Tuesday, December 16, 2025
ADVT 
National

Christian Law School Fights B.C. Law Society's Refusal To Call Grads To The Bar

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 Aug, 2015 12:22 PM
    VANCOUVER — A Christian university that forbids sexual intimacy outside heterosexual marriage is arguing the Law Society of British Columbia is violating the right to religious freedom of those who would graduate from its proposed law school. 
     
    Trinity Western University is asking B.C. Supreme Court to overturn the society's decision to deny accreditation to graduates due to the institution's so-called "community covenant," which prohibits sex outside of marriage between a man and a woman.
     
    The society accredited the proposed law school in April 2014, but reversed that decision last October after a vote by its members.
     
    The B.C. government subsequently revoked its own support, barring the school from enrolling students.
     
    "I expect over the next week you'll hear a lot about conflict of rights," said university lawyer Kevin Boonstra in court on Monday.
     
    "If anything ... the membership of the law society shows that if anybody's rights need protection, its religious minorities."
     
    The judicial review, scheduled for five days, is the third time the university has fought provincial law societies in court for refusing accreditation.
     
    The cases pit religious freedoms against same-sex equality rights, with each side arguing discrimination.
     
    Boonstra said Trinity's covenant is central to the private university's identity as an evangelical Christian institution. Trinity enrols about 4,000 students annually and is located in the Fraser Valley community of Langley.
     
    He said students are not screened for sexual orientation but must abide by the code of conduct.
     
    "It asks students to make a choice. If they come, they should understand what being part of an evangelical Christian educational institution is about, to make sure they understand what they are getting into."
     
    He said the covenant includes provisions for treating all students with respect, and there is no evidence of sexuality-based harassment within the university.
     
    Students can be disciplined for breaking the covenant, but Boonstra said there is no specific mechanism for reporting sexual-related breaches of the code.
     
    In its written reply, the society argued the covenant is discriminatory and runs contrary to equality rights of LGBTQ people set out in the charter. The code "seriously undermines the integrity and the foundation of the administration of justice," it said.
     
    Earl Phillips, executive director of Trinity's law school, said the case is about whether there is room in Canada for a minority group to exercise its beliefs together. About 12 per cent of Canadians identify as evangelical Christian, he said.
     
    "That's what we are seeking, space in Canada to live and work and study together as an authentic Christian university," Phillips said outside court.
     
    Kendra Milne, who represents intervener West Coast LEAF, said religious freedoms can be exercised in private, but graduates called to the bar become officers of the court and have public obligations.
     
    "I don't think anyone here is saying that Trinity Western should not be able to have a law school," she said outside court. "The issue is when we get to the public accreditation process."
     
    The university won a similar case in Nova Scotia earlier this year, but an Ontario court upheld the Law Society of Upper Canada's refusal to accept graduates.
     
    The Federation of Law Societies of Canada and the Alberta and Saskatchewan's bar associations have approved accreditation, while Manitoba and Saskatchewan have put decisions on hold.
     
    The school was originally slated to open in the fall of 2016, but Phillips now expects classes to be delayed at least two years.
     
    The case is expected to conclude in the Supreme Court of Canada.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Inuit Lose Bid To Block Seismic Testing Off Baffin Island

    Inuit Lose Bid To Block Seismic Testing Off Baffin Island
    A tiny Inuit hamlet on the coast of Baffin Island has lost its bid to block seismic testing off its shores.

    Inuit Lose Bid To Block Seismic Testing Off Baffin Island

    Family Looks On As Gravestone Unveiled For Slain Teen, Father In Winnipeg

    Family Looks On As Gravestone Unveiled For Slain Teen, Father In Winnipeg
    WINNIPEG — Family and friends have marked the one-year anniversary of a slain teen's body being recovered from Winnipeg's Red River.

    Family Looks On As Gravestone Unveiled For Slain Teen, Father In Winnipeg

    Small ISPs Ask CRTC To Let Them Run Wireless Networks

    Small ISPs Ask CRTC To Let Them Run Wireless Networks
    Canada's small Internet service providers are appealing a recent CRTC decision against their efforts to offer wireless services using the networks of Bell, Telus and Rogers.

    Small ISPs Ask CRTC To Let Them Run Wireless Networks

    Canadian Company Gets Patent For 20-Kilometre-High Space Elevator

    Canadian Company Gets Patent For 20-Kilometre-High Space Elevator
    PEMBROKE, Ont. — Blasting off into space may never look the same if one Canadian company has its way.

    Canadian Company Gets Patent For 20-Kilometre-High Space Elevator

    Boa Constrictor On The Loose In New Brunswick After Escaping From Cage

    Boa Constrictor On The Loose In New Brunswick After Escaping From Cage
    FREDERICTON — Police are on the hunt for a boa constrictor that went missing from a home in Fredericton, but they say the snake is not considered a threat to people.

    Boa Constrictor On The Loose In New Brunswick After Escaping From Cage

    Tension Rises At Conservative Event As Duffy Questions Continue On Campaign

    Tension Rises At Conservative Event As Duffy Questions Continue On Campaign
    OTTAWA — Tensions bubbled over at a campaign event in Toronto today when Conservative supporters interrupted reporters during the prime minister's press conference and hurled expletives at them as they were leaving the event.

    Tension Rises At Conservative Event As Duffy Questions Continue On Campaign