Wednesday, February 4, 2026
ADVT 
National

Judges In Alberta Custody Case Ordered Boy Not To Wear Girls Clothes In Public

The Canadian Press, 25 Oct, 2016 01:28 PM
    MEDICINE HAT, Alta. — A sexual minorities expert says judges need to be better educated about gender identity after two Alberta family court judges ruled that a child born a boy couldn't wear girls clothes in public.
     
    The case involves a couple in Medicine Hat fighting over custody of the five-year-old.
     
    The mother supports what she says is the child's wish to identify and dress as a girl, but the father does not and blames the mother for the child's gender confusion.
     
    Last year, a judge ruled the child could only wear girls clothes in private. A second judge later upheld the decision.
     
    A third judge recently removed the restriction and said the child can choose what clothes to wear.
     
    "These kinds of decisions shouldn't be happening, particularly when our human rights legislation has changed," Kris Wells with the Institute for Sexual Minority Studies and Services at the University of Alberta said Monday.
     
    "Some of these attitudes need to be challenged and corrected."
     
    Wells has been helping the mother and said she doesn't want the family identified.
     
    He said the case makes it clear that the "next frontier" of awareness and education for the courts is gender identity, particularly involving young children.
     
    Wells said he hopes Alberta Justice will look at the case and support the judiciary in becoming more knowledgeable and inclusive about gender issues.
     
    Justice Minister Kathleen Ganley said in an emailed statement that while she can't comment on the specifics of the case, the government added gender identity and expression as prohibited grounds of discrimination to the province's human rights act last fall.
     
    "This step was a strong signal to let all Albertans know we support them. This is now law, and we expect all Albertans to follow the law," Ganley said.
     
     
     
    Although Wells has never before heard of a case like this in the courts, there have recently been others in Alberta that highlight a lack of judicial awareness.
     
    Three Alberta judges faced scrutiny for remarks they made during sexual assault trials. The most high-profile case centred on federal Judge Robin Camp, who was a provincial court judge in Calgary when he asked a rape complainant why she didn't keep her knees together. He has since apologized and had counselling and training.
     
    The Canadian Judicial Council is deciding whether he should keep his job.
     
    Angela Reid with the Trans Equality Society of Alberta said her group has been helping the mother in Medicine Hat in the last year and is encouraging her to file a human rights complaint against the first two judges.
     
    "We certainly believe she has grounds," Reid said. "Even with the order having been corrected, I would agree that there's been some harm done."
     
    The group emailed a short statement from the mother on Monday afternoon, where she said her goal is to educate the legal system.
     
    "My child is a human being and human rights apply at all ages," she said.
     
    The father was awarded primary custody by the second judge and that decision remains in place, said Reid. The mother may be able to show bias by the first two judges and get another chance, Reid suggested.
     
    She said the five-year-old is having a gender identity crisis but is too young to diagnosis as transgender.
     
    In the end, it doesn't matter, Reid said.
     
    Even if a boy just wants to wear girls clothes, he should be allowed to and not punished for it, she said.
     
    "What we are objecting to is an agent of the state — in the form of the judge — having a court order that limits the child's expression."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Ontario Offers Free Naxolone And Promises Better Monitoring Of Opioid Overdoses

    TORONTO — Ontario will expand access to Naxolone, an antidote for overdoses of opioids like fentanyl, as part of a new provincial strategy to combat an increasing number of addictions and deaths.

    Ontario Offers Free Naxolone And Promises Better Monitoring Of Opioid Overdoses

    Mounties In Langley, B.C., Search For Man Who Exposed Himself To Teen Girls

    Mounties In Langley, B.C., Search For Man Who Exposed Himself To Teen Girls
    Police say the girl's reported that they were walking on a street when they were approached by a man in a white panel van who asked them for directions.

    Mounties In Langley, B.C., Search For Man Who Exposed Himself To Teen Girls

    Study: More Than 45,000 Canadians Sought Treatment Abroad In 2015

    Study: More Than 45,000 Canadians Sought Treatment Abroad In 2015
    VANCOUVER — A new study released today by the Fraser Institute suggests 45,619 Canadians went outside the country for non-emergency medical treatment in 2015.

    Study: More Than 45,000 Canadians Sought Treatment Abroad In 2015

    No Jail Time For Man Who Assaulted Abbotsford Nurse

    No Jail Time For Man Who Assaulted Abbotsford Nurse
    A man who attacked a nurse at an Abbotsford, B.C., hospital will not serve time in jail.

    No Jail Time For Man Who Assaulted Abbotsford Nurse

    Nominees Announced For 2016 Surrey Business Excellence Awards

    Nominees Announced For 2016 Surrey Business Excellence Awards
    On Thursday, November 3, 2016, the Surrey Board of Trade will recognize 6 of Surrey’s best businesses and business people in different award categories at the Academy Awards style 18th Annual Surrey Business Excellence Awards.

    Nominees Announced For 2016 Surrey Business Excellence Awards

    Nobel-winning Astrophysicist Among Those Awarded The Order Of Nova Scotia

    Nobel-winning Astrophysicist Among Those Awarded The Order Of Nova Scotia
    McDonald, a retired professor originally from Sydney, N.S., was the co-winner of a Nobel prize for his work on subatomic particles known as neutrinos.

    Nobel-winning Astrophysicist Among Those Awarded The Order Of Nova Scotia