Monday, June 17, 2024
ADVT 
National

English Montreal School Board Votes To Launch Bill 21 Court Challenge

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 26 Sep, 2019 07:34 PM

    MONTREAL - The English Montreal School Board has voted in favour of challenging Quebec's religious symbols legislation in court.

     

    The board's commissioners voted Wednesday evening to hire a law firm to determine the "appropriate legal recourse" against the provincial government over the validity of the law known as Bill 21.

     

    It will seek to mount a case invoking Section 23 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, which guarantees minority language educational rights to English-speaking minorities in Quebec.

     

    Despite the planned legal action, the board will continue to apply the law, as all other school boards across the province have done.

     

    Bill 21, which came into effect in June, prohibits public servants deemed to be in positions of authority, including teachers, judges and police officers, from wearing religious symbols, such as turbans, kippas and hijabs.

     

    There is a grandfather clause exempting those who were employed before the bill was tabled in the spring — as long as they stay in their current jobs.

     

    The province's largest French-language school board, the Commission scolaire de Montreal, has said it has dealt with five teachers affected by the law this year, four of whom agreed to remove their symbols while one did not.

     

    The Coalition Avenir Quebec government has defended the secularism law, saying it enjoys strong support among Quebecers.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Former Ontario Provincial Police Union Leaders On Trial For Fraud

    Former Ontario Provincial Police Union Leaders On Trial For Fraud
    TORONTO - Three leaders of Ontario's provincial police union set up a scheme that used a travel company and consulting firm to defraud union members, prosecutors told the group's trial Tuesday.

    Former Ontario Provincial Police Union Leaders On Trial For Fraud

    OPP No Longer Releasing Gender Of People Charged With Crimes

    OPP No Longer Releasing Gender Of People Charged With Crimes
    Ontario Provincial Police say they are no longer releasing the gender of people who are charged with crimes or that of their alleged victims, citing concerns over privacy and a broader shift on the issue of gender identity.    

    OPP No Longer Releasing Gender Of People Charged With Crimes

    Kevin O'Leary's Wife Charged In Boat Crash That Left Two Dead, Three Injured

    Kevin O'Leary's Wife Charged In Boat Crash That Left Two Dead, Three Injured
    SEGUIN TOWNSHIP, Ont. - The wife of celebrity businessman Kevin O'Leary and an American man have been charged in connection with a boat crash that left two people dead and three others injured.

    Kevin O'Leary's Wife Charged In Boat Crash That Left Two Dead, Three Injured

    Group Calls For Catholic Bishops To Release Names Of Clergy Accused Of Abuse

    A group of survivors of sexual abuse in the Catholic Church has called for Canadian bishops to follow in the footsteps of some American counterparts and release the names of clergy facing credible misconduct allegations.    

    Group Calls For Catholic Bishops To Release Names Of Clergy Accused Of Abuse

    Alberta Property Owner Who Shot Suspected Thief Facing Lawsuit

    Alberta Property Owner Who Shot Suspected Thief Facing Lawsuit
    CALGARY - A southern Alberta man who shot at suspected thieves on his rural property is being sued by one of the people.    

    Alberta Property Owner Who Shot Suspected Thief Facing Lawsuit

    Federal Judge Grants B.C. Injunction Against Alberta's Turn-Off-The-Taps Law

    CALGARY - A Federal Court judge has granted the British Columbia government a temporary injunction against an Alberta law that could have limited oil exports to other provinces.    

    Federal Judge Grants B.C. Injunction Against Alberta's Turn-Off-The-Taps Law