Tuesday, December 30, 2025
ADVT 
National

Federal assisted death panel should be disbanded: advocacy groups

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 29 Oct, 2015 12:53 PM

    OTTAWA — A three-member federal panel on assisted death created under the Conservative government should be disbanded, two advocacy groups argue.

    Dying with Dignity Canada and the B.C. Civil Liberties Association put forward a blueprint with recommendations for leadership on physician-assisted death on Thursday, including a call for the panel to halt its work.

    "It is necessary for a number of reasons," said Wanda Morris, CEO of Dying with Dignity. "It could have been a worthwhile exercise to have a federal panel to look at this, but the panel that was appointed was three members, two of them have been openly opposed to assisted dying, so much so that they were actually witnesses for the Crown against legalization."

    The groups are also encouraging the incoming Liberal government to collaborate with a provincial-territorial advisory group also examining the issue.

    "They've created a really stellar panel of experts ... They haven't just gone one way," Morris said. "They're really wrestling with the nuts and bolts in a way that just blows out of the water anything that the federal panel has done."

    Last February, the Supreme Court of Canada recognized the right of clearly consenting adults who endure intolerable physical or mental suffering to end their lives with a physician's help.

    The court gave Parliament one year to come up with a set of laws to govern assisted suicide, though former justice minister Peter MacKay mused in June that the government — Conservative or otherwise — would require more time to address the decision.

    In the summer, the federal government appointed the three-member panel.

    It has defended its independence and has conducted research tours in Europe and Portland, Ore.

    Meanwhile, the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops and the Evangelical Fellowship of Canada have also released a declaration on euthanasia and assisted suicide.

    The statement, endorsed by Jewish and Muslim leaders, advocates for palliative care and urges the federal, provincial and territorial governments to "enact and uphold laws that enhance human solidarity."

    The group held a news conference on Parliament Hill on Thursday.

    "I personally would not be in favour of allowing any deaths, but given the fact that we live in a democratic society and laws are made to deal with extreme situations, then I would say we would have to respect the ones that are as limiting as possible," said Terrence Prendergast, the archbishop of Ottawa.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Richard Linklater, Barefoot Prisoner Walks Out Of Whitehorse Courthouse After Shedding Guard, Shoes

    Richard Linklater, Barefoot Prisoner Walks Out Of Whitehorse Courthouse After Shedding Guard, Shoes
     A warrant has been issued for a Yukon man after he slipped out the front door of the Whitehorse courthouse.

    Richard Linklater, Barefoot Prisoner Walks Out Of Whitehorse Courthouse After Shedding Guard, Shoes

    Divers Scour Rossland, B.C., Reservoir For Clues In 2014 Homicide

    Divers Scour Rossland, B.C., Reservoir For Clues In 2014 Homicide
    Cpl. Dave Tyreman says the RCMP Underwater Recovery Team will search the depths of a Rossland reservoir on Monday.

    Divers Scour Rossland, B.C., Reservoir For Clues In 2014 Homicide

    Free Reservations For Some BC Ferry Foot Passengers To Continue Until 2016

    Free Reservations For Some BC Ferry Foot Passengers To Continue Until 2016
    It means walk-on passengers will continue to have the option of a free booking service, guaranteeing boarding on sailings from Tsawwassen to Salt Spring, Galiano, Saturna, Pender or Mayne islands.

    Free Reservations For Some BC Ferry Foot Passengers To Continue Until 2016

    Search For Two People On Mackenzie River In N.W.T. Turns To Recovery Effort

    Search For Two People On Mackenzie River In N.W.T. Turns To Recovery Effort
    Mounties says personal items discovered during the search have led police to believe the pair drowned.

    Search For Two People On Mackenzie River In N.W.T. Turns To Recovery Effort

    Nunavut Coroner Agrees With Inquest That Suicide A Public Health Crisis

    Nunavut Coroner Agrees With Inquest That Suicide A Public Health Crisis
    Padma Suramala says that might break the logjam in the territory's inability to implement major parts of Nunavut's suicide prevention strategy.

    Nunavut Coroner Agrees With Inquest That Suicide A Public Health Crisis

    Representation Of Women On Boards Varies By Industry, Company Size: Report

    Representation Of Women On Boards Varies By Industry, Company Size: Report
    A review of more than 700 companies listed on the Toronto Stock Exchange has found that the number of women on corporate boards and in executive positions varies by industry and company size.

    Representation Of Women On Boards Varies By Industry, Company Size: Report