendents. It could have examined discipline files
involving TWU graduates and other teachers affiliated with a Christian school
of that nature. Any concerns should go to risk, not general perceptions. The
appellant suggested in argument that it may be that no problem was incurred
because of the participation of Simon Fraser University during the fifth year.
This is rather difficult to accept. After finding that TWU students hold
fundamental biases, based on their religious beliefs, how could the BCCT ever
have believed that the last year’s program being under the aegis of Simon
Fraser University would ever correct the situation? Simon Fraser University is
supervising eight credit hours taken off the TWU campus. There is no evidence
that this instruction is in any way related to the problem of apprehended
intolerance or that there has been a change in the mandate of Simon Fraser
since the last year of the program was given to it to supervise in 1985. On
the evidence, it is clear that the participation of Simon Fraser University
never had anything to do with the apprehended intolerance from its inception to
the present. The organization of the program in 1985 required assistance
because of the need to provide a professional development component for
certification of future teachers (see A.R., at pp. 45, 47, 48, 62, 64, 90, 95
and 133). The cooperation was intended to support a small faculty in its
start-up stage (A.R., at pp. 128, 132 and 298). There is no basis for the
inference that the fifth year corrected any attitudes.
(3) The
Argument that Other Criteria Were not Satisfied by TWU
39
The appellant has argued that there were other matters outstanding
relating to the readiness of the TWU program and that this alone should have
prevented the issuance of a mandamus. We
disagree. In the minutes of the initial Council meeting of May 16, 1996, there
is extensive discussion of the wording of the conditions and wording of the
ultimate denial of accreditation. Concerns expressed refer to the
discrimination issue. There is no discussion of any stated criteria not having
been met. At the reconsideration stage, the criteria addressed earlier are not
mentioned, discussed or included in the final decision. This is supported by
the affidavit of Dr. Harro Van Brummelen wherein he states that the only issue
addressed by Council was that of discriminatory practices. The Report to
Members is to the same effect. In any event,
the conditions imposed by the TEPC and attached to the order in the nature of
mandamus granted by the trial judge adequately address all of these outstanding
concerns.
(4) Is the
Mandamus Order Justified?
40
The exercise of the discretion of the trial
judge in granting the order of mandamus must be quashed if he did not act
judicially. In practical terms, the order of mandamus will be invalidated if
the trial judge made an error in principle, significantly misapprehended the
evidence, acted on irrelevant considerations or ignored relevant ones, lacked
foundation for the exercise of his discretion, or otherwise made an error in
law (see Khalil v. Canada (Secretary of State), [1999] 4 F.C. 661
(C.A.)). The BCCT has argued that there was no foundation for the exercise of
the discretion in the present case. We disagree.
41
The appellant relies on Apotex Inc. v. Canada
(Attorney General), [1994] 1 F.C. 742, affirmed by this Court at [1994] 3
S.C.R. 1100, to support the argument that mandamus is only available where a
specific duty must be performed by operation of law, without discretion. In
fact, Apotex clearly acknowledges that bodies having a discretionary
decision-making power may still be faced with a court order for mandamus in
certain circumstances. The appellant also argues that, in the present
circumstances, even if the discriminatory practices as a basis for refusal are
set aside, the BCCT still had to determine whether other criteria had been
met. Having rejected the report of its committee, Council must therefore now
be allowed to determine if TWU has met all relevant criteria. It must, it is
argued, considering “TWU’s sectarian nature”, determine whether the degree of
monitoring and evaluation recommended by the TEPC is appropriate, and whether
library and faculty preparation concerns have been met.
42
We have
already dealt with the satisfaction of criteria other than discrimination. We would add that
the continuing focus of the BCCT on the sectarian nature of TWU is disturbing.
It should be clear that the focus on the sectarian nature of TWU is the same as
the original focus on the alleged discriminatory practices. It is not open to
the BCCT to consider the sectarian nature of TWU in determining whether its
graduates will provide an appropriate learning environment for public school
students as long as there is no evidence that the particularities of TWU pose a
real risk to the public educational system. The actual impact of the sectarian
nature of TWU on the educational environment is what was examined in these
reasons. The conditions attached to the five-year approval by the TEPC remain in
place and provide for monitoring of the program to ensure that a proper
teaching environment, in particular one that is free of discrimination, is
provided by TWU graduates. The BCCT has the responsibility of assuring that
programs in place in all private and public teacher training institutions
continue to serve the public interest and it has all of the powers required to
fulfil its obligations in that regard.
43
The order of mandamus was justified because the
exercise of discretion by the BCCT was fettered by s. 4 of the Act and because
the only reason for denial of certification was the consideration of
discriminatory practices. In considering the religious precepts of TWU instead
of the actual impact of these beliefs on the school environment, the BCCT acted
on the basis of irrelevant considerations. It therefore acted unfairly. There
is no reason to return the matter of accreditation to the BCCT in the present
circumstances. We would like to add that, although it is difficult to establish a
relationship between the requirement of a fifth year of study under the aegis
of Simon Fraser University and the assertion, at para. 58 of the reply factum
of the appellant, that “all students wishing to teach in the public schools are
required to do a professional year through a public university”, we want to stress
that the above affirmation is simply wrong. The BCCT is, by this affirmation,
stating that it will deny a full program to all private institutions regardless
of circumstances. This is contrary to its mandate.
44
In light of all of these
considerations, we see no merit in returning the matter to the BCCT and
thereby interfering with the exercise of discretion of the trial judge. There
is no interference with the discretion of the BCCT where all of its concerns
have been met or dealt with according to law.
45
Given our conclusions on the
main issue, it will not be necessary for us
to deal with the question of the breach of the individual Charter rights
of the respondent Donna Gail Lindquist.
46
The appeal is dismissed with costs to the respondents.
The following are the reasons delivered by
47
L’Heureux-Dubé J. (dissenting)
-- At its core, this case is about providing the best possible educational
environment for public school students in British Columbia. As our Court stated
in Ross v. New Brunswick School District No. 15, [1996] 1 S.C.R. 825, at
para. 42:
A school is a communication centre for a whole range of values and
aspirations of a society. In large part, it defines the values that transcend
society through the educational medium. The school is an arena for the exchange
of ideas and must, therefore, be premised upon principles of tolerance and
impartiality so that all persons within the school environment feel equally
free to participate. [Emphasis added.]
La Forest J.
also remarked in R. v. Jones, [1986] 2 S.C.R. 284, at p. 299, that: “No
proof is required to show the importance of education in our society or its
significance to government. The legitimate, indeed compelling, interest of the
state in the education of the young is known and understood by all informed
citizens.” In short, there is a vital public interest in maintaining and
improving supportive environments in the classrooms of our country, which are
the intellectual incubators of Canada’s most vulnerable and impressionable
citizens. The educational process “awakens children to the values a society
hopes to foster and to nurture”: Ross, supra, at para. 82.
48
The present controversy stems from a 1996 decision by the Council of the
British Columbia College of Teachers (“BCCT”), which refused to approve an
application for teacher training accreditation submitted by Trinity Western
University (“TWU”). On May 17, 1996, the Council adopted a motion stating
[t]hat the application for a new teacher education program by Trinity
Western University be denied because it does not fully meet the criteria and
because it is contrary to the public interest to approve a teacher education
program offered by a private institution which appears to follow discriminatory
practices that public institutions are, by law, not allowed to follow.
On May 22,
1996, the BCCT’s Registrar wrote an assistant dean at TWU explaining that
“Council members considered all or some of these issues when voting on the
recommendation”:
· Discriminatory practices at Trinity Western
University, specifically the requirement for students to sign a contract of
“Responsibilities of Membership in the Trinity Western University Community.”
...
· The suitability and preparedness of
graduates to teach in the diverse and complex social environments found in the
public school system.
...
· The ability of the faculty to provide a
program of sufficient breadth and depth. . . .
TWU appealed
the BCCT’s decision and a hearing was held on June 14, 1996. On June 29, 1996,
the BCCT upheld its denial of accreditation, passing a motion stating “[t]hat
Trinity Western University’s appeal in regard to the [BCCT’s] denial of its
application for approval of a Teacher Education Program be denied because
Council still believes the proposed program follows discriminatory practices
which are contrary to the public interest and public policy which the [BCCT]
must consider under its mandate as expressed in the Teaching Profession Act”.
49
TWU petitioned for judicial review of the BCCT’s decision. Davies J. of
the Supreme Court of British Columbia ((1997), 41 B.C.L.R. (3d) 158) ordered it
quashed and directed the Council to approve TWU’s program with stipulated
conditions. He found that it was beyond the BCCT’s jurisdiction to consider
discriminatory practices. Davies J. added that there was no reasonable
foundation for the BCCT’s decision. A majority of the Court of Appeal (Goldie
and Braidwood JJ.A.) affirmed the trial judgment, with Rowles J.A. dissenting:
(1998), 59 B.C.L.R. (3d) 241. Like Davies J., the majority considered the BCCT
to have exceeded its jurisdiction. In the alternative, “the decisions of
Council embodied in the resolutions under review reflect an error in law and
are factually patently unreasonable. They are not entitled to deference” (para.
115).
I. BCCT’s
Jurisdiction
50
This appeal raises two administrative law issues: a threshold question
of jurisdiction and a subsequent determination of the appropriate standard of
review of the BCCT’s decision. On the question of jurisdiction, I agree with my
colleagues that s. 4 of the Teaching Profession Act, R.S.B.C. 1996, c.
449, confers jurisdiction on the BCCT to consider discriminatory practices as
part of its evaluation of TWU’s application. In the words of Madam Justice
Rowles, at para. 200:
The statutory mandate of the [BCCT] under the Act gives the College a
broad discretion to approve teacher education programs and to set standards for
the programs themselves, as well as their graduates. Those standards must
relate ultimately to the ‘education, professional responsibility and
competence’ of future public school teachers, but within that jurisdiction is a
fairly broad discretion to consider what factors are relevant to those
standards. The presence of discrimination is certainly relevant to any of those
areas within the [BCCT’s] jurisdiction.
II. Standard
of Review
51
As to the appropriate standard of review for the BCCT’s decision, my
colleagues and I differ, however. An application of Pushpanathan v.
Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration), [1998] 1 S.C.R. 982,
supports a standard of patent unreasonableness. The Court’s decision in that case
sets out four categories of factors to consider when determining the standard
of review. I note at the outset that Pushpanathan indicates that the
“absence of a privative clause does not imply a high standard of scrutiny,
where other factors bespeak a low standard” (para. 30). The first factor of
privative clauses does not apply to this case, in which the other three
factors, namely expertise; what the purpose of the act as a whole and the
provision in particular are; and whether the question at issue is one of law or
fact, all weigh in favour of patent unreasonableness.
52
Pushpanathan emphasized the primary importance of assessing the
tribunal’s specialized expertise, at para. 33:
Making an evaluation of relative expertise has three dimensions: the
court must characterize the expertise of the tribunal in question; it must
consider its own expertise relative to that of the tribunal; and it must
identify the nature of the specific issue before the administrative decision‑maker
relative to this expertise.
All these
factors point to a high degree of curial deference in this case. As the Supreme
Court of British Columbia has recognized, the BCCT has “relative expertise in
the area of setting standards for admission into the teaching profession”: Casson
v. British Columbia College of Teachers, [2000] B.C.J. No. 1038 (QL), at
para. 29 and at paras. 22-25. The BCCT, a majority of which is composed of
teachers, also represents a self-governing profession. In Pearlman v.
Manitoba Law Society Judicial Committee, [1991] 2 S.C.R. 869, this Court
emphasized at p. 890 the deference that should be accorded to self-governing
professions: “a large part of effective self‑governance depends upon the
concept of peer review” (emphasis added). In the context of the legal
profession, the Court stated at p. 888 that “the Manitoba Legislature has
spoken, and spoken clearly. The Law Society Act manifestly intends to
leave the governance of the legal profession to lawyers and, unless judicial
intervention is clearly warranted, this expression of the legislative will
ought to be respected.” The Teaching Profession Act is also a clear
statement of legislative intent and the BCCT is a similar self-governing body.
As stated by the majority of the Court of Appeal, “[t]he scheme of the Teaching
Profession Act suggests [that] the legislature considered [that] teachers
needed little guidance in determining the standards applicable to the training
of prospective teachers” (para. 97).
53
On the question of the purpose of the Act as a whole, the third Pushpanathan
factor, that case states at para. 36:
In Southam, the Court found (at para. 48) that the “aims of the
Act are more ‘economic’ than they are strictly ‘legal’ because the broad goals
of the Act ‘are matters that business women and men and economists are better
able to understand than is a typical judge”. This conclusion was reinforced by
the creation in the statute of a tribunal with members having a special
expertise in those domains. Also of significance is . . . the fact that an
administrative commission plays a “protective role” vis‑à‑vis
the investing public, and that it plays a role in policy development; Pezim,
supra, at p. 596.
Each of these
aspects is present here. The BCCT’s decision concerning TWU’s teacher education
program goes to the heart of the Teaching Profession Act’s raison
d’être and should only be disturbed by judges, who lack the specialized
expertise of teachers, if it is patently unreasonable. As La Forest J. noted in
Jones, supra, at p. 304: “The province cannot, in my view, be
faulted for adopting the philosophy frequently applied in the courts of the
United States, namely, that ‘The courtroom is simply not the best arena for the
debate of issues of educational policy and the measurement of educational
quality’”. Moreover, vulnerable schoolchildren are in need of much greater
protection by the BCCT than was the investing public in Pezim v. British
Columbia (Superintendent of Brokers), [1994] 2 S.C.R. 557. Further,
individual decisions under the purview of the BCCT, such as the one at issue
concerning teacher training program accreditation, are central to the
development of educational policy. There is a division of policy-making labour whereby
the BCCT complements other policy-making bodies. As observed by Madam Justice
Rowles, at para. 173:
This policy-making mandate is reflected in the
words of s. 4 of the Act. The statutory provision requires the [BCCT] to have
‘regard to the public interest’ in the setting of standards.
54
Pushpanathan, supra, indicates that the purpose of
the particular provision of the statute at issue is relevant to the
determination of the standard of review. The BCCT’s decision was made pursuant
to s. 21(i) of the Act, permitting it to “approve, for certification purposes,
the program of any established faculty of teacher education or school of
teacher education”. This provision involves the application of “vague, open-textured”
principles, requiring curial deference under Pushpanathan (para. 36).
The BCCT has wide discretion to review teacher training programs under the Act.
Its decision was, moreover, a polycentric one taking into account the
educational interests of teachers, students, parents, and the public. Pushpanathan
noted that “some problems require the consideration of numerous interests
simultaneously, and the promulgation of solutions which concurrently balance
benefits and costs for many different parties. Where an administrative
structure more closely resembles this model, courts will exercise restraint”
(para. 36).
55
The BCCT’s decision is also fact-based, concerning an issue the nature
of which implicates the tribunal’s expertise. This feature addresses the fourth
Pushpanathan factor, which asks whether the question addressed by the
tribunal is legal or factual. Determining how TWU’s program may affect its
graduates’ preparedness to teach in the public schools is a factual inquiry
requiring the specialized expertise of the BCCT’s members, the majority of whom
have classroom experience. I agree with Madam Justice Rowles, who wrote that:
“With respect to the factual question of the effect of the practices, I am of
the view that the Council’s decision is entitled to deference. The question as
to whether the discriminatory practices were contrary to the public interest in
terms of the education, professional responsibility and competence of public
school teachers appears to me to come clearly within the expertise and
jurisdiction of the [BCCT]” (para. 150).
56
The BCCT’s public interest jurisdiction was carefully described by Madam
Justice Rowles (at para. 173): “The ‘public interest’ is not to be defined
nebulously but in relation to the particular policy interest that the [BCCT]
has jurisdiction over, that is, establishing in the public interest
standards for the education, professional responsibility and competence of its
members who teach in public schools” (emphasis added). Her wording paraphrases
s. 4 of the Teaching Profession Act. Other sections of this legislation
similarly support a contextual approach to understanding the meaning of “public
interest”. The BCCT fulfills the role of gatekeeper to the profession of public
school teaching and is responsible for ensuring that its members meet the
expertly determined requisites for qualifying to teach in the classrooms of the
province. Thus, ss. 23(1)(d) and 23(1)(f) of the Act state that the BCCT may
adopt bylaws:
(d) respecting the training and qualifications
of teachers and establishing standards, policies and procedures with respect
to the training and qualifications including, but not limited to, professional,
academic and specialist standards, policies and procedures;
.
. .
(f) respecting the standards of fitness
for the admission of persons as members of the [BCCT]; [Emphasis added.]
57
Statutory interpretation of the BCCT’s “public interest”
responsibilities should be purposive, not nebulous. As the Manitoba Court of
Appeal stated in Lindsay v. Manitoba (Motor Transport) (1989), 62 D.L.R.
(4th) 615, at p. 626: “The meaning of those words, neither precise nor
unambiguous in themselves, must be construed in the context of the statute in
which they are found”. Philp J.A. went on to observe that: “I think there can
be no doubt that the determination of what constitutes the public interest is
not ‘a matter of policy’ entirely within the jurisdiction of the Board, nor is
it a finding of fact. It is the formulation of an opinion and, when acting
within its jurisdiction, it is a determination within the exclusive
administrative jurisdiction of the Board” (p. 628 (emphasis added)).
58
The BCCT is obligated by the Teaching Profession Act to assess
any component of a teacher training program that may affect “the education,
professional responsibility and competence of its members”. It is irrelevant
that private religious institutions are protected under British Columbia’s Human
Rights Code, R.S.B.C. 1996, c. 210. The BCCT must review all teacher
training programs in the same light, using its own expertly determined
standards. It never found or considered TWU graduates to be “unworthy of fully
participating in public activities”, as my colleagues imply (para. 35). To the
contrary, the BCCT provided a route for these students to attain the requisites
for teaching in public schools. These actions are fully consistent with the
College’s contextualized mandate to establish and implement standards for its
members “having regard to the public interest”.
59
It is a misconception to characterize the BCCT’s decision as being a
balancing or interpretation of human rights values, an exercise that is beyond
the tribunal’s expertise. The BCCT’s decision employed one relevant and
undisputed Charter or human rights value, that of equality, in the
narrow context of appraising the impact on the classroom environment of TWU’s
proposal. Equality is a central component of the public interest that the BCCT
is charged with protecting in the classrooms of the province. As Cory J. wrote
in Hill v. Church of Scientology of Toronto, [1995] 2 S.C.R. 1130, at
para. 92, the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms is “a restatement
of the fundamental values which guide and shape our democratic society”
(emphasis added). The BCCT was entitled, indeed required, to consider the value
of equality in its assessment of the effect TWU’s program will have on the
classroom environment. In Cuddy Chicks Ltd. v. Ontario (Labour Relations
Board), [1991] 2 S.C.R. 5, the Court held at pp. 13-14 that “the
Constitution, as the supreme law, must be respected by an administrative
tribunal called upon to interpret law”. I agree with Madam Justice Rowles, who
asked at para. 171: “When that is so, why would an administrative tribunal not
also be expected to consider Charter values?”
60
The BCCT was not acting as a human rights tribunal and was not required
to consider other Charter or human rights values such as freedom of
religion, which are not germane to the public interest in ensuring that
teachers have the requisites to foster supportive classroom environments in
public schools. Thus, it is not relevant to the standard of review that “the
Council is not particularly well equipped to determine the scope of freedom of
religion and conscience and to weigh these rights against the right to equality
in the context of a pluralistic society” (Iacobucci and Bastarache JJ., at
para. 19). The BCCT’s equality based approach, focussed on supportive
atmospheres in public school classrooms, merits a standard of review of patent
unreasonableness because it directly engages the specialization of the
tribunal.
61
If the BCCT were to have applied a value that is clearly not an
accepted Charter or human rights value, or one irrelevant to the
decision at hand, or if it failed to apply a clearly relevant value, then its
decision would be patently unreasonable. None of these scenarios occurred here.
Iacobucci and Bastarache JJ. write that “The BCCT has the responsibility of
assuring that programs in place in all private and public teacher training
institutions continue to serve the public interest. . . .” (para. 42). The BCCT
has the expertise to determine the relevant criteria for this supervisory
exercise and its assessment of these factors deserves significant deference.
See generally Baker
v. Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration),
[1999] 2 S.C.R. 817, at para. 65: “Deference as respect requires not
submission but a respectful attention to the reasons offered or which could be
offered in support of a decision. . . . (D. Dyzenhaus, #The Politics of Deference: Judicial Review and Democracy$, in M. Taggart, ed., The
Province of Administrative Law (1997), 279, at p. 286.)”
62
The circumstances of this case are analogous to those of P. (D.) v.
S. (C.), [1993] 4 S.C.R. 141, in which a freedom of religion claim was
opposed to a child’s best interests in the context of parental access rights.
In my reasons, I noted at p. 181 that “in ruling on a child’s best interests, a
court is not putting religion on trial nor its exercise by a parent for himself
or herself, but is merely examining the way in which the exercise of a given
religion by a parent through his or her right to access affects the child’s
best interests”. See also B. (R.) v. Children’s Aid Society of Metropolitan
Toronto, [1995] 1 S.C.R. 315, at para. 228, per Iacobucci and Major
JJ.:
. . . in P. (D.) v. S. (C.), supra, L’Heureux-Dubé J.
(writing for the majority on this point) held at p. 182 that:
As the Court has reiterated many times, freedom of religion, like any
freedom, is not absolute. It is inherently limited by the rights and freedoms
of others. Whereas parents are free to choose and practise the religion of
their choice, such activities can and must be restricted when they are against
the child's best interests, without thereby infringing the parents' freedom
of religion. [Emphasis added by Iacobucci and Major JJ.]
There is a
similar intersection between the asserted private religious beliefs and the
public interest in the present appeal. Actions in the private sphere can have
effects in the public realm. Everyone must assume the legal consequences of his
or her private beliefs, so long as these consequences do not violate
fundamental rights. The BCCT’s expert attention to the classroom environment
means that public school students’ best interests, like those of children in
custody and access disputes, are the focal point. In neither situation should a
religiously based risk fall on children.
63
The BCCT’s inquiry was reasonably limited to its area of educational
expertise. Nothing in the impugned decision suggests that the respondents’
religious faith influenced the result. The BCCT’s statutory mandate is to act
in the public interest by accrediting only teachers who are adequately prepared
for the rigours of the public school classroom. The religion of a teacher or
group of teachers is never at issue before the BCCT since religion cannot be a
criterion for its certification decisions. Whatever the religion of the
institution or individual concerned, all candidates must satisfy the BCCT that
they possess the requisites for public school teaching. Indeed, if the BCCT had
considered the respondents’ religion in making its decision, this would have
been not only discriminatory, but also a jurisdictional error of law. The
BCCT’s concern was with the impact on public school classrooms of a
discriminatory practice; whether or not this practice is based on religion was
immaterial to their decision. The mandate of the BCCT to have regard for the
public interest in its accreditation of teachers requires such scrutiny of any
discriminatory practice.
64
The freedom of religion of the prospective teacher is thus not
implicated in this case at the administrative law stage. I will examine TWU’s
and Donna Lindquist’s Charter claims near the end of these reasons. At
the time this litigation commenced, Ms. Lindquist was a student at TWU who
intended to apply for admission to the teacher training program in September
1998, if the program were approved. She voluntarily signed the Community
Standards contract, discussed below, on September 4, 1996.
65
I disagree with my colleagues, who believe that it was incumbent on the
BCCT to “reconcile the religious freedoms of individuals wishing to attend TWU
with the equality concerns of students in B.C.’s public school system” (para.
28). Their reasoning amounts to changing the statutory mandate and function of
the BCCT into those of a human rights body. It supposes that the BCCT should
have resolved what my colleagues have retrospectively identified as a conflict
of rights. I find no such conflict in this case. Donna Lindquist was not a
party to the BCCT’s decision and in any event her freedom of religion did not
need to be considered. Nor were B.C. public school students’ equality interests
considered for the sake of protecting their Charter rights. Rather, the Charter
or human rights value of equality was applied only as it pertains to the
classroom environment. I find it problematic to force an appraisal by an
administrative tribunal of the allegedly dueling Charter rights or
values of TWU students like Donna Lindquist and unnamed B.C. public school
students. It is more appropriate, in my view, to respect the Pushpanathan
test and to consider third-party Charter claims in a proper Charter
analysis that is subsequent to, rather than conflated with, judicial review
of an administrative law decision.
66
Ross emphasized precisely this point at para. 32. La Forest J.
wrote that “the administrative law standard and the Charter standard are
not conflated into one. When the issues involved are untouched by the Charter ,
the appropriate administrative law standard is properly applied as a standard
of review. . . . As Dickson C.J. noted [in Slaight Communications Inc. v.
Davidson, [1989] 1 S.C.R. 1038], the more sophisticated and structured
analysis of s. 1 is the proper framework within which to review Charter values.”
Thus, in these reasons, I employ a two-stage approach of, first, considering
administrative law, a sphere in which the Pushpanathan factors indicate
that deference is due to BCCT, and, then, assessing the Charter claims
advanced by TWU and third parties affected by the BCCT’s decision.
III. Application
of Patent Unreasonableness to this Case
67
I turn now to the application of the patent unreasonableness standard to
the BCCT’s decision. As Cory J. observed in Canada (Attorney General) v.
Public Service Alliance of Canada, [1993] 1 S.C.R. 941, at pp. 963-64, “if
the decision the Board reached, acting within its jurisdiction, is not clearly
irrational, that is to say evidently not in accordance with reason, then it
cannot be said that there was a loss of jurisdiction. This is clearly a very
strict test”. Earlier, Dickson J. (later Chief Justice) in Canadian Union
of Public Employees, Local 963 v. New Brunswick Liquor Corp., [1979] 2
S.C.R. 227, at p. 237, put the question in these terms: was the tribunal’s
“interpretation so patently unreasonable that its construction cannot be
rationally supported by the relevant legislation and demands intervention by
the court upon review?”
68
The BCCT’s finding of discriminatory practices is related to the Council’s
consideration of the “suitability and preparedness of graduates to teach in the
diverse and complex social environments found in the public school system” (see
para. 48 of these reasons). These two elements, amounting to cause and effect,
will be discussed in turn. First, the BCCT expressed a concern that the TWU
Community Standards contract, mandatory for students, faculty, and staff to
sign, embodied discrimination against homosexuals. All students, faculty, and
staff must
refrain from practices that are
biblically condemned. These include but are not limited to drunkenness
(Eph. 5:18), swearing or use of profane language (Eph. 4:29, 5:4; Jas 3:1-12),
harassment (Jn 13:34-35; Rom. 12:9-21; Eph. 4:31), all forms of dishonesty
including cheating and stealing (Prov. 12:22; Col. 3:9; Eph. 4:28), abortion
(Ex. 20:13; Ps. 139:13-16), involvement in the occult (Acts 19:19; Gal. 5:19),
and sexual sins including premarital sex, adultery, homosexual
behaviour and viewing of pornography (I Cor. 6:12-20; Eph. 4:17-24; I
Thess. 4:3-8; Rom. 2:26-27; I Tim. 1:9-10). [Emphasis added. This wording is
taken from the student version of the Code, which is almost identical to that
provided to employees.]
I note in
passing that “homosexual behaviour” is undefined and could be interpreted to
include a wide range of activity falling short of sexual intercourse. The
preamble to the Community Standards Code states that “[i]ndividuals who are
invited to become members of this community but cannot with integrity pledge to
uphold the application of these standards are advised not to accept the
invitation and to seek instead a living-learning [or employment] situation
more acceptable to them” (emphasis added).
69
I am dismayed that at various points in the history of this case the
argument has been made that one can separate condemnation of the “sexual sin”
of “homosexual behaviour” from intolerance of those with homosexual or bisexual
orientations. This position alleges that one can love the sinner, but condemn
the sin. But, in the words of the intervener EGALE, “[r]equiring someone not to
act in accordance with their identity is harmful and cruel. It destroys the
human spirit. Pressure to change their behaviour and deny their sexual identity
has proved tremendously damaging to young persons seeking to come to terms with
their sexual orientation” (factum, at para. 34). The status/conduct or
identity/practice distinction for homosexuals and bisexuals should be soundly
rejected, as per Madam Justice Rowles: “Human rights law states that
certain practices cannot be separated from identity, such that condemnation of
the practice is a condemnation of the person” (para. 228). She added that “the
kind of tolerance that is required [by equality] is not so impoverished as to
include a general acceptance of all people but condemnation of the traits of
certain people” (para. 230). This is not to suggest that engaging in homosexual
behaviour automatically defines a person as homosexual or bisexual, but rather
is meant to challenge the idea that it is possible to condemn a practice so
central to the identity of a protected and vulnerable minority without thereby
discriminating against its members and affronting their human dignity and
personhood.
70
As another preliminary matter, I would emphasize the relevance of the
United States Supreme Court’s decision in Bob Jones University v.
United States, 461 U.S. 574 (1983). In that case, the court denied
tax-exempt status to a religious institution that at the time prohibited
interracial dating and marriage based on apparently sincerely held religious
beliefs. Burger C.J. for the court wrote that “there can no longer be any doubt
that racial discrimination in education violates deeply and widely accepted
views of elementary justice” (p. 592). He added that “Bob Jones University . .
. contends that it is not racially discriminatory. It emphasizes that it now
allows all races to enroll, subject only to its restrictions on the conduct of
all students, including its prohibitions of association between men and women
of different races, and of interracial marriage” (p. 605). This American case
provides an example, namely a ban on interracial dating and marriage, that is
difficult to distinguish in a principled way from the ban on homosexual
behaviour at issue here. In my view, to paraphrase Burger C.J., there can no
longer be any doubt that sexual orientation discrimination in education
violates deeply and widely accepted views of elementary justice.
71
It was not Bob Jones University faculty or students’ religious beliefs
that led to the American Supreme Court decision, but rather a disciplinary rule
of conduct prohibiting interracial dating and marriage. Similarly, in this
case, where the salient difference is the ground of discrimination, namely
sexual orientation, it is the Code of Community Standards that is at issue. See
B. MacDougall, “Silence in the Classroom: Limits on Homosexual Expression and
Visibility in Education and the Privileging of Homophobic Religious Ideology”
(1998), 61 Sask. L. Rev. 41, at p. 78: “Once the
religious characterization is removed from an issue of racial or gender
discrimination, the issue becomes much more straightforward. So it should be
with homosexuality.” I thus find it alarmist for my colleagues to suggest that
“if TWU’s Community Standards could be sufficient in themselves to justify
denying accreditation, it is difficult to see how the same logic would not
result in the denial of accreditation to members of a particular church” (para.
33).
72
It is far from patently unreasonable for the BCCT to have concluded that
TWU’s Code of Community Standards embodies discriminatory practices. The Code
is not a proxy for belief; TWU students’ beliefs are not the issue here.
Indeed, it is impossible to know what individual students believe since, as
recognized in the Code, ultimately convictions are a personal matter. Signing
the Community Standards contract, by contrast, makes the student or employee
complicit in an overt, but not illegal, act of discrimination against
homosexuals and bisexuals. With respect, I do not see why my colleagues
classify this signature as part of the freedom of belief as opposed to the
narrower freedom to act on those beliefs (para. 36). In Ross, supra,
the Board of Inquiry noted that human rights legislation “does not prohibit a
person from thinking or holding prejudicial views. The Act, however, may
affect the right of that person to be a teacher when those views are
publicly expressed in a manner that impacts on the school community or if
those views influence the treatment of students in the classroom by the
teacher” (para. 39 (emphasis added)). Whether or not TWU students’ signatures
on the Community Standards contract reflect their true beliefs, it is not
patently unreasonable for the BCCT to treat their public expressions of
discrimination as potentially affecting the public school communities in which
TWU graduates wish to teach.
73
There are manifold repercussions to this requirement that TWU students
and employees affirm a policy that discriminates against those who practice the
“sexual sin” of “homosexual behaviour.” As my colleagues acknowledge at para.
25, “a homosexual student would not be tempted to apply for admission, and
could only sign the so-called student contract at a considerable personal
cost”. To this it should be added that homosexual or bisexual faculty and staff
would also in practice be excluded from the campus. This is an important
supplementary fact because “faculty must actually endorse those standards as
correct and agree to teach in accordance with the principles of the school”
(Madam Justice Rowles, at para. 265). The negative impact on campus diversity
and pluralism is patently reasonable to assume. This is especially true
considering the BCCT Program Approval Team’s recommendation that TWU faculty
associates be seconded from the public school system to “ensure a broad
worldview”, since they “significantly influence the development of the student
teacher” (A.R., at pp. 250 and 249). I agree with Madam Justice Rowles that
“the ‘message’ sent by TWU’s Community Standards Contract not only to gays and
lesbians but also to every member of the TWU Community is discriminatory in a
way that may be viewed as contrary to the public interest” (para. 226).
74
I acknowledge that tolerance is also a fundamental value in the
Community Standards, which include an admonition for students to show “respect
for all people regardless of race or gender”. This and like statements, such as
those contained in the slightly different faculty and staff document, may well
implicitly encompass tolerance for those of homosexual and bisexual
orientations and lead to discrimination-free interactions. I share the view of
Madam Justice Rowles, however, that “the public interest in the public school
system may also require something more than mere tolerance. As was stated in [Ross],
supra, public school teachers and those who administer and regulate the
public school system may have a positive duty to ensure nondiscrimination in
our public schools” (para. 230). See Ross, supra, at para. 50:
“it is not sufficient for a school board to take a passive role. A school board
has a duty to maintain a positive school environment for all persons served by
it and it must be ever vigilant of anything that might interfere with this
duty.”
75
The BCCT’s decision answers a more complex question than that of whether
TWU graduates would be intolerant and engage in overt discrimination in public
schools. The BCCT’s accreditation ruling was based, in part, on consideration
of whether the discriminatory practices of TWU have the potential to cause
deleterious effects on the classroom environment because of graduates’ lack of
preparedness. As stated in the BCCT’s Fall 1996 Report to Members, the BCCT was
concerned about “the integrity and the values of the public school system and
the institutions and programs which will prepare graduates to teach in the
public system”. The Report added that
[t]he motion made by Council reflects the majority belief that Trinity
Western University’s Community Standards contract discriminates on the basis of
sexual orientation.
.
. .
Labelling homosexual behaviour as sinful has the effect of excluding
persons whose sexual orientation is gay or lesbian.
.
. .
Councillors also expressed concern that the
particular world view held by Trinity Western University with reference to
homosexual behaviour may have a detrimental effect in the learning environment
of public schools. A teacher’s ability to support all children regardless of
race, colour, religion or sexual orientation within a respectful and
nonjudgmental relationship is considered by the [BCCT] to be essential to the
practice of the profession.
Thus, the only
institutional expression of discriminatory practices by TWU concerning
homosexual behaviour, namely the Community Standards contract, was thought by
the BCCT to have the potential to affect the classroom environment negatively.
76
All TWU graduates to this point have been asked to complete their fifth
year Professional Development Program under the auspices of Simon Fraser
University (“SFU”). There is, therefore, no track record to assess with respect
to the way in which TWU graduates would behave without this fifth year. Aside
from this methodological problem, I do not believe that incidents of overt
discriminatory behaviour are the evidentiary basis on which to test the BCCT’s
decision. The BCCT’s concern is about the classroom environment and it is
patently reasonable for it to have concluded that there could be ulterior
consequences for the classroom environment if TWU students were allowed to do
all five years of their training within their university’s program. It is
within the realm of reasonableness for the BCCT to be apprehensive about
whether TWU graduates may be less than fully prepared to teach in diverse
public school classrooms.
77
My colleagues ask: “After finding that TWU students hold fundamental
biases, based on their religious beliefs, how could the BCCT ever have believed
that the last year’s program being under the aegis of Simon Fraser University
would ever correct the situation?” (para. 38). With respect, I cannot agree
that the BCCT made any such finding of “fundamental biases, based on . . .
religious beliefs”. Nor were “[b]oth the program and the practices of TWU, the
declarations required of students and faculty in particular . . . condemned
because they reflected the beliefs of the signatories” (para. 21). I reiterate
that consideration of TWU students’ beliefs did not enter into the decision at
issue (see paras. 63 and 72 of these reasons). The BCCT simply found
discriminatory practices based on the signing of the Community Standards
contract. I also object to the idea that the fifth year is somehow ineffective
in “correct[ing] the situation”. That is a matter for educators, not judges, to
determine. Beliefs do not have to be “corrected”, in Orwellian fashion, but it
is reasonable to conclude that teachers must be equipped to deal with diverse
classroom environments.
78
Without taking a position on the efficacy of the fifth year requirement,
I would for the record like to enumerate potential reasons that the BCCT could
have for mandating it. This is not a matter of policy debate, but rather an
exercise to show that the requirement itself is not irrational and does not
render the BCCT’s decision patently unreasonable. Withdrawing the Simon Fraser
University-supervised fifth year requirement would mean that SFU would no
longer be the institution recommending students for certification, but rather
TWU, an institution that mandates a discriminatory practice, would. TWU
students would be exempted from engaging in reflection on why, as under the
present program, they cannot complete their training at their own university
before entering the public school system. The SFU year could be seen to be
symbolically important as a catalyst for this introspection. More
significantly, the BCCT could reasonably find that without the fifth year there
would be an unacceptable pedagogical cost in terms of reduced exposure of TWU
students to diversity and its values. At present, SFU students attend courses
at TWU run under their own university’s aegis. The SFU year involves both SFU
faculty and students coming to the TWU campus (and TWU students going to the
SFU campus). It exposes TWU students to a diversity of people and values that
they might not encounter at TWU. The fifth year also ensures supervision by SFU
associates for the teaching practicum.
79
In the fifth year, TWU students now spend seven weeks at TWU, six weeks
at SFU, and 19 weeks practice teaching, all under the supervision of SFU
personnel. The BCCT could rationally find that this promotes interaction
between TWU students and the purportedly more diverse faculty, staff and
student body of SFU. We should not question what appears to be the expert
opinion of the BCCT: that this time is valuable for inculcating teachers with
the skills needed to promote and enhance diverse classroom environments.
Beliefs do not have to change, but it is not patently unreasonable to hope that
awareness and attitudes will become broader. This is a vital concern, for
“[t]eacher attitudes can provide the validation for a gay student’s
self-acceptance or self-rejection”: J. H. Fontaine, “The Sound of Silence:
Public School Response to the Needs of Gay and Lesbian Youth”, in M. B. Harris,
ed., School Experiences of Gay and Lesbian Youth: The Invisible Minority
(1997), 101, at p. 105.
80
Instead of immersing themselves in the scholastic context, those who
urge us to dismiss this appeal give short shrift to the pressing need for
teachers in public schools to be sensitive to the concerns of homosexual and
bisexual students. It is reasonable to insist that graduates of accredited
teacher training programs be equipped to provide a welcoming classroom
environment, one that is as sensitive as possible to the needs of a diverse
student body. The modern role of the teacher has developed into a multi-faceted
one, including counselling as well as educative functions. The Court noted in Ross,
supra, that “[t]eachers occupy positions of trust and confidence, and
exert considerable influence over their students as a result of their
positions” (para. 43).
81
As the intervener EGALE pointed out, it is vital to remember in
the context of the case at bar that “[b]ecause lesbian, gay, and bisexual youth
are almost always ‘minorities’ in their own families, they do not enter the
school environment with the same level of family support and understanding that
other members of minority groups do. Thus schools are an important second line
of support for students dealing with issues of sexuality, and can counter the
effect of a hostile family environment” (factum, at para.14). See also
MacDougall, supra, at p. 44: “Many families make it clear that
discovering that their child is gay or lesbian is the worst possible news they
could have, and this can lead to exclusion from the family group”, and K. A.
Lahey, Are We “Persons” Yet? Law and Sexuality in Canada (1999), at p.
197: “[Queer] [y]ouths who are ostracized from their families receive
inadequate emotional and social support, and completely lose their families as
‘social safety nets.’ This leaves them to the streets, vulnerable to
involvement in the sex trades, use of drugs, and unhealthy relationship
patterns.”
82
Evidence shows that there is an acute need for improvement in the
experiences of homosexual and bisexual students in Canadian classrooms. Health
Canada, in a review of literature on The Experiences of Young Gay Men in the
Age of HIV (1996), noted at p. 19 that:
Implicit and explicit discrimination runs throughout the education
system. Schools often fail in their responsibility to lesbian, bisexual and gay
youth. Whether it is the invisibility of gay role models in the curricula or
derogatory epithets in school hallways, many gay youth see school as a
frightening and hostile place.
A self-identified gay youth, or one uncertain of his sexual identity,
is bombarded by obvious and subtle messages that homosexuality is not valued.
The heterosexual bias in educational materials and the lack of information
regarding homosexuality leaves many gay youth with little support for many of
their special interests and needs.
This leads many youth to deny their gay identity and stay closeted at
school. . . .
Most teachers and counsellors have a low comfort level with
homosexuality and lack the skills necessary to help an adolescent who
approaches with questions about homosexuality. A lack of expertise among school
staff creates missed opportunities to help lesbian, bisexual and gay youth
before a crisis develops.
See also I. T.
Kroll and L. B. Warneke, “The Dynamics of Sexual Orientation & Adolescent
Suicide” (1995), at p. 40: “Because of the added burdens of
anomie, rejection, and violence, school drop-out among homosexually oriented
youth remains a big problem.”
83
In an April 3, 2000 article, the Chief Commissioner of the British
Columbia Human Rights Commission, Mary-Woo Sims, wrote that “[g]ay, lesbian,
bisexual and transgender students face isolation, harassment, intimidation and
violence at school. . . . [They] need to know they have other students and
teachers they can turn to for support and understanding”: see “Gay/Straight
Alliance Clubs - Understanding Our Differences” <http://www.bchumanrights.org/text_only/PressReleases2000.asp#Gaystraightallianceclubs‑understandingourdifferences>.
She discussed the results of a study, Being Out: Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual
& Transgender Youth in B.C.: an Adolescent Health Survey (1999).
Importantly, this British Columbia survey found that 39 percent of participants
“told a teacher or school counsellor that they are gay or lesbian” (p. 6). Such
a result demonstrates the imperative nature of assuring that homosexual and
bisexual students do not perceive a barrier to approaching their teachers for
counselling. The BCCT was not patently unreasonable in concluding that, without
spending a year under the auspices of SFU, TWU graduates, due to their
signature of the Community Standards pledge, could have a negative impact on
the supportive environment required in classrooms. It is not patently
unreasonable for the BCCT to believe that a component of the noble effort to
eradicate public school homophobia, whether perceived or actual, is to require
TWU students to take a fifth year of training outside the supervision of that
institution.
84
The B.C. report also showed that 37 percent of the gay and lesbian youth
questioned feel like outsiders at school. None of the youth gave high
ratings to the quality of his or her family relationships. Almost 40 percent
have dramatically low self-esteem. Two-thirds often hear homophobic remarks
made by other students at school. Nearly one in five had been physically assaulted
at school in the past year.
85
The study found that 46 percent of the gay and lesbian youth had
attempted suicide at least once. Their average age at the first suicide attempt
was 13 years. See also Egan v. Canada, [1995] 2 S.C.R. 513, at para.
174, per Cory J.: “a study by the Quebec Human Rights Commission has
indicated that the isolation, harassment and violence imposed by the public and
the rejection by their families has caused young homosexuals to have a higher
rate of attempted and successful suicide than heterosexual youths” and Kroll
and Warneke, supra: “Canada has one of the highest youth suicide rates
in the world. . . . Of all teens who commit suicide, about one third appear
to be homosexual in orientation. Many such youth become depressed in the
ongoing struggle with social fear and rejection. . . . Cognitive, emotional and
social isolation, ongoing external and internalized homophobia and lack of
support may lead homosexually oriented adolescents to perceive suicide as their
only means of escape. . . . ‘Closeted’ adolescents who are aware of their
same-sex attraction but who have not yet established a positive homosexual
identity, are at particular risk for suicide” (see introduction and pp. 1 and
4).
86
With these statistics and observations in the foreground, the assertion
that “[h]omophobia . . . is one lesson students (both gay and straight) learn
in the informal curriculum” is eminently plausible: see S. L. Nichols, “Gay,
Lesbian, and Bisexual Youth: Understanding Diversity and Promoting Tolerance in
Schools” (1999), 99 Elementary School Journal 505, at p. 514. See also
MacDougall, supra, at p. 41: “The most important factor in the
perpetuation of homophobia and the marginalization of homosexuals, including
self-hatred in homosexuals, is the intense indoctrination in heterosexism that
children experience. A great deal of this indoctrination occurs in educational
institutions”. In this context, the BCCT’s decision to refuse to accredit TWU
unconditionally is a reasonable proactive measure designed to prevent any
potential problems of student, parent, colleague, or staff perception of
teachers who have not completed a year of training under the supervision of
SFU, but have signed the Community Standards contract. As the intervener the
Ontario Secondary School Teachers’ Federation stated in oral argument:
To suggest that we must await harm is to suggest that we will
experiment upon children when, in fact, within our power is the power to expose
the students at TWU before they enter into the public school system to that
range of values that they are expected to extricate and live by while working
within that public education system.
87
I agree with Madam Justice Rowles that “it is open to the Council to
concern itself with whether graduates from an applicant program will be
perceived as upholding discriminat[ion]-free values in the public classroom”
(para. 197 (emphasis added)). See also Ross, supra, at para. 44:
By their conduct, teachers as “medium” must be
perceived to uphold the values, beliefs and knowledge sought to be transmitted
by the school system. The conduct of a teacher is evaluated on the basis of his
or her position, rather than whether the conduct occurs within the classroom or
beyond. Teachers are seen by the community to be the medium for the educational
message and because of the community position they occupy, they are not able to
“choose which hat they will wear on what occasion” (see Re Cromer and
British Columbia Teachers’ Federation (1986), 29 D.L.R. (4th) 641
(B.C.C.A.), at p. 660); teachers do not necessarily check their teaching hats
at the school yard gate and may be perceived to be wearing their teaching hats
even off duty. [Allison] Reyes affirms this point in her article, [“Freedom of
Expression and Public School Teachers” (1995), 4 Dal. J. Leg. Stud. 35],
at p. 37:
The integrity of the education system also depends
to a great extent upon the perceived integrity of teachers. It is to this
extent that expression outside the classroom becomes relevant. While the
activities of teachers outside the classroom do not seem to impact directly
on their ability to teach, they may conflict with the values which the
education system perpetuates. [Emphasis added by Reyes.]
88
It is not patently unreasonable for the BCCT to have denied
accreditation when the audience perceiving public school teachers includes
homosexual and bisexual students, parents, colleagues, and staff, students with
homosexual and bisexual relatives and friends, and also adolescents exploring
their sexual identities. As this Court stated in Ross, at para. 82, “[t]he
importance of ensuring an equal and discrimination free educational
environment, and the perception of fairness and tolerance in the classroom
are paramount in the education of young children. This helps foster self‑respect
and acceptance by others” (emphasis added). At para. 43 of that case, La Forest
J. also found that:
Teachers are inextricably linked to the integrity
of the school system. . . . The conduct of a teacher bears directly upon the
community’s perception of the ability of the teacher to fulfil such a
position of trust and influence, and upon the community’s confidence in the
public school system as a whole. [Emphasis added.]
The conduct at
issue in this case is simply the signing of the Community Standards contract by
TWU students and its potential impact on the learning environment in public
schools.
89
Considering the importance of perceptions for the healthy functioning of
the classroom, I find my colleagues’ emphasis on the need for positive proof of
discriminatory conduct sadly ironic. Ross took a broader view than this
of the school environment (at para. 100): “In order to ensure a discrimination‑free
educational environment, the school environment must be one where all are
treated equally and all are encouraged to fully participate” (emphasis
added). Moreover, the principal metaphor for the homosexual and bisexual
experience of discrimination has been that of the closet, an isolated refuge of
invisibility often enveloped in fear. Indeed, the history of struggles against
sexual orientation discrimination has been described as a battle against “the
apartheid of the closet”, W. N. Eskridge Jr., Gaylaw: Challenging the
Apartheid of the Closet (1999). See generally M. v. H., [1999]
2 S.C.R. 3, at para. 64, per Cory J.: “In Egan . . . a majority
of this Court explicitly recognized that gays, lesbians and bisexuals, ‘whether
as individuals or couples, form an identifiable minority who have suffered and
continue to suffer serious social, political and economic disadvantage’ (para.
175, per Cory J.; see also para. 89, per L'Heureux‑Dubé
J.).”
90
As one commentator has written, “[g]ay and lesbian students at all ages
and stages of schooling share an identity that has been bumped, bruised, or
completely ignored. That this personal identity crosses all ethnic, cultural,
economic, geographic, and gender boundaries makes gay and lesbian students
universally present, yet easily invisible”: C. Mathison, “The Invisible
Minority: Preparing Teachers to Meet the Needs of Gay and Lesbian Youth”
(1998), 49 Journal of Teacher Education 151, at p. 154. I believe that
the students’ perspective must be the paramount concern and that, even if there
are no overt acts of discrimination by TWU graduates, this vantage point
provides ample justification for the BCCT’s decision.
91
Without the existence of supportive classroom environments, homosexual
and bisexual students will be forced to remain invisible and reluctant to
approach their teachers. They will be victims of identity erasure, forced to
endure what Professor Kathleen Lahey has called “a ‘spiral of silence’ in which
lesbians and gays modify their behaviour to avoid the impact of prejudice”: see
Brillinger v. Brockie (2000), 37 C.H.R.R. D/15, at para. 35. The BCCT’s
decision that TWU graduates are more likely to foster a welcoming classroom
environment after participating in SFU’s program for one year is not patently
unreasonable. Most of the relevant evidence in this case is the reality of
hostile school environments faced by homosexual and bisexual students. The
courts, by trespassing into the field of pedagogy, deal a setback to the
efforts of the BCCT to ensure the sensitivity and empathy of its members to all
students’ backgrounds and characteristics.
IV. Charter
Claims
92
Having concluded my analysis of administrative law, which found that the
BCCT’s decision was not patently unreasonable, I turn now to the Charter claims
advanced by the respondents. They presented arguments concerning alleged s. 2 (b),
(d), (a), and 15 violations.
93
I agree with Madam Justice Rowles, the only member of the Court of
Appeal who considered Charter claims, that: “Signing TWU’s Community
Standards Contract may well be an expressive activity protected by s. 2 (b), but
it does not follow that the consequences of the exercise of that expression are
immune from consideration by the certifying body” (para. 270). Ross stated
that courts assessing alleged s. 2 (b) violations must determine “whether
the purpose or effect of the impugned government action is to restrict the
individual’s freedom of expression” (para. 64). The purpose in this case, by
way of contrast to Ross, is not to restrict expression. Rather, the
purpose of the BCCT’s decision is to ensure the existence of supportive
classroom environments. The effect of the decision is to restrict Ms.
Lindquist’s expression, however, since TWU students who sign the Community
Standards contract lose the opportunity to be certified automatically as public
school teachers. Having found an individual rights violation, I will assume
without deciding that TWU’s expression is also fettered. I find these violations
to be saved under s. 1 .
94
My colleagues write that “this is a case where
any potential conflict should be resolved through the proper delineation of the
rights and values involved. In essence, properly defining the scope of the
rights avoids a conflict in this case” (para. 29). I believe that a s. 1
analysis is more appropriate considering the facts before us; the Court in Ross,
supra, encouraged and itself undertook the s. 1 inquiry in similar
circumstances (see para. 66 of these reasons). See also R. v. Sharpe,
[2001] 1 S.C.R. 45, 2001 SCC 2, at para. 153, per
L’Heureux-Dubé, Gonthier and Bastarache JJ.: “Where courts are asked to consider whether a
violation is justified under s. 1 , they must be sensitive to the competing
rights and values that exist in our democracy.”; B. (R.) v. Children's Aid Society of Metropolitan Toronto, supra,
at para. 118, per La Forest J.: “I
am happy to see that my colleagues concede that the balancing of the competing
rights could be integrated in a s. 1 analysis, since apart from specific
provisions such as ‘fundamental justice’, that is the only balancing mechanism provided
under the Charter . The Charter makes no provision for directly
balancing constitutional rights against one another. It is aimed rather at
governmental and legislative intrusion against the protected rights; see s. 32
of the Charter .” Section 1 's contextual approach protects all the interests involved
and ensures careful consideration of all the implications of the impugned state
action: see Madam Justice Wilson’s opinion in Edmonton Journal v. Alberta
(Attorney General), [1989] 2 S.C.R. 1326, at pp. 1355-56 (“The contextual
approach attempts to bring into sharp relief the aspect of the right or freedom
which is truly at stake in the case as well as the relevant aspects of any
values in competition with it. It seems to be more sensitive to the reality of
the dilemma posed by the particular facts and therefore more conducive to
finding a fair and just compromise between the two competing values under s.
1 .”). My following analysis of the s. 2 (b) violation stays true to this
imperative and meaningful attention to context.
95
This case presents a context that calls for deference to the
impugned decision based on the public educational setting and the vulnerability
of the group that is being protected: see Thomson Newspapers Co. v. Canada
(Attorney General), [1998] 1 S.C.R. 877, at para. 87, “context
is the indispensable handmaiden to the proper characterization of the objective
of the impugned provision, to determining whether that objective is justified,
and to weighing whether the means used are sufficiently closely related to the
valid objective so as to justify an infringement of a Charter right”. As
the Court stated in Ross, supra, at para. 82: “There can be no doubt that the attempt to foster
equality, respect and tolerance in the Canadian educational system is a
laudable goal. But the additional driving factor in this case is the nature of
the educational services in question: we are dealing here with the education of
young children.” See also Sharpe, supra, at para. 169, per L’Heureux-Dubé,
Gonthier and Bastarache JJ.: “Because of
their physical, mental, and emotional immaturity, children are one of the most
vulnerable groups in society”; and Winnipeg
Child and Family Services v. K.L.W., [2000] 2 S.C.R. 519, 2000 SCC 48, at
para. 73: “children are vulnerable and
depend on their parents or other caregivers for the necessities of life, as
well as for their physical, emotional and intellectual development and well‑being.
Thus, protecting children from harm has become a universally accepted goal: see
the Convention on the Rights of the Child, Can. T.S. 1992 No. 3, now
ratified by 191 states, including Canada.”
96
My review in the administrative law section of the objective behind the
BCCT’s decision, namely to protect the classroom environment in public schools
by ensuring that teachers meet the BCCT’s requisite standards, shows that it is
pressing and substantial, as required by R. v. Oakes, [1986] 1 S.C.R.
103. I find that the BCCT’s decision also satisfies the proportionality test of
Oakes. The burden placed on expression is rationally connected to the
BCCT’s goal of ensuring a welcoming and supportive atmosphere in classrooms.
The expression at issue, namely the signing of the Community Standards
contract, is itself the source of the BCCT’s concern about the educational
implications of teachers completing TWU’s training without the SFU year.
Therefore a burden on this expression is a rational response to the BCCT’s
mandate to protect the public interest. As indicated in my administrative law
analysis, the BCCT had a reasonable apprehension of harm to the classroom
environment; there is no need for scientific proof of cause and effect between
the objective and the means: see Ross, supra, at para. 101.
97
Further, I agree with Madam Justice Rowles that “[i]t would be
inappropriate for this Court to suggest or endorse a particular set of
conditions to meet the Council’s compelling objective in the public school
system” (para. 291). As Madam Justice McLachlin (now Chief Justice) wrote for
the majority in RJR-MacDonald Inc. v. Canada (Attorney
General), [1995] 3 S.C.R. 199, at para. 160, “[i]f
the law falls within a range of reasonable alternatives, the courts will not
find it overbroad merely because they can conceive of an alternative which
might better tailor objective to infringement”. See also Adler v. Ontario,
[1996] 3 S.C.R. 609, at para. 220, per McLachlin J.:
Where social issues are at stake,
courts approach the legislature's decision as to what infringement is required
to achieve the desired end with considerable deference. It is not difficult to
conjure up hypothetical solutions which might infringe the right in question
less than the solution chosen by the legislature. This alone is insufficient to
allow the courts to declare that the legislature's solution violates the Charter .
As long as the measure falls within a range of acceptable solutions to the
problem, it will pass the minimal impairment test: Edwards Books, supra,
Irwin Toy Ltd. v. Quebec (Attorney General), [1989] 1 S.C.R. 927; Reference
re ss. 193 and 195.1(1)(c) of the Criminal Code (Man.), [1990] 1 S.C.R.
1123; R. v. Chaulk, [1990] 3 S.C.R. 1303.
By falling
within the acceptable range of solutions, the BCCT’s decision satisfies the
minimal impairment prong of the Oakes test. Finally, the extent of the
deleterious effects on TWU and its students like Ms. Lindquist is more than
offset by the salutary gains that will plausibly accrue in classrooms. I find,
therefore, that the violation of s. 2(b) caused by the BCCT’s decision
is justified under s. 1 .
98
Because in these reasons I find no unjustified individual rights
violation, Ms. Lindquist’s s. 2(d) claim also fails since TWU students
are not unconstitutionally restrained from exercising their individual rights
collectively: see Professional Institute of the Public Service of Canada v.
Northwest Territories (Commissioner), [1990] 2 S.C.R. 367, at p. 403, per
Sopinka J. My comments in that case are also apposite here, but only with
respect to the Community Standards contract: “Though the pursuit of them may be lawful,
the objects of some associations may be either sexist or racist or in some
other fashion contemptible. To my mind it is difficult to suggest that the
freedom envisaged by s. 2(d) was ever meant to embrace these objects” (p. 393).
99
In addition, the respondents claim violations of their freedom of
religion. TWU’s claim must confront the obstacle that this Court has not yet
decided whether a religiously based corporation may initiate a s. 2(a)
claim or whether in challenging the BCCT’s decision TWU qualifies for standing
as of right: see Canadian Egg Marketing Agency v. Richardson, [1998]
3 S.C.R. 157. I will assume without deciding that TWU can advance a s. 2(a)
claim. I find it without merit, however. I agree with Madam Justice Wilson’s
analogous analysis of religious school certification in Jones, supra,
at p. 312. Here, as there, the impugned state action “does not offend religious
freedom; it accommodates it. It . . . permits the existence of schools such as
the [respondent TWU’s] which have a religious orientation. It is a flexible
piece of legislation which seeks to ensure one thing -- that all children
receive an adequate education.”
100
With respect to Ms. Lindquist’s individual s. 2(a) claim, I
adhere to the analysis of s. 2(a) expressed in my dissenting reasons in Adler,
supra, at para. 72:
While s. 2(a) of the Charter is
primarily concerned with the necessary limits to be placed on the state in its
potentially coercive interference with the original, objectively perceived
religious "choice" that individuals make, s. 15 ensures that
consequences in behaviour and belief, which flow from this initial choice and
are not perceived by the rights claimant as optional, not be impacted upon by
state action in such a way as to attack the inherent dignity and consideration
which are due all human persons. The protections afforded in s. 15 may thus be
of greater scope than those in s. 2 (a), as our concern moves from the
coercive aspect of the state action to its impact on the individuals' and
groups' sense of dignity and worth in the socio-economic context of the day.
I will therefore confine my appraisal of Donna Lindquist’s religious
Charter rights to her s. 15 claim. There is no impairment of her s. 2 (a)
rights.
101
Madam Justice Rowles found that in this case “the burden on students for
attending the religious school of their choice would be the exclusion from the
automatic certification process for teaching in the public schools. This
constitutes an adverse impact and is related to the students’ religious
conviction” (para. 276). She thus found a violation of s. 15 . This decision
preceded our Court’s judgment in Law v. Canada (Minister of Employment and
Immigration), [1999] 1 S.C.R. 497. Based on the guidelines assembled and
applied in that case and in subsequent jurisprudence, I find that no s. 15
violation has been established by Ms. Lindquist.
102
The Law guidelines ask whether the challenged state action
draws a formal distinction between the claimant and others on the basis of
one or more personal characteristics. They further inquire whether the
claimant is subject to differential treatment based on one or more
enumerated and analogous grounds. The distinction and differential
treatment resulting from the BCCT’s decision are not based on Ms. Lindquist’s
religion, but on the act of signing the Community Standards contract performed
by TWU students. There is every indication that the BCCT would be as concerned
if a private secular institution were to require a discriminatory practice
(assuming for the sake of argument that this hypothetical secular equivalent to
TWU were also shielded from human rights legislation). The impugned decision is
neutral with regard to the claimant’s religion. I understand this case to be an
example of a type of s. 15 challenge predicted by the Court in Law.
There, Iacobucci J. described “adverse effects
discrimination . . . cases where a law which applies identically to all fails
to take into account the claimant's different traits or circumstances, yet
does not infringe the claimant's human dignity in so doing. In such cases,
there could be said to be substantively differential treatment between the claimant
and others, because the law has a meaningfully different effect upon the
claimant, without there being discrimination for the purpose of s. 15(1) ” (para. 86 (emphasis added)).
103
Law, supra, at para. 53, described the inquiry into human
dignity as follows:
Human dignity means that an individual or group feels self-respect and
self-worth. It is concerned with physical and psychological integrity and
empowerment. Human dignity is harmed by unfair treatment premised upon personal
traits or circumstances which do not relate to individual needs, capacities, or
merits. It is enhanced by laws which are sensitive to the needs, capacities,
and merits of different individuals, taking into account the context underlying
their differences. Human dignity is harmed when individuals and groups are
marginalized, ignored, or devalued, and is enhanced when laws recognize the
full place of all individuals and groups within Canadian society. Human dignity
within the meaning of the equality guarantee does not relate to the status or
position of an individual in society per se, but rather concerns the
manner in which a person legitimately feels when confronted with a particular
law. Does the law treat him or her unfairly, taking into account all of the
circumstances regarding the individuals affected and excluded by the law?
[Emphasis added.]
Importantly,
as my reasons stated in Corbiere v. Canada (Minister of Indian and Northern
Affairs), [1999] 2 S.C.R. 203, “I would
emphasize that the ‘reasonable person’ considered by the subjective-objective perspective
[on human dignity] understands and recognizes not only the circumstances of
those like him or her, but also appreciates the situation of others.
Therefore, when legislation impacts on various groups,
particularly if those groups are
disadvantaged, the subjective-objective perspective will take into account the
particular experiences and needs of all of those groups” (para. 65 (last emphasis added)). In my view, the
disadvantaged group in this case is that composed of homosexual and bisexual
public school students, who have generally experienced “pre-existing disadvantage, vulnerability,
stereotyping, or prejudice” (Law,
supra, at para. 63). It is their human dignity that is truly at stake.
104
Law enumerated three other contextual factors to guide the
inquiry into whether state action has violated human dignity. Before delving
into these, I would like to state that I recognize that Ms. Lindquist may
herself feel singled out on the basis of religious belief. Nevertheless, I
believe that a subjective-objective examination of Law’s contextual
factors reveals that her human dignity is not demeaned by the BCCT’s decision
to attach consequences to TWU students’ signature of the Community Standards
contract. A reasonable person with similar characteristics to the claimant, who
is fully informed of the circumstances and context and rationally takes them
into account, as posited by Law, at para. 61, would not feel less
capable, or less worthy of recognition or value as a human being or as a member
of Canadian society, equally deserving of concern, respect, and consideration:
see Law, supra, at para. 49, quoting Egan, supra, at para. 39, per L’Heureux-Dubé J.
105
She would take note of the fact that a public institution could not
require students to engage in the discriminatory practice of TWU. This
mandatory discrimination insulates the BCCT’s focus on TWU students’ complicity
with it from attack as a stereotype. According to Law, supra, at
para. 64, “[a] stereotype may be described as a misconception whereby a person
or, more often, a group is unfairly portrayed as possessing undesirable traits,
or traits which the group, or at least some of its members, do not possess.”
In this case, the undeniable fact is that TWU students sign their names to a
discriminatory document.
106
Our reasonable person would further observe that while the religious
exemption from human rights legislation allows for religious teacher training
institutions in British Columbia to self-regulate without state interference,
once graduates ask to be accredited for public school teaching, the public
interest comes to the fore and reasonable secular requirements can be imposed
without infringing the freedom of religion: see Jones, supra. If
the religious exemption were allowed to shield TWU graduates from complete
scrutiny of their abilities to work and to be perceived to work effectively in
diverse classrooms, then an advantage would be conferred on these students as
compared with public institution graduates, suggested as the appropriate
comparator group by the respondents. Depriving TWU students of such an
advantage is not an affront to their human dignity.
107
The four contextual factors identified in Law all militate
against finding a violation of Ms. Lindquist’s human dignity. I have already
discussed the fact that the historically disadvantaged group in this case is
that composed of homosexual and bisexual public school students. The second
relevant Law factor examines whether the state action takes into account
a claimant’s actual situation. The BCCT’s decision was tailored to the fact
that students like Ms. Lindquist signed the Community Standards contract. Yet
due to the irrelevance of the enumerated ground, namely religion, to the
decision, and to the absence of Ms. Lindquist from the proceedings, the BCCT
did not take her religious circumstances into consideration. I do not find this
to be an affront to Ms. Lindquist’s human dignity, however, since her Charter
rights could not have been properly considered in the BCCT’s deliberations.
108
The third Law factor looks for ameliorative purpose or
effects: “An ameliorative purpose or effect
which accords with the purpose of s. 15(1) of the Charter will likely
not violate the human dignity of more advantaged individuals where the
exclusion of these more advantaged individuals largely corresponds to the
greater need or the different circumstances experienced by the disadvantaged
group being targeted by the legislation”
(para. 72). See also Lovelace v. Ontario, [2000] 1 S.C.R. 950, 2000 SCC
37, at para. 95, discussing the interpretive assistance provided for s. 15(1)
by the language of s. 15(2) and quoting with approval Madam Justice Wilson’s statement in Harrison v. University of British
Columbia, [1990] 3 S.C.R. 451, at pp. 474-75: “By its terms s. 15(2) informs us that measures aimed
at ameliorating the conditions of those who are disadvantaged . . . (those in
other words who have been the victims of discrimination) are constitutionally
permissible. In this way subsection (2) strengthens the notion adopted by this
Court in Andrews v. Law Society of British Columbia, [1989] 1 S.C.R.
143, that what lies at the heart of the equality guarantee is protection from
discrimination”. In these reasons, I
have discussed why homosexual and bisexual students have an acute need for
welcoming and supportive classroom environments. The BCCT’s decision attempts to alleviate the effects on this
disadvantaged group of a discriminatory practice engaged in by the group
represented by the s. 15 claimant. This is clearly an ameliorative purpose, one
which does not violate Ms. Lindquist’s
human dignity.
109
The fourth Law factor examines the nature of the interest
affected and also indicates to me that there is no cognizable affront to Ms.
Lindquist’s human dignity. Law quoted with approval the pertinent
section of my reasons in Egan, supra. There I wrote that “a group's interests will be more adversely affected in cases
involving complete exclusion or non-recognition than in cases where the
legislative distinction does recognize or accommodate the group, but
does so in a manner that is simply more restrictive than some would like”
(para. 64 (emphasis in original)). See also Lovelace, supra, at
para. 88. I do not consider the impact of the BCCT’s decision on Ms. Lindquist
to be severe enough to conclude that its effect on her interest in not studying
at all under the auspices of SFU violates her human dignity. She
remains free to apply to the BCCT for individual certification and the
requirement to spend one year at SFU is not
overly onerous for her or for the future of TWU’s educational community. The BCCT’s decision merely maintains
the status quo ante for TWU students. What was affected by it was only
Ms. Lindquist’s interest in automatic certification for TWU students, since
there is no right for TWU to receive such accreditation from the BCCT. The BCCT seeks not to penalize future teachers from
TWU, but to ensure that they possess the requisites to teach in British
Columbia’s public schools.
110
I therefore close my Charter analysis by holding that no
violation of Ms.
Lindquist’s s.
15 equality rights has been demonstrated.
V. Conclusion
111
I have found that the BCCT had jurisdiction to consider TWU’s
discriminatory practices. Using a standard of review of patent
unreasonableness, I then demonstrated why the BCCT’s decision not to accredit a
free-standing TWU teacher training program should be upheld. Lastly, I rejected
Charter -based challenges to the decision. For these reasons, I would
allow the appeal and set aside the orders of the trial judge.
Appeal dismissed with costs, L’Heureux‑Dubé
J. dissenting.
Solicitors for the appellant: Nelson & Vanderkruyk,
Vancouver.
Solicitors for the respondents: Kuhn & Company,
Abbotsford, British Columbia.
Solicitors for the intervener the Evangelical Fellowship of Canada:
Stikeman, Elliott, Toronto.
Solicitors for the intervener the Ontario Secondary School
Teachers’ Federation: Green & Chercover, Toronto.
Solicitors for the intervener the Canadian Conference of Catholic
Bishops: Barnes, Sammon, Ottawa.
Solicitors for the intervener the British Columbia Civil Liberties
Association: Lindsay Kenney, Vancouver.
Solicitors for the intervener EGALE Canada Inc.:
Elliott & Kim, Toronto.
Solicitors for the interveners the Christian
Legal Fellowship and the Seventh-Day Adventist Church in Canada: Fraser Milner
Casgrain, Calgary.
Solicitors for the intervener the Canadian Civil
Liberties Association: Gowling, Strathy & Henderson, Toronto.