Wednesday, March 11, 2026
ADVT 
National

Supreme Court of Canada to look at request for religious records through B.C. law

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 20 Nov, 2025 02:00 PM
  • Supreme Court of Canada to look at request for religious records through B.C. law

The Supreme Court of Canada has agreed to hear a case about applications for access to personal information held by Jehovah's Witnesses congregations.

The congregations withheld information from two former members who applied under B.C.'s Personal Information Protection Act for records about themselves, on the basis it was confidential religious communication.

After mediation failed, an adjudicator was assigned to look into the case on behalf of the B.C. information and privacy commissioner.

The congregations argued that disclosing the disputed records, even to an adjudicator, would amount to a violation of their elders' Charter rights. 

The adjudicator found elements of the B.C. information protection law infringed the constitutional guarantee of freedom of religion, but concluded the breach was justified under Section 1 of the Charter.

The adjudicator ordered that the information be disclosed to her so she could determine whether it had been properly withheld from the requesters.

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Sean Kilpatrick

MORE National ARTICLES

New AI minister says Canada won’t ‘over-index’ on AI regulation

New AI minister says Canada won’t ‘over-index’ on AI regulation
Canada's new minister of artificial intelligence said Tuesday he'll put less emphasis on AI regulation and more on finding ways to harness the technology's economic benefits.

New AI minister says Canada won’t ‘over-index’ on AI regulation

12 more temperature records broken in B.C. as hot weather persists

12 more temperature records broken in B.C. as hot weather persists
Another dozen temperature records have fallen in British Columbia thanks to the ongoing spell of warm weather brought to the province by a ridge of high pressure.

12 more temperature records broken in B.C. as hot weather persists

'Sleeping in cars': Saskatchewan ombudsman slams delayed aid to wildfire evacuees

'Sleeping in cars': Saskatchewan ombudsman slams delayed aid to wildfire evacuees
Saskatchewan's ombudsman says Premier Scott Moe's government is failing to provide immediate food, shelter and basic information to the thousands forced from their homes in recent weeks by wildfire.

'Sleeping in cars': Saskatchewan ombudsman slams delayed aid to wildfire evacuees

Duke of Edinburgh to make three stops in Canada, attend Canada Day celebrations

Duke of Edinburgh to make three stops in Canada, attend Canada Day celebrations
The Duke of Edinburgh is scheduled to visit Prince Edward Island later this month, just weeks after King Charles opened Parliament and read the throne speech.

Duke of Edinburgh to make three stops in Canada, attend Canada Day celebrations

Malfunctioning brakes suspected in B.C. ferry truck crash that delayed Friday sailing

Malfunctioning brakes suspected in B.C. ferry truck crash that delayed Friday sailing
Police in Powell River say a pickup truck hit a ramp on a BC Ferries vessel on Friday morning. 

Malfunctioning brakes suspected in B.C. ferry truck crash that delayed Friday sailing

'General acceptance': A year of banning cellphones in Canadian classrooms

'General acceptance': A year of banning cellphones in Canadian classrooms
Sixteen-year-old Roha Akram was skeptical when teachers in Calgary announced a cellphone ban during the first assembly of the school year.

'General acceptance': A year of banning cellphones in Canadian classrooms