Friday, June 12, 2026
ADVT 
National

Bus driver with one eye wins discrimination case

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Jul, 2020 09:33 PM
  • Bus driver with one eye wins discrimination case

A city bus driver whose licence was revoked after she lost her eye to cancer has won her battle to have the relevant provincial regulations declared unconstitutional.

In her ruling this month, Ontario Superior Court Justice Jessica Kimmel decided the rules, aimed at enhancing road safety, are unfair to the monocular — those with sight in only one eye.

"These vision standards are based on, and perpetuate, the stereotype that monocular drivers are not able to safely drive public transit vehicles," Kimmel found. "They create or perpetuate a discriminatory disadvantage without allowing for individual exemption based on the actual driving capabilities and characteristics of individual monocular drivers."

Kimmel put her unconstitutionality finding on hold for 12 months to give the province time to redo the rules, and the driver who launched the case will have to remain unlicensed in the interim.

Liliana Di Cienzo, a bus driver with an unblemished driving record in Oakville, Ont., lost her right eye to cancer in October 2013 when she was 41 years old. As a result, the province revoked her Class C commercial licence under a section of the Highway Traffic Act that bars a person with one eye from holding the permit.

Court documents show Di Cienzo maintained she could drive safely using her left eye when she tried returning to work about a year after her eye removal.

The Ministry of Transportation, however, said vision regulations precluded her holding a licence, effectively ending her driving career.

"I was pretty much shocked," Di Cienzo, of Hamilton, said in an interview. "I was certain that I'd at least be given a road test to prove I could do it."

Di Cienzo, who is allowed to drive passenger vehicles, argued the rules discriminated against those with physical disabilities. Backed up by a provincial study from 1998, she argued little evidence exists to show the one-eyed — as a group — are unsafe commercial drivers, and she should have the chance to prove she can drive buses safely.

"The Ministry of Transportation found me guilty right away," she said. "They basically gave me a life sentence for doing nothing wrong."

After several failed legal manoeuvres, the province argued in court that the minimum vision standard at play is fair and related to important and reasonable safety considerations.

The rules do make a distinction based on a physical disability, the province conceded, but said they do not specifically single out those with one eye, because even people with both eyes functional might not meet the standards.

Several experts testified, with one arguing for the province that statistics show the monocular have a higher risk of crashes. Di Cienzo's experts assessed her capable of driving safely. Other provinces do allow individual exceptions based on functional assessments.

Despite the victory, Di Cienzo will have to wait at least 12 months before potentially getting her licence back. Kimmel refused her request to exempt her from the hold she put on the ruling, saying a test first needs to be in place for Di Cienzo to show she can indeed drive safely.

Di Cienzo's lawyer, Neil Wilson, said the ruling would affect Class-C licensing, which covers all buses other than school buses.

"It's an important recognition of what she has always said: that she should be assessed on her actual ability to drive safely rather than on her disability," Wilson said.

A similar case was unfolding in Belleville, Ont., he said, in which a client of his with albinism who used a "telescopic" lens to drive cars accident-free for 25 years lost his licence under changed rules.

Jenessa Crognali, a spokeswoman for Attorney General Doug Downey, said only that the vision standards are not discriminatory and, in any event, are justified to protect road safety.

MORE National ARTICLES

Langley Shooting Victim Ravinder Sandhu Is Dead

On February 7th, at approximately 9:35 p.m., Langley RCMP was called to the a parking lot in the 6300 block of 200th Street for a report of a shooting.

Langley Shooting Victim Ravinder Sandhu Is Dead

Mounties Looking For Missing 61-Year-Old Woman Monica Winter And Her Dog

Police immediately began a search and later confirmed she was last seen on February 7, 2020, leaving from work in the 1200-block of West Broadway Avenue in Vancouver.    

Mounties Looking For Missing 61-Year-Old Woman Monica Winter And Her Dog

Man Arrested On 2 Outstanding Warrants Faces 2 New Charges In Richmond

Man Arrested On 2 Outstanding Warrants Faces 2 New Charges In Richmond
The male was identified as Coleton SZALAY. SZALAY had a Canada-wide warrant stemming from a robbery out of Vancouver as well as a warrant for theft under $5,000 out of Richmond.  

Man Arrested On 2 Outstanding Warrants Faces 2 New Charges In Richmond

Pipeline Protests Hit B.C. Legislature And Canada's Rail Network

Hundreds of protesters blocked the entrances to the British Columbia legislature on Tuesday as demonstrations in support of Indigenous hereditary chiefs who oppose a pipeline project continued to flare across the country.

Pipeline Protests Hit B.C. Legislature And Canada's Rail Network

Provincial Health Officer Says Four People With Coronavirus In B.C. Doing Well

Dr. Bonnie Henry says the individuals in the Vancouver region are being monitored by health professionals and three of them are living in a home with others.

Provincial Health Officer Says Four People With Coronavirus In B.C. Doing Well

Changes To Popular Child Care Fund To Maximize Spaces

Changes To Popular Child Care Fund To Maximize Spaces
In the past 15 months, the Province has supported the fastest creation of licensed child care spaces in B.C.’s history.

Changes To Popular Child Care Fund To Maximize Spaces