Friday, December 12, 2025
ADVT 
National

'Swastika Trail' Stands: Court Won't Interfere With Ontario Township Vote

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 21 Jun, 2019 07:33 PM

    TORONTO — An Ontario township was within its rights to maintain the name of a street called Swastika Trail, despite the passionate objections of some residents, Divisional Court has ruled.

     

    In its decision, the panel found no reason to interfere with Puslinch council's votes against changing the name of the private road.


    "Council's decision was evidently disappointing to the applicants and likely does not accord with the beliefs of many Canadians," Divisional Court said in its ruling. "(But) there is no basis for finding that council's decisions were unlawful."


    Swastika Trail, near Puslinch Lake in central southwestern Ontario, was named in the 1920s. The road is owned by a private corporation controlled by Paul Wyszynski, one of the 54 residents who live on it. However, the trail runs into a municipal road and is used as a public thoroughfare.


    In response to several complaints about the name, the township asked staff in June 2017 to report on a possible change. Staff recommended a change with the consent of residents on the road but Wyszynski opposed any change.


    Council did pass a resolution to "encourage" the Bayview Cottagers Association — comprising 82 members, 54 with homes on Swastika trail — to consider a renaming but a majority of the organization voted to keep it.


    After hearing from several delegations at a heated meeting in December 2017, council voted 4-1 against any name change.


    Two residents, Randy Guzar and William Knetsch, sought a judicial review of the township's actions. They and others in the area argue the swastika is a symbol that has "represented hatred, white supremacy and anti-Semitism" since the Second World War.


    Guzar, who has lived on the road for the past 18 years, said he associates the swastika with the bigotry and genocide of the Nazis.


    "He does not want to be linked with the symbol, and he says that when he presents his driver's licence or health card, he is routinely asked if he is a white supremacist or a neo-Nazi," court said in its decision.


    Among other things, Guzar objected to how the cottagers association held its vote, including distributing a pamphlet about the positive history of the swastika before the Nazis used it.


    Legally, he and Knetsch argued council had illegally based its decision on what the association wanted. The township argued it made its own decision. Divisional Court sided with the township.


    "There is no doubt that, to many people in Canada in the 21st century, the swastika is an abhorrent symbol, reminiscent of the atrocities perpetrated by the Nazis," the court said. "However, the discrete issue raised on this application is whether council for the Township of Puslinch acted lawfully when it voted not to change the name of the road."


    On that point, the court said, the record clearly shows council did not simply defer to the cottagers association but considered various options before deciding as it did.


    In the war era, the city of Berlin, Ont., changed to the existing Kitchener, while the community of Swastika in northern Ontario changed to Winston. However, residents of Swastika, named in about 1908, objected and the original name was kept.

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Committee Of MPs Decides Against Calling For School-Bus Seatbelts

    OTTAWA — A committee of MPs who probed bus-passenger safety in Canada has decided not to call for seatbelts to be installed in Canadian school buses, urging further study instead.

    Committee Of MPs Decides Against Calling For School-Bus Seatbelts

    Government Asks Supreme Court For Urgent Stay Of Solitary Confinement Ruling

    Government Asks Supreme Court For Urgent Stay Of Solitary Confinement Ruling
    In a hand-delivered application on Tuesday, the Department of Justice tells the Supreme Court of Canada that it needs the stay for safety reasons.

    Government Asks Supreme Court For Urgent Stay Of Solitary Confinement Ruling

    Vancouver Mayor Kennedy Stewart Blames Ottawa For Continued Growth Of Homelessness In City

    Vancouver Mayor Kennedy Stewart Blames Ottawa For Continued Growth Of Homelessness In City
    Preliminary figures released Wednesday show the homeless count rose by two per cent to more than 2,200 in the past year, the same rate that it rose in the year previous.

    Vancouver Mayor Kennedy Stewart Blames Ottawa For Continued Growth Of Homelessness In City

    Data Show Alcohol The Main Cause Of Substance-Related Deaths In Hospital

    Data Show Alcohol The Main Cause Of Substance-Related Deaths In Hospital
    VANCOUVER — Heavy drinking landed Dawn Nickel in the emergency department four times — twice for alcohol poisoning and two more times when she took pills with alcohol to try and kill herself.

    Data Show Alcohol The Main Cause Of Substance-Related Deaths In Hospital

    Federal Government Making Electronic Logs Mandatory For Truck, Bus Drivers

     Transport Canada says it will require all commercial drivers to have electronic logging devices.

    Federal Government Making Electronic Logs Mandatory For Truck, Bus Drivers

    Openly Gay Legion Member Presses Ahead With Discrimination Complaint

    A Cape Breton man who says he faced discrimination at his local Royal Canadian Legion because he is gay is pressing ahead with a human rights complaint.

    Openly Gay Legion Member Presses Ahead With Discrimination Complaint