Monday, December 29, 2025
ADVT 
National

Churches challenge B.C. COVID-19 health orders

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 02 Mar, 2021 01:12 AM
  • Churches challenge B.C. COVID-19 health orders

A lawyer for a group of British Columbia churches that are challenging the province's COVID-19 rules prohibiting in-person religious services argued Monday the orders reflect a "value judgment."

Paul Jaffe says the provincial health officer's orders allow secular gatherings such as in-class education and food distribution for people in need to continue, while discriminating against the churches and their congregants' right to freedom of religion.

He told the court his clients — which include the Riverside Calvary Chapel in Langley, Immanuel Covenant Reformed Church in Abbotsford and the Free Reformed Church of Chilliwack — have been careful to adopt safety protocols similar to those approved by Henry in places that remain open.

Jaffe also argued the province has not provided medical justification showing that the virus is spreading through church services and posing a greater risk to the public than other activities that remain allowed, including outdoor assemblies over matters of public interest or controversy.

Provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry told a news conference last month that churches were operating with safety measures in place throughout the summer and fall, but as the pandemic worsened, so did transmission in faith settings.

Henry and the province have said they are confident the health orders are in accordance with the law, including the Charter of Rights and Freedoms.

Hearings over the churches' petition are set to continue Tuesday.

Jaffe works with the Justice Centre for Constitutional Freedoms, a Calgary-based legal advocacy group that's also asking the court to dismiss tickets of up to $2,300 each for the alleged violations of the health orders by the churches.

B.C. Supreme Court Chief Justice Christopher Hinkson dismissed an injunction request in February by Henry and B.C.'s attorney general, whose lawyers argued churchgoers who are breaking COVID-19 rules would be more likely to comply with a court order.

Hinkson said he did not condone the churches' conduct and he was satisfied with the province's argument that the public could suffer from transmission of the virus where people are unsafely attending gatherings.

But he said during a hearing that the province was putting the court in an "impossible position" before the churches' own petition is heard this week.

Hinkson said he was also concerned that the administration of justice could be brought into disrepute if an injunction was granted but not enforced if the Crown found it would not be in the public interest to prosecute people who refused to adhere to it.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Close U.S. election shows power of individual vote

Close U.S. election shows power of individual vote
As results trickled in from those key states on Wednesday, anxious expat Americans from those states watched the ongoing count with at least some degree of satisfaction.

Close U.S. election shows power of individual vote

Brief power outage affects thousands in Vancouver

Brief power outage affects thousands in Vancouver
A notice on the BC Hydro website blamed a transmission circuit failure for the problem.

Brief power outage affects thousands in Vancouver

Canada faces instability after U.S cliffhanger

Canada faces instability after U.S cliffhanger
The U.S. presidential race remains too close to call, with millions of votes still being counted in battleground states including Michigan, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Georgia and North Carolina.

Canada faces instability after U.S cliffhanger

Vancouver Police closes suspicious Marpole incident file

Vancouver Police closes suspicious Marpole incident file
According to surveillance video, a woman and man were involved in an altercation along West 59th before two men arrived minutes later in a white SUV.

Vancouver Police closes suspicious Marpole incident file

Aviation pioneer Max Ward dies at 98

Aviation pioneer Max Ward dies at 98
Family friend Jacquie Perrin says Ward collapsed yesterday at his home in Edmonton and died shortly after in hospital, surrounded by his family and 20 days short of his 99th birthday.

Aviation pioneer Max Ward dies at 98

Liberals continue filibuster over WE affair

Liberals continue filibuster over WE affair
Liberal MPs occupied most of two hours with ruminations on the role of Parliament, the proper business of the ethics committee, and the value of the organizations the other parties' MPs want to examine.

Liberals continue filibuster over WE affair