Date:
20180130
Docket:
T-8-18
Citation:
2018 FC 102
Montréal, Quebec, January 30, 2018
PRESENT: The
Honourable Madam Justice St-Louis
BETWEEN:
|
RIGHT TO LIFE
ASSOCIATION OF TORONTO AND AREA, BLAISE ALLEYNE AND MATTHEW BATTISTA
|
Applicants
|
And
|
CANADA (MINISTER
OF EMPLOYMENT, WORKFORCE, AND LABOUR)
|
Respondent
|
ORDER AND REASONS
I.
Overview
[1]
The applicants, the Right to Life Association of
Toronto and Area [RTLT], Mr. Blaise Alleyne, its president, and Mr. Matthew
Battista, a student who is said to intend to apply for employment this summer with
RTLT, seek an interlocutory injunction to stay the decision of the Minister of
Employment, Workforce Development and Labour [the Minister] to add a new attestation
requirement to the application for the 2018 Canada Summer Jobs Program [the 2018
Program].
[2]
The applicants ask the Court to stay the operation of
the Minister’s decision pending final determination of the underlying application
for judicial review [the Underlying Application] they commenced on January 4,
2018. In their Underlying Application, the applicants challenge the decision of
the Minister to add the new attestation requirement to the application for
funding under the 2018 Program and seek numerous reliefs, including one in the
nature of certiorari, quashing the decision of the Minister, and one in
the nature of a mandamus, requiring the Minister to award those funds
which would be awarded but for the requirement of the new attestation.
[3]
The applicants included the 2018 Program’s
Applicant Guide in their record, where it is confirmed that, as part of the 2018
Program application process, the organization’s representative must tick a box
labelled “I attest”, confirming attestation, in
bulk, to the four following statements:
- I have read and understood the Canada
Summer Jobs Articles of Agreement and referred to in the Applicant Guide
as needed;
- The job would not be created without the
financial assistance provided under a potential contribution agreement;
- Both the job and my organization’s
core mandate respect individual human rights
in Canada, including the values underlying the Canadian Charter of
Rights and Freedoms as well as other rights. These include
reproductive rights and the right to be free from discrimination on the
basis of sex, religion, race, national or ethnic origin, colour, mental or
physical disability or sexual orientation, or gender identity or
expression; (emphasis added)
- I have all the necessary authorities,
permissions and approvals to submit this application on behalf of myself
and the organization.
[4]
The third statement is the new attestation
requirement at the center of these proceedings, and the Court will herein refer
to it as the Attestation Requirement.
[5]
On December 20, 2018, the RTLT applied for
funding under the 2018 Program. It did not apply online, as the application
cannot be submitted online unless the “I attest”
box is ticked. RTLT thus sent a paper application, did not tick the “I attest” box and, since it has issues with the
Attestation Requirement, attached a letter along with its application, stating
the following:
On the basis of conscience, we are unable to
express the words that the Minister has required in the Applicant’s Guide. We
are, however, able to attest that “we support all Canadian law, including
Charter and human rights law.” We believe the Minister does not have the
jurisdiction under law to compel us to make a statement that conflicts with our
conscience rights under the Charter. Nor does the Minister have the right to
compel speech as a condition of receiving a financial benefit from the
government of Canada. We respectfully decline to make a statement that is
inconsistent with our fundamental personal beliefs about the value of life and
the right to life under section 7 of the Charter. Please confirm that you
will accept our application with the above noted statement in substitution for
the statement set forth in the on line application process and in the
Applicant’s Guide.
[6]
On January 3, 2018, RTLT received a receipt of
delivery from Service Canada, but has received no response or comments to its
letter of objection and substitute statement.
[7]
The Application Guide specifically notes that
the attestation is mandatory, i.e. that the applicant must tick the “I attest” box, in order for the application to be
considered complete and eligible for assessment.
[8]
As the application deadline is February 2, 2018,
the applicants are seeking urgent intervention of the Court, asking the Court to
suspend the Attestation Requirement for the 2018 Program. The Court
is here not tasked with deciding the merits of the Underlying Application, but with
assessing whether or not the test allowing for the issuance of interlocutory
injunctive relief staying the Attestation Requirement has been met.
[9]
Hence, in order to succeed in their motion for
an interlocutory injunction, the applicants must establish that they satisfy
each prong of the conjunctive three-part test set forth by the Supreme Court of
Canada [SCC] in RJR-Macdonald Inc v Canada (Attorney General), [1994] 1
SCR 311 [RJR-Macdonald]. Under that test, the applicants must establish
that: 1) a serious issue has been raised in the Underlying Application; 2) they
will suffer irreparable harm if the stay is not granted; and 3) the balance of convenience,
which examines the harm to the applicants and to the respondent, as well as the
public interest, favours them.
[10]
The applicants contend that they satisfy each
prong of the test. On the serious issue component, the applicants set the low threshold,
and contend that the issues raised in the Underlying Application meet this
threshold as they are neither vexatious nor frivolous. They submit that the
Attestation Requirement is compelled speech by the government, as it requires the
applicant to attest to certain beliefs and to agree with the state’s position
on certain social issues as a condition to receiving government funding. The
applicants assert that the imposition of the Attestation Requirement thus infringes
their freedom of conscience protected by section 2(a) of the Canadian Charter
of Rights and Freedoms, Part 1 of the Constitution Act, 1982,
being scheduled B to the Canada Act 1982 (UK), 1982, c 11 [Charter],
their freedom of thought, belief, opinion and expression protected by section 2(b)
of the Charter, and their right to equality protected under section 15
of the Charter. On the irreparable harm component, the applicants first contend
that the particulars of this case warrant a lower burden of proof as it involves
a potential Charter breach. They submit that irreparable harm flows from
the allegation of a Charter breach and lies in the loss of funding, the harm
to the organization’s activities, and the loss of opportunity for Mr. Battista,
and on the impact to all those affected by the Attestation Requirement.
Finally, on the last component, the applicants submit that the balance of
convenience favours them as there is no injury to the Minister if the stay is
granted while the applicants face a serious breach of their Charter
rights if it is not. The consideration of the public interest weighs in their
favour, particularly as a stay would not upset the status quo, reverting
to the situation that prevailed in 2016 and 2017 in regard to the Summer Job
Program.
[11]
The Minister responds that the applicants have
not met any of the three parts of the RJR-Macdonald test. On the serious
issue component, the Minister argues that none of the issues raised by the applicants
meet even the low threshold of not being vexatious or frivolous. On irreparable
harm, the Minister disagrees with the applicants on the burden of proof imposed
to them, arguing that it is not set lower in this case, and that irreparable
harm does not flow uniquely from an allegation of a Charter breach. On
the other impacts claimed by the applicants as being irreparable harm, the
Minister stresses that the applicants have submitted no evidence to support their
allegations of financial irreparable harm, and have thus failed to meet their
burden. Finally, the Minister submits that the balance of convenience lies in
her favour. She is tasked with promoting and creating employment opportunities,
recognised as a public interest concern. As the 2018 Program is deployed
pursuant to this responsibility, irreparable harm to the public interest would
result from restraining it, which weighs in her favour. The 2018 Program, with
the Attestation Requirement, is in the public interest, which outweighs the
applicants’ speculative financial harm. Finally, the Minister argues that the status
quo is the current situation, and that maintaining it weighs in favour of
not staying the Attestation Requirement.
[12]
For the reasons exposed hereinafter, I will
dismiss the applicants’ motion, as I am not satisfied that they have met the three
parts of the conjunctive test set forth by the SCC in RJR-Macdonald.
[13]
First, on the serious issue, I do not agree with
the parties on the applicable threshold; however, given my conclusion on the two
other parts of the test, I will assume without deciding that a serious issue
exists. Second, on irreparable harm, I conclude that the applicants have not
met their burden as irreparable harm does not flow uniquely from an allegation
of a Charter breach, and the applicants have not submitted clear and
convincing evidence of irreparable harm. Finally, as detailed in my reasons and
in the absence of evidence of irreparable harm to the applicants, I find that the
balance of convenience favours the Minister as granting a stay would cause irreparable
harm to the public interest. Finally, prudence also weighs in favour of
preserving the status quo and maintaining the 2018 Program as it stands.
II.
Background
A.
The 2018 Program
[14]
As described in the Applicant Guide found in the
applicants’ record, the 2018 Program provides wage subsidies to certain
employers to create employment for secondary and post-secondary students aged
15 to 30.
[15]
On a broader note, the objectives of the 2018
Program are stated in the Applicant Guide as: (1) providing work experience for
students; (2) supporting organizations, including those that provide important
community services; and (3) recognizing that local circumstances, community
needs and priorities vary widely. In setting these objectives, the government
seeks to ensure that youth job opportunities funded by the 2018 Program take
place in an environment that respects the rights of all Canadians.
[16]
The 2018 Program is established pursuant to the
authority granted to the Minister, as set out in section 7 of the Department
of Employment and Social Development Act, SC 2005, c 34 [the Act]:
Programs
7 The Minister may, in exercising the powers and performing the
duties and functions assigned by this Act, establish and implement programs
designed to support projects or other activities that contribute to the
development of the human resources of Canada and the skills of Canadians, or
that contribute to the social development of Canada, and the Minister may
make grants and contributions in support of the programs.
|
Programmes
7 Le ministre peut, dans le cadre des
attributions que lui confère la présente loi, concevoir et réaliser des
programmes destinés à appuyer les projets ou autres activités qui contribuent
au développement des ressources humaines au Canada et au développement des
compétences des Canadiens ou au développement social du Canada et accorder
des subventions et des contributions pour les appuyer.
|
[17]
The Act grants broad discretion to the Minister
as section 7 contains no indications as to how the programs should be
construed.
[18]
The 2018 Program provides funding to a number of
eligible employers (not-for-profit organizations, public-sector employers and
small businesses with 50 or fewer full-time employees) in order for them to
create summer job opportunities for full-time students aged 15 to 30, who
intend to return to their studies in the following school year. The 2018 Program
also provides details on eligible costs, activities, duration and hours of
work.
[19]
As per the Applicant Guide, the applications for
funding are assessed in terms of both the aforementioned eligibility criteria,
and seven assessment criteria, which also account for the national priorities.
[20]
According to the information contained on page 3
of the Applicant Guide, by way of five national priorities, the 2018 Program
supports the following:
- Employers
who intend to hire youth who are in underrepresented groups, including new
immigrant youth/refugees, Indigenous youth, youth with disabilities and
visible minorities;
- Small
businesses, in recognition of their contribution to the creation of jobs;
- Organizations
that support opportunities for official language minority communities;
- Organizations
that provide services and/or supports for the LGBTQ2 community;
- Organizations
that support opportunities in science, technology, engineering and
mathematics (STEM) and information and communications technology (ICT),
particularly for women.
[21]
Even more relevant to these proceedings, the
Applicant Guide outlines the fact that applicants are required to tick the “I attest” box, and thus attest to four (4) statements
in bulk, including the new Attestation Requirement that “Both the job and my organization’s core mandate respect
individual human rights in Canada, including the values underlying the Canadian
Charter of Rights and Freedoms as well as other rights. These include
reproductive rights and the right to be free from discrimination on the basis
of sex, religion, race, national or ethnic origin, colour, mental or physical
disability or sexual orientation, or gender identity or expression”. As a
guideline, the Applicant Guide indicates that the government “recognizes that women’s rights are human rights. This
includes sexual and reproductive rights — and the right to access safe and
legal abortions”.
[22]
The Applicant Guide further indicates, at page 4,
that the objective of the change (i.e. the new Attestation Requirement) is to “prevent Government of Canada funding from flowing to
organizations whose mandates or projects may not respect individual human
rights, the values underlying the Charter of Rights and Freedom and
associated case law. This helps prevent youth (as young as 15 years of age)
from being exposed to employment within organizations that may promote
positions that are contrary to the values enshrined in the Charter of Rights
and Freedoms and associated case law”.
B.
Relevant Facts
[23]
Mr. Alleyne submitted an affidavit and testified
that RTLT is a registered charity, incorporated under the Corporations Act,
RSO 1990, c C 38, carrying on business in Toronto and the GTA. As per Mr.
Alleyne’s affidavit, RTLT is a volunteer, non-sectarian human rights
organization dedicated, through education, to “upholding
the sacredness and inviolability of human life from conception to natural
death”.
[24]
Mr. Alleyne also confirms that in 2016, RTLT
applied for summer student funding in the amount of $28,800.00 and was approved
for the amount of $10,800.00. In 2017, RTLT applied for funding in the amount
of $29,184.00, but its application was denied as it was informed there were no
more funds available in its constituency. However, as it was revealed that the
reason for denying the funds to RTLT and other organizations was linked to these
organizations’ stand on abortion (exhibit A referred to in the affidavit of Mr.
Alleyne), RTLT and other organizations challenged the 2017 funding denial
before the Court. In November 2017, they settled with the Minister, received
funds, and the Minister acknowledged that their 2017 application for funding
had been denied based on criteria neither set out in the Applicant Guide nor
included in the MP’s list of local priorities for 2017 (exhibit B referred to
in the affidavit of Mr. Alleyne).
[25]
In December 2017, the 2018 Program was released
and the Attestation Requirement was introduced.
[26]
On December 20, 2017, RTLT applied for funding
under the 2018 Program by way of a paper application. Its representative did
not tick the “I attest” box and thus did not attest
to any of the four statements in the application. With its application, RTLT included
a letter objecting to the Minister’s Attestation Requirement and asking that
its application be processed on the basis of its own substitute statement, already
reproduced at paragraph 5 of this decision.
III.
Interlocutory Injunction
A.
The appropriate test
[27]
The parties agree that the test to be applied in
determining whether a stay or injunction can be granted is the one set forth by
the SCC in 1994 in RJR-Macdonald. It is a three-part conjunctive test in
which each element must be satisfied.
[28]
The applicant seeking the stay must thus
establish that there is a serious issue to be tried, that it will suffer
irreparable harm if the relief is not granted, and that the balance of
convenience lies in his favour.
[29]
The Courts have
confirmed that the injunction is an exceptional remedy (Teva Canada Limited
v. Sanofi-Aventis Canada Inc., 2011 FCA 149 at para12;
Aventis Pharma S.A. v Novopharm Ltd, 2005 FCA 390 at para
4). In Mylan Pharmaceuticals ULC v AstraZeneca Inc, 2011 FCA 312, the
Federal Court of Appeal confirmed the exceptional nature of the injunction
relief and indicated that as “the Supreme Court
recognized in RJR-Macdonald Inc., this is an unusual relief that
requires satisfaction of a demanding test” (at para 5). In Janssen v
AbbVie Corporation, 2014 FCA 112, the Federal Court of Appeal confirmed
that the test “is aimed at recognizing that the
suspension of a legally binding and effective matter – be it a court judgment,
legislation, or a subordinate body’s statutory right to exercise its
jurisdiction – is a most significant thing” (at para 20). The burden
imposed on the applicants is onerous.
B.
Serious issue
(1)
The applicants’ position
[30]
The applicants’ submissions on the serious issue
prong of the RJR-Macdonald tripartite test are limited to two paragraphs
in their memorandum.
[31]
They first submit that the threshold for
determining whether there is a serious constitutional issue to be determined is
a low one, and that this first part of the test will be satisfied if the matter
is not vexatious or frivolous. In this regard, and in response to a question
from the Court, the applicants present the 2018 Program as a perennial one,
rather than a yearly one, and argue that the relief sought in the interlocutory
injunction is therefore different than the relief sought in the Underlying Application
as the former is limited to the year 2018 while the latter impacts all
subsequent summer jobs programs. As per their conclusion, the situation therefore
does not give rise to the elevated test on the serious issue prong, and there
is thus no need for them to establish a likelihood of success in their
Underlying Application.
[32]
The applicants then contend that the operation
of the Minister’s decision, if found unconstitutional, impinges on sections 2(a),
2(b), and 15 of the Charter. They submit that the issue of the state
compelling its citizens to agree with its position on social issues in order to
receive government funding is a serious one. The applicants contend that the
Attestation Requirement constitutes compelled speech by the state, as it is forcing
them to agree to a specific political platform and to specific beliefs under
threat of being punished, by being denied eligibility to apply for and/or denied
funding on account of their beliefs.
[33]
They assert that the obligation to attest in
order to be allowed to apply and be eligible for funding breaches their freedom
of conscience, as well as their freedom of thought, belief, expression and
opinion protected by sections 2(a) and 2(b) of the Charter, breaches
their right to equality guaranteed by section 15, and cannot be saved
under section 1 of the Charter.
[34]
The applicants refer particularly to National
Bank of Canada v Retail Clerks’ international Union [1984] 1 S.C.R. 269,
where, at p 296, the SCC affirmed that “these
freedoms guarantee to every person the right to express the opinions he may
have; a fortiori they must prohibit compelling anyone to utter opinions that
are not his own”.
[35]
The applicants assert that it is not illegal to
advocate against abortion, that any individual in Canada holds the right to
either agree or disagree with abortion, as well as to hold different viewpoints
on any other social issue, and that punishing its citizens on the basis of
contrary views or beliefs infringes the right to equality protected by section 15
of the Charter.
(2)
The Minister’s position
[36]
The Minister affirms, at para 53-55 of its
memorandum, albeit as part of another argument, that in this case, the
injunction relief would effectively grant the applicants the ultimate remedy
sought in their Underlying Application, as the 2018 Program is not perennial,
but yearly, could change from year to year or even be eliminated. However, at
the hearing, the Minister accepted that the threshold for the serious issue nonetheless
remains the lower one, i.e., the “neither
vexatious nor frivolous” one. Even on this lower threshold, the Minister
submits that there is no serious issue to be made on the three (3) allegations
of a Charter breach and on the submission that the Minister’s decision
to add the Attestation Requirement is unreasonable.
[37]
First, the Minister argues that there is no
serious issue as it relates to section 2(b) of the Charter (freedom
of expression) as the 2018 Program is a voluntary one, and as no organization
is either compelled to apply or has a right to receive funding. The Minister
argues that the applicants are trying to assert a positive right’s claim under section 2(b),
seeking a positive entitlement of funding and a compelled access to government
funding, while the claim under section 2(b) has been interpreted as essentially
a negative right. The Minister submits that the factors allowing for a positive
claim under section 2(b) of the Charter are not satisfied as the
applicants’ claim is not grounded in a fundamental freedom of expression; the
applicants are rather seeking access to a particular statutory funding program,
the exclusion from which does not substantially interfere with their freedom of
expression (Baier v Alberta, 2007 SCC 31).
[38]
The Minister refers to case law in which the Federal
Court of Appeal held that freedom of expression in section 2(b) of the Charter
does not guarantee public funding for the propagation of one’s opinions, no
matter how sincerely held (Canadian Arab Federation v Canada, 2013 FC 1283
at para 93; affirmed by 2015 FCA 168; Human Life International In
Canada Inc v Minister of National Revenue, [1998] 3 FC 202 (FCA) at
para 18; Alliance for Life v Minister of National Revenue [1999] 3
FC 504 (FCA) at para 73).
[39]
Second, the Minister argues that there is no
serious issue as it relates to section 2(a) of the Charter (freedom
of conscience), as the government has no Charter obligation to provide
funding to groups such as RTLT so that they can support their views. In
addition, the Attestation Requirement does not interfere with any of the
applicants’ beliefs as it relates to the job and the core mandate
of RTLT.
[40]
Third, the Minister submits that there is no
serious issue as it relates to subsection 15(1) of the Charter, since
equality rights under section 15 belong to individuals and not to corporations,
and the applicants have not established prima facie, as required, that
the Attestation Requirement treats them differently or has a disproportionate
effect on them based on their membership in a group recognized as an enumerated
or analogous ground of discrimination nor that this treatment is discriminatory
(Kahkewistahaw First Nation v Taypotat, 2015 SCC 30 at para 19-21).
[41]
Finally, the Minister contends that there is no
serious issue as it relates to the reasonableness of the Minister’s decision to
require the Attestation Requirement, as the design of a funding program is
discretionary and largely immune from judicial intervention.
(3)
The Court assumes a serious issue exists
[42]
The serious issue component usually imposes a
low threshold, requiring only a preliminary assessment of the merits to ensure
that the underlying application is neither vexatious nor frivolous (RJR-Macdonald,
at para 55). However, certain circumstances warrant the elevated test of “likelihood of success” as per the SCC in RJR-Macdonald,
at para 51. Hence where a favourable decision on the interlocutory motion effectively
grants the relief sought in the underlying judicial review application, an
elevated standard for the establishment of a serious issue applies. In such
circumstances, the applicant is required to demonstrate that the underlying application
for judicial review is likely to succeed.
[43]
The parties both submit that the lower threshold
apply in these proceedings. However, paradoxically, at para 53 of its
memorandum, when addressing the balance of convenience test, the Minister states
that granting the relief on the interlocutory injunction would, in fact, grant
the relief sought by the applicants in the Underlying Application.
[44]
Questioned by the Court on the issue of the
proper threshold, the applicants responded that the relief sought in the
interlocutory injunction will not grant the relief in the Underlying Application
as the program is a perennial program, and the injunction would grant the
relief solely for the year 2018 while the Underlying Application would not be
limited to that year.
[45]
On the other hand, counsel for the Minister
confirmed to the Court that the 2018 Program is an annual one, designed and
released yearly at the discretion of the Minister, that it is not perennial and
that it could even be eliminated.
[46]
The Court is not persuaded that the low
threshold proposed by the parties is the appropriate one in the circumstances. However,
given the conclusion on the two other parts of the three-part conjunctive test,
the Court need not resolve this situation and will assume, without deciding,
that a serious issue exists.
C.
Irreparable harm
(1)
The applicants’ position
[47]
In support of their motion, the applicants
limited their evidentiary record to Mr. Alleyne’s affidavit and the six (6)
exhibits he introduced: (A) a copy of an article by Ms. Amenda Connoly
published on April 13, 2017, and titled “Government
looking to shut down summer job grants for anti-abortion groups”; (B) a copy
of a two-page letter dated November 23, 2017, from the Department of Justice
Canada to 3 organizations, including RTLT, confirming their agreement, the
payment of funding for the year 2017 and the amounts to be paid; (C) the 28-page
Canada Summer Jobs 2018 Applicant Guide; (D) a copy of RTLT’s application
for funding under the 2018 Program, dated December 20, 2017; (E) a copy of a
receipt from Canada Post confirming delivery of an item in Brampton, Ontario,
on December 22, 2017; and (F) copy of an email message dated January 3, 2018, from
hrsdc-rhdcc to RTLT, confirming receipt of the application for funding under
Canada Summer Jobs.
[48]
The applicants assert that they will suffer irreparable
harm if the stay is not granted. In regard to the threshold they must meet to
establish irreparable harm, the applicants submit that where there is an
alleged breach of constitutional rights, the threshold is a lower one, and the
applicants simply need to demonstrate that there is a reasonable likelihood
or probability of irreparable harm.
[49]
The applicants further contend that the harm
flowing from a breach of constitutional rights, which the applicants claim will
be suffered if relief is not granted, constitutes irreparable harm. They advance
that where there is a potential Charter breach, irreparable harm is made
out because such breaches are assumed not to be compensable through damages (RJR-Macdonald,
at para 60-61; Tlicho Government v Canada (Attorney General), 2015 NWTSC 9
at para 66-68; Siksika Health Services v Health Sciences Association of
Alberta, 2017 CanLII 61259 (AB LRB) at para 21).
[50]
The applicants reassert the protected right to
freedom, and the fact that, facing the choice of either violating their
conscience by agreeing to the Attestation Requirement or facing the denial of a
government service, amounts to coercion by the state that cannot be compensated
(National Council of Canadian Muslims (NCCM) v Attorney general of Quebec,
2017 QCCS 5459 [NCCM] ).
[51]
In addition, the applicants submit that the irreparable
harm manifests itself in several other forms, such as the loss of funding, harm
to the organization’s activities, loss of opportunity for Mr. Battista, and adverse
impact on all those affected by the Attestation Requirement.
(2)
The Minister’s position
[52]
The Minister responds that the applicants have
not established irreparable harm.
[53]
The Minister disagrees with the lower threshold set
forth by the applicants. Relying on case law from the Federal Court of Appeal
and the Federal Court, the Minister argues to the contrary that the applicants
must demonstrate that irreparable harm will result; alleged harm must
not be speculative or hypothetical and the applicants must present evidence at
a convincing level of particularity demonstrating a real probability that
unavoidable irreparable harm will result if the injunction or stay is not
granted.
[54]
Furthermore, the Minister submits that the lower
standard put forth by the applicants is not permitted in cases where a party
asserts a breach of constitutional rights. Irreparable harm must instead be
established independently of arguments regarding the constitutionality of the
measure at issue and cannot simply be inferred based upon a potential Charter
breach that has yet to be determined.
[55]
The Minister submits that the applicants have
not provided clear and convincing evidence that irreparable harm will result
either (1) to the organization RTLT, as it provided no evidence, information,
financial documents or any other evidence regarding monetary harm; (2) to his
president, the applicant Mr. Alleyne, as his personal beliefs are not in play
in signing the attestation for the organization; or (3) to Mr. Battista as he
submitted no sworn evidence on the impact of the Attestation Requirement.
[56]
Finally, the Minister confirms her willingness
to agree to expedite the hearing of the applicants’ Underlying Application on
the merits to ensure that it takes place well before the final start date for
summer jobs, set for July 22, 2018.
(3)
Irreparable harm has not been established
[57]
Under this second prong of the test, the
question is whether the applicants have provided clear and convincing evidence demonstrating,
on a balance of probabilities, that it will suffer irreparable harm between now
and the time the Underlying Application is adjudicated upon.
[58]
At para 63 of RJR-Macdonald, the SCC
described the duties of the Court in assessing irreparable harm as: “At this stage the only issue to be decided is whether a
refusal to grant relief could so adversely affect the applicants’ own interests
that the harm could not be remedied if the eventual decision on the merits does
not accord with the result of the interlocutory application”.
[59]
At para 65 and 66, the SCC acknowledged the
difficulty in assessing irreparable harm in interlocutory applications
involving Charter rights, and outlined that one reason is that the
notion of irreparable harm is closely tied to the remedy of damages, but that
damages are not the primary remedy in Charter cases (para 65). Hence, the
SCC then concluded: “Therefore, until the law in
this area has developed further, it is appropriate to assume that the
financial damage which will be suffered by an applicant following a refusal of
relief, even though capable of quantification, constitutes irreparable harm”
(RJR-Macdonald, at para 66, emphasis added).
[60]
The Federal Court of Appeal has since developed
case law that runs contrary to the applicants’ argument that the irreparable harm
threshold is lower in Charter cases, or that irreparable harm flows from
the allegations of a Charter breach. In Canada (Attorney General) v
United States Steel Corp, 2010 FCA 200 [US Steel], where the
appellant raised allegations that the legislation at issue contravened section
11 of the Charter, the Court stated that “The
jurisprudence of this Court holds that the party seeking the stay must adduce clear
and non-speculative evidence that irreparable harm will follow if
the motion for a stay is denied. It is not sufficient to demonstrate that
irreparable harm is “likely” to be suffered. The alleged irreparable harm may
not be simply based on assertions” (at para 7, emphasis added).
[61]
Madam Justice Kane reviewed the case law in
a case involving section 8 of the Charter in Professional
Institute of the Public Service of Canada v. Canada (Attorney
General), 2015 FC 1101 [Professional Institute of the Public Service of
Canada]. Given the urgency of the present matter, and for economy of time,
I refer to her conclusion that the Federal Court of Appeal “has found that irreparable harm must be established
independently of arguments regarding the constitutionality of the measures at
issue and cannot be inferred based on a potential Charter breach that has yet
to be determined” (Professional Institute of the Public Service of
Canada, at para 154; Groupe Archambault Inc. v. Cmrra/Sodrac
Inc., 2005 FCA 330 at para 16; International Longshore and
Warehouse Union, Canada v Canada (Attorney General), 2008 FCA 3).
[62]
In setting the standard, the Federal Court of Appeal
stated that “there must be evidence at a convincing
level of particularity that demonstrates a real probability that unavoidable
irreparable harm will result unless a stay is granted. Assumptions,
speculations, hypotheticals, and arguable assertions, unsupported by evidence,
carry no weight” (Glooscap Heritage Society v Canada (National
Revenue), 2012 FCA 255 at para 31).
[63]
The applicants submitted case law from the
Superior Courts of the Northwest Territories and Québec as well as from the
Alberta Labor Relations Board in support of their position. However, even if the
Court assumed that this case law supports their argument, the Federal Court of
Appeal stated otherwise, and this Court is bound to follow the teachings of the
Federal Court of Appeal. The doctrine of stare decisis provides that “a lower court is bound by particular findings of law made by
a higher court to which decisions of that lower court could be appealed,
directly or indirectly” (Tuccaro v Canada, 2014 FCA 184 at para 18).
The Court can only depart from the stare decisis principle in
exceptional circumstances, described by the SCC in Carter v Canada (Attorney
General), [2015] 1 S.C.R. 331 at para 44. The applicants have not addressed
this issue, and have presented no circumstances that would justify this Court to
depart from the Federal Court of Appeal’s position.
[64]
Hence, the Court cannot retain the applicants’
proposition that the irreparable harm threshold is lower given the allegations
of a Charter breach, nor that irreparable harm flows from said
allegations.
[65]
On irreparable harm, the Court is therefore left
with Mr. Alleyne’s allegations about the other impacts resulting from the failure
to attest, in terms of loss of funding, harm to the organization’s activities,
loss of opportunity for Mr. Battista, and adverse impact on all those affected
by the Attestation Requirement.
[66]
Unfortunately, the applicants have provided no
evidence to support these allegations of irreparable harm. They provided no
documentary evidence pertaining, for example, to the RTLT’s constitution, mandate,
financial situation, size, sources of funding, human resources or hiring plans.
They have thus failed to establish, by clear and convincing evidence, that
irreparable harm will occur to the organization. The Court is left with Mr.
Alleyne’s assertions in that regard, which fails to meet the aforementioned
threshold of irreparable harm.
[67]
As argued by the Minister, there is no more evidence
of irreparable harm to Mr. Alleyne, who is not personally required to sign the
application form and thus not personally required to attest to the Attestation
Requirement. The application form must be signed by an authorised
representative of the organization and refers to the job and the core mandate
of the organization, not to the signatory’s own personal beliefs.
[68]
Turning now to the harm claimed to Mr. Battista,
no sworn evidence was submitted by him. The Court is left to rely on
unsubstantiated general assertions of harm which fail to meet the aforementioned
threshold of irreparable harm.
[69]
Finally, the same conclusion applies regarding
the argument that other organizations would be negatively impacted by the new
Attestation Requirement, as no evidence has been adduced in support of these
allegations.
[70]
In conclusion, the applicants’ allegations of
irreparable harm remain unsubstantiated, and the applicants have failed to meet
their burden in this regard.
D.
Balance of convenience
(1)
The applicants’ position
[71]
The applicants submit that the balance of
convenience favours them as the Charter issues are significant and
serious, whereas the government would suffer no impact if the Attestation
Requirement was stayed. They raise that (1) the government has not pointed to
any public problem that relates to the need for the Attestation Requirement,
and its decision does not prevent any identifiable harm; (2) the applicants experience
grave and irreparable harm from the requirement to agree to attest or lose a
government benefit; (3) citizens hold and share certain views on the issue of
abortion, but they do not breach the law; (4) citizens are free to hold and
share different beliefs without threat from the state; (5) the law adopted for
the public good must be “coherent and complete”
(NCCM, at para 58) while the actions of the Minister do not
indicate transparent, “coherent and complete” government
decision-making; (6) section 7 of the Act does not grant the Minister the
power to design a program that limits its citizens’ Charter rights; and (7)
public interest does not here gravitate in favour of enforcing legislation.
[72]
Furthermore, the applicants contend that granting
the stay would preserve the status quo as the Minister did provide
funding to RTLT in 2016 and in 2017 without the completed Attestation
Requirement.
(2)
The Minister’s position
[73]
The Minister responds that (1) contrary to the
applicants’ argument, granting the stay would upset the status quo by
altering the criteria for evaluation and assessment of the funding applications
as the program was launched in December 2017 and is currently underway; (2) promotion
of the public interest must be presumed, and weighs in favour of the Minister;
(3) in any event the 2018 Program, with the Attestation Requirement, is in the
public interest; and (4) the public interest in the 2018 Program outweighs the
applicants’ speculative financial harm.
(3)
The balance of convenience, public interest and status
quo considerations favours the Minister
[74]
Under the third component of the three-part
test, the balance of convenience assessment, the Court must determine which of
the parties will suffer the greatest harm from the granting or the denial of
the injunction, pending the decision on the Underlying Application (RJR-Macdonald,
at para 67). Important to these proceedings, the SCC also stated that the role
of public authorities in protecting the public interest is an important factor
in assessing the balance of convenience.
[75]
The SCC, again in RJR-Macdonald, at para
73, indicates that “When a private applicant alleges
that the public interest is at risk that harm must be demonstrated”. On
the other hand, in the case of a public authority, the SCC teaches us that the
onus of demonstrating irreparable harm to the public is less than that of a
private applicant (RJR-Macdonald, at para 76), and that the test will “nearly always be satisfied simply upon proof that the
authority is charged with the duty of promoting or protecting the public
interest and upon some indication that the impugned legislation, regulation or
activity was undertaken pursuant to that responsibility. Once these minimal
requirements have been met, the court should in most cases assume that
irreparable harm to the public interest would result from the restraint of that
action” (RJR-Macdonald, at para 76).
[76]
The Court is satisfied that the Minister is
indeed charged with the promotion of the public interest. Her powers, duties
and function, stated in subsection 5(1) of the Act, “extend
to and include all matters relating to human resources and skills development
in Canada or the social development of Canada over which Parliament has
jurisdiction and which are not by law assigned to any other Minister,
department, board or agency of the Government of Canada”. As per subsection
5(2) of the Act, theses powers must be exercised: (a) relating to human
resources and skills development with a view to improving the standard of
living and quality of life of all Canadians by promoting a highly skilled and
mobile workforce and an efficient and inclusive labour market; and (b) relating
to social development with a view to promoting social well-being and income
security.
[77]
Under the authority of section 7 of the Act, the
Minister may establish and implement programs designed to support projects or
other activities that contribute to the development of the human resources of
Canada and the skills of Canadians, or that contribute to the social
development of Canada, and the Minister may make grants and contributions in
support of the programs. The Act thus grants broad discretion to the
Minister.
[78]
In addition, legislation intended to create job
opportunities for Canadians has been held to constitute legislation in the
public interest (US Steel at para 23), and the principles governing
harm to the public interest have been found to apply to policies as well as
statutes (Canada v Ishaq, 2015 FCA 90 at para 11-15). It stems from
these premises that a policy intended to create job opportunities for young
Canadian students is to be considered in the public interest.
[79]
The Court is thus satisfied that irreparable
harm to the public interest has been established, and that this tilts the
balance of convenience in favour of the Minister (especially in a context
where, conversely, the applicants have not demonstrated that they will suffer
any irreparable harm at their end).
[80]
On the issue of the status quo, the parties
agree that preserving said status quo weighs in favour of granting a
stay. However, they disagree on what constitutes status quo in this
particular context.
[81]
The applicants assert that the status quo
must be construed as the situation that prevailed in 2016 and 2017, when there
was no Attestation Requirement and they received funding. The Minister contends
that the status quo is rather the situation as it stands presently, i.e.
maintaining the 2018 Program that has been adopted pursuant to the valid exercise
of the Minister’s powers, and that is currently under way as designed and
deployed by the Minister in December 2017.
[82]
As the status quo refers to the situation
that currently exists (Black’s Law Dictionary, 10th edition, p
1633), the Court sides with the Minister and is satisfied that, as of January
2018, maintaining the status quo means keeping the program as it stands.
Reverting to the situation that prevailed in 2016 and 2017 would, it seems,
rather amount to the status quo ante.
[83]
The Court thus concludes that granting the
relief sought by the applicants would upset the current state of affairs, and
thus weighs in favour of denying the interlocutory injunction.
[84]
The applicants have not convinced the Court that
the harm they expect to suffer in the absence of a stay outweighs the harm that
will be caused to the public interest by a suspension of the Attestation
Requirement. In the circumstances of this case, the balance of convenience
therefore does not favour granting the stay requested by the applicants.
IV.
Decision on the interlocutory injunction
[85]
In conclusion, I will dismiss the applicants’
motion, as I am not satisfied that they have met the three parts of the
conjunctive test set forth by the SCC in RJR-Macdonald.
ORDER
THIS COURT’S ORDER is that:
1.
The applicants’ motion is dismissed;
2.
No costs are granted.
"Martine St-Louis"