Sunday, December 28, 2025
ADVT 
National

Restaurant discriminated against patron: HRTO

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 13 Aug, 2020 09:06 PM
  • Restaurant discriminated against patron: HRTO

A Toronto restaurant discriminated against a woman who uses mobility devices and "publicly humiliated" her by refusing to let her use its bathroom four years ago, the Human Rights Tribunal of Ontario has ruled.

In a decision issued this week, the tribunal says Haily Butler-Henderson "experienced adverse treatment" when she was repeatedly refused access to a downstairs washroom at the Pentagram Bar and Grill on Aug. 19, 2016.

The tribunal says a server also physically blocked Butler-Henderson's path and loudly proclaimed to other patrons that the then-23-year-old was accepting the risk and liability associated with going down the stairs.

"Instead of asking the applicant if she needed any accommodation or assistance to use the facilities, the server made a spectacle of the applicant in front of its other patrons which was discriminatory," adjudicator Romona Gananathan wrote.

"She was eventually allowed to use the facilities but only with conditions."

The tribunal ordered Pentagram, which did not participate in the proceedings, to pay Butler-Henderson $10,000 in compensation for injury to dignity, feelings and self-respect.

The restaurant's current management and staff must also undergo training on their obligations under the Human Rights Code of Ontario, and post signs related to those responsibilities on the premises.

Butler-Henderson welcomed the ruling on social media, saying it "sets a huge precedent for disabled people in the future."

Her lawyer, Lorin MacDonald, said the ruling will "serve restaurateurs to take notice."

"While it was distressing to have the restaurant owners completely ignore the human rights application and to wait so long for validation of the discrimination, the decision is important for two reasons: it is now a matter of public record, and it initiated and continues a worldwide discussion around the broader issue of access to public restrooms," MacDonald said in a statement.

In her complaint, Butler-Henderson, who has spina bifida and uses forearm crutches as a mobility aid, said the incident took place as she was waiting for friends at a nearby coffee shop.

Lineups for the washroom there were too long so she went down the block to Pentagram and asked for permission to use the facilities, she said.

Butler-Henderson said the server specifically cited her use of crutches as a reason to deny her access to the washroom, stressing the restaurant would be held liable if she were to fall.

At one point, she said, the server physically barred her from going down the stairs. Eventually, staff relented and allowed her to use the washroom, but Butler-Henderson said the incident was humiliating and infringed on a basic human right.

The human rights complaint argues people with disabilities have the right to assume a certain amount of risk for themselves.

Butler-Henderson said it was not the server's place to assess her ability to navigate the stairwell on the basis that she has a disability and relies on a mobility aid.

MORE National ARTICLES

StatCan probes pandemic hit to inflation

StatCan probes pandemic hit to inflation
Statistics Canada says Canadians' buying patterns changed so much during the COVID-19 pandemic that its measure of consumer inflation went a little wobbly.

StatCan probes pandemic hit to inflation

Police say Abbotsford, B.C., homicide targeted

Police say Abbotsford, B.C., homicide targeted
Investigators say a shooting that killed a 43-year-old man east of Vancouver on Friday night was likely targeted.

Police say Abbotsford, B.C., homicide targeted

PM: wage subsidy to be extended to December

PM: wage subsidy to be extended to December
The federal government is extending its program to subsidize wages in companies hit hard by the COVID-19 pandemic until December, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Monday.

PM: wage subsidy to be extended to December

8 positive tests: Four sites in Kelowna, B.C., now linked to COVID-19 exposures

8 positive tests: Four sites in Kelowna, B.C., now linked to COVID-19 exposures
Health officials are monitoring several cases of COVID-19 exposure in Kelowna, B.C., and say they've identified two more locations where people may have contracted the respiratory illness.

8 positive tests: Four sites in Kelowna, B.C., now linked to COVID-19 exposures

Toronto Police need your help in locating missing 23 year old Arvinder Bhullar

Toronto Police need your help in locating missing 23 year old Arvinder Bhullar
The Toronto Police Service is requesting the public’s assistance in locating a missing man. Arvinder Bhullar, 23, was last seen on Thursday, July 9, 2020, at approximately 6 p.m., in the Martin Grove Road and Steeles Avenue West area.

Toronto Police need your help in locating missing 23 year old Arvinder Bhullar

Canadian economy adds 953,000 jobs in June

Canadian economy adds 953,000 jobs in June
Nearly one million more Canadians had jobs in June, Statistics Canada says, as businesses forced to close by the pandemic began to reopen and the country continued to recoup steep losses over March and April.

Canadian economy adds 953,000 jobs in June