Sunday, June 21, 2026
ADVT 
National

P.E.I. Discriminates Against Mentally Ill By Denying Disability Benefits: Panel

The Canadian Press, 05 Apr, 2016 11:09 AM
    CHARLOTTETOWN — The Prince Edward Island government discriminates against the mentally ill by denying them disability benefits, a Human Rights Panel found Monday.
     
    Millie King of Queen County filed a complaint on behalf of her daughter, Laura, who has paranoid schizophrenia, after being told her condition is not covered by the province's Disability Supports Program.
     
    The DSP gives financial assistance to around 1,300 Islanders with disabilities, but people with mental illnesses have not been eligible since the program began about 15 years ago.
     
    "The only reason for the distinction is the nature of [Laura King's] disability," the panel wrote in its ruling. "This differential treatment offends her … and amounts to discrimination. The denial of an integrity is affected. Her fundamental human dignity is denied."
     
    Mike Dull, a lawyer for the King family, said it was difficult for them to file the complaint because of the stigma associated with mental illness.
     
    "They made a decision knowing that it could cause them humiliation," Dull said. "They saw a wrong that had been unaddressed for 15 years."
     
    During a three-day hearing in January, the government said its program is tailor-made for the needs of people with physical and intellectual disabilities, and that mental illness is explicitly excluded because its services are "not a fit" for this type of disability.
     
    Dull said this is not an excuse for the policy, but further evidence of its discrimination.
     
    Similar support programs in Nova Scotia and Ontario include disabilities resulting from mental illness.
     
    The panel awarded King $31,000 in damages and legal fees, and ordered the Disability Supports Program to change its practices to avoid further discrimination.
     
    Laura King suffers from delusions and social difficulties that make it hard for her to work. She lives with her mother, which Dull said can be difficult on both of them.
     
    The DSP said it is considering how to respond to the ruling.
     
    Dull said this is just the first step to recognition.
     
    "It's a very modest recognition of the hurt and humiliation that one goes through," Dull said. "Laura recognizes it's not just her here."
     
    Dull said he and his team intend to file a class action on behalf of other Islanders affected by the policy.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Mike Duffy Wants To Keep Some Of His Diary Entries Private

    OTTAWA — Sen. Mike Duffy may no longer be part of the Conservative caucus, but he's still trying to keep some of its secrets at his trial.

    Mike Duffy Wants To Keep Some Of His Diary Entries Private

    Surrey Gang Conflict: 5 Indo-Canadian Men Suspected Of Violence Charged; RCMP Looking For Sixth Man

    Surrey Gang Conflict: 5 Indo-Canadian Men Suspected Of Violence Charged; RCMP Looking For Sixth Man
    Mounties say 31-year-old Davjit Randhawa, 19-year-old Sukhdeep Dhaliwal, 20-year-old Chaten Dhindsa, 18-year-old Gurpreet Dhudwal and 28-year-old Ravinder Samra are facing charges that include forcible confinement, robbery and assault.

    Surrey Gang Conflict: 5 Indo-Canadian Men Suspected Of Violence Charged; RCMP Looking For Sixth Man

    Winnipeg Hospital ERs Continue To Have The Longest Wait Times In Canada: CIHI

    Winnipeg Hospital ERs Continue To Have The Longest Wait Times In Canada: CIHI
    WINNIPEG — New data shows Winnipeg hospitals still have the longest emergency room wait times in Canada.

    Winnipeg Hospital ERs Continue To Have The Longest Wait Times In Canada: CIHI

    Manitoba Liberal Leader Rana Bokhari Criticizes Snail-Mail Holiday Cards, Prefers Digital

    Manitoba Liberal Leader Rana Bokhari Criticizes Snail-Mail Holiday Cards, Prefers Digital
    The Liberal Party sent out a holiday greeting on social media Tuesday, extolling the virtues of electronic holiday cards over physical ones.

    Manitoba Liberal Leader Rana Bokhari Criticizes Snail-Mail Holiday Cards, Prefers Digital

    B.C. Privacy Report Recommends Government Stop Triple Deleting Its Emails

    VICTORIA — A former privacy commissioner says British Columbia's government must drop its policy of deleting potentially sensitive emails in an effort to improve its freedom-of-information practices.

    B.C. Privacy Report Recommends Government Stop Triple Deleting Its Emails

    B.C. Family Attempted To Claim $50-Million Prize Anonymously Before Finally Stepping Up

    B.C. Family Attempted To Claim $50-Million Prize Anonymously Before Finally Stepping Up
    VANCOUVER — It's been a $50-million dollar question across Canada for the last 21 months: who owns the lone winning ticket from a 2014 Lotto Max draw.

    B.C. Family Attempted To Claim $50-Million Prize Anonymously Before Finally Stepping Up