Difference between revisions of "Course:Law3020/2014WT1/Group U"

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[[Course:Law3020/2014WT1/Group_U/Summary_Of_Case|Summary of ''Trinity Western University v. British Columbia College of Teachers'']]
 
[[Course:Law3020/2014WT1/Group_U/Summary_Of_Case|Summary of ''Trinity Western University v. British Columbia College of Teachers'']]
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Trinity Western University vs. BC College of Teachers
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Facts:
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• TWU established a teaching training program
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• TWU applied to the BCCT for permission to assume complete responsibility for the program
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o Rationale: TWU wanted to have the full program re`flect Christian world view
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• BCCT refused
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o Rationale: contrary to the public interest to have discriminatory practices (Christian against homosexuals)
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Issues:
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• TWU:
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o BCCT can ensure teachers are properly trained, competent, and of good character
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o They are not authorized to deal with religious beliefs
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• BCCT:
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o Teaching programs must reflect human rights value (equality)
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o Program must prepare teachers for the public school environment, which is diverse.
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• TWU’s program is not capable of doing so
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• Reconcile religious freedom with equality concerns of students in BC public school system (public interest)
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History:
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• Trial judge:
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o Approved TWU’s program for 5 years subject to a number of conditions
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• Court of appeal:
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o BCCT acted within jurisdiction but there is no reasonable foundation to support their decision
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Analysis:
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1. Is consideration of discriminatory practices within the jurisdiction of the BCCT?
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• BCCT:
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o Teaching programs must reflect human rights values
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o Must ensure programs prepare future teachers for the public school environment, particularly for he diversity of public school students
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• TWU:
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o BCCT was not created to render judgment on religious beliefs, enforce human rights, eradicate discrimination
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o S.4 of the Teaching Profession Act
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• Statutory interpretation: BCCT limited to establishing whether teachers are properly trained, competent, of good character
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o BCCT is not authorized to deal with discriminatory practices
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• Court:
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o Teachers are a medium for the transmission of values
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o Canada is diverse → must be understood by teachers
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o Need to respect and promote minority rights
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o Schools need to be free of bias, prejudice, intolerance
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o S.4 is not limited to determination of skill and knowledge
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o Conclusion: BCCT has jurisdiction to consider discriminatory practices in dealing with TWU’s application.
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2. Was the decision of the BCCT Council justified?
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• Standard of review
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• BCCT:
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o Use the standard of patent unreasonableness
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o Expertise in the field of education
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o Protect minority and human rights
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• TWU:
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o Standard of correctness
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o BCCT claims to protect minorities and human rights, but they are not experts of human rights
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• Court:
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o BCCT has a lack of expertise in human rights
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o BCCT is not the only gov’t actor entrusted with policy development
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o Good character cannot be expanded into evaluation of religious belief, freedom of association, right to equality
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o The appropriate standard of review is the standard of correctness
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• The evidence of discrimination
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• BCCT:
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o The document is discriminatory against homosexuals
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o Homosexual behaviour was in the list of biblically condemned practices
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o Homosexual behaviour = homosexual people
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• TWU:
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o Only homosexual behaviour is prohibited.
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o This is not enough to claim discrimination against homosexual people
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• Court:
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o TWU is designed to the heed the needs of people who share similar religious beliefs
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o The admission document is not sufficient to establish discrimination
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• It just deters certain people from applying to TWU
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• TWU doesn’t prevent homosexuals from becoming teachers.
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• This is not enough to say it is discriminatory
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o To say 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 religious, which co-exist with the right to equality
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3. Reconciliation of freedom of religion and equality rights
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• Religious freedom of those who want to attend TWU vs. equality concerns of students in BC’S public school system, parents, and society generally
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• Court: must reconcile the two rights
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o Neither freedom of religious nor equality rights (discrimination based on sexual orientation) is absolute
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o There is a difference between having a belief and acting upon it
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• Teachers from TWU can have religious beliefs without acting upon them in a discriminatory way.
 +
• If the teachers do act in discriminatory ways, BCCT can discipline them.
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• But BCCT cannot discipline them for simply having such belief.
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o Charter must be read as a whole. All rights are equal. When there are conflicts, must seek a balance that respects the importance of both sets of rights.
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• Court: TWU’s program must be allowed (to respect freedom of religion)
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o BCCT prevents students of TWU from expressing their religious beliefs freely.
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o There is not enough evidence to suggest teachers trained by TWU would not be qualified (no discriminatory conduct by any graduates)
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o S.93 of the Constitution Act 1867 enshrined religious public education rights into our constitution
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o Human Rights Act s.19
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o Religious institution is not considered to breach the Act where it prefers adherents of its religious constituency
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o Cannot be concluded that private institutions are protected by their graduates are unworthy in public service
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• Conclusion:
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o Reconciliation of the two rights → must find a common ground 
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o Allow TWU program but teachers cannot act in a discriminatory way once they graduate.
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Conclusion:
 +
• BCCT has jurisdiction to consider whether the program follows discriminatory practices under the public interest component of the Teaching Profession Act
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• No reasonable foundation to support the BCCT’s decision with regard to discrimination
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 +
  
 
[[Course:Law3020/2014WT1/Group_U/Natural_Law|Natural Law]]
 
[[Course:Law3020/2014WT1/Group_U/Natural_Law|Natural Law]]

Revision as of 17:34, 26 March 2014

Summary of Trinity Western University v. British Columbia College of Teachers

Trinity Western University vs. BC College of Teachers

Facts: • TWU established a teaching training program • TWU applied to the BCCT for permission to assume complete responsibility for the program o Rationale: TWU wanted to have the full program re`flect Christian world view • BCCT refused o Rationale: contrary to the public interest to have discriminatory practices (Christian against homosexuals) Issues: • TWU: o BCCT can ensure teachers are properly trained, competent, and of good character o They are not authorized to deal with religious beliefs • BCCT: o Teaching programs must reflect human rights value (equality) o Program must prepare teachers for the public school environment, which is diverse. • TWU’s program is not capable of doing so • Reconcile religious freedom with equality concerns of students in BC public school system (public interest) History: • Trial judge: o Approved TWU’s program for 5 years subject to a number of conditions • Court of appeal: o BCCT acted within jurisdiction but there is no reasonable foundation to support their decision Analysis: 1. Is consideration of discriminatory practices within the jurisdiction of the BCCT? • BCCT: o Teaching programs must reflect human rights values o Must ensure programs prepare future teachers for the public school environment, particularly for he diversity of public school students • TWU: o BCCT was not created to render judgment on religious beliefs, enforce human rights, eradicate discrimination o S.4 of the Teaching Profession Act • Statutory interpretation: BCCT limited to establishing whether teachers are properly trained, competent, of good character o BCCT is not authorized to deal with discriminatory practices • Court: o Teachers are a medium for the transmission of values o Canada is diverse → must be understood by teachers o Need to respect and promote minority rights o Schools need to be free of bias, prejudice, intolerance o S.4 is not limited to determination of skill and knowledge o Conclusion: BCCT has jurisdiction to consider discriminatory practices in dealing with TWU’s application. 2. Was the decision of the BCCT Council justified? • Standard of review • BCCT: o Use the standard of patent unreasonableness o Expertise in the field of education o Protect minority and human rights • TWU: o Standard of correctness o BCCT claims to protect minorities and human rights, but they are not experts of human rights • Court: o BCCT has a lack of expertise in human rights o BCCT is not the only gov’t actor entrusted with policy development o Good character cannot be expanded into evaluation of religious belief, freedom of association, right to equality o The appropriate standard of review is the standard of correctness • The evidence of discrimination • BCCT: o The document is discriminatory against homosexuals o Homosexual behaviour was in the list of biblically condemned practices o Homosexual behaviour = homosexual people • TWU: o Only homosexual behaviour is prohibited. o This is not enough to claim discrimination against homosexual people • Court: o TWU is designed to the heed the needs of people who share similar religious beliefs o The admission document is not sufficient to establish discrimination • It just deters certain people from applying to TWU • TWU doesn’t prevent homosexuals from becoming teachers. • This is not enough to say it is discriminatory o To say 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 religious, which co-exist with the right to equality 3. Reconciliation of freedom of religion and equality rights • Religious freedom of those who want to attend TWU vs. equality concerns of students in BC’S public school system, parents, and society generally • Court: must reconcile the two rights o Neither freedom of religious nor equality rights (discrimination based on sexual orientation) is absolute o There is a difference between having a belief and acting upon it • Teachers from TWU can have religious beliefs without acting upon them in a discriminatory way. • If the teachers do act in discriminatory ways, BCCT can discipline them. • But BCCT cannot discipline them for simply having such belief. o Charter must be read as a whole. All rights are equal. When there are conflicts, must seek a balance that respects the importance of both sets of rights. • Court: TWU’s program must be allowed (to respect freedom of religion) o BCCT prevents students of TWU from expressing their religious beliefs freely. o There is not enough evidence to suggest teachers trained by TWU would not be qualified (no discriminatory conduct by any graduates) o S.93 of the Constitution Act 1867 enshrined religious public education rights into our constitution o Human Rights Act s.19 o Religious institution is not considered to breach the Act where it prefers adherents of its religious constituency o Cannot be concluded that private institutions are protected by their graduates are unworthy in public service • Conclusion: o Reconciliation of the two rights → must find a common ground o Allow TWU program but teachers cannot act in a discriminatory way once they graduate. Conclusion: • BCCT has jurisdiction to consider whether the program follows discriminatory practices under the public interest component of the Teaching Profession Act • No reasonable foundation to support the BCCT’s decision with regard to discrimination


Natural Law

Positivism

Separation Thesis and Lon Fuller

System of Rights

Liberty-Paternalism

Law as Efficiency

Feminist Jurisprudence