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February 14, 2003
Human rights bill needs
work, labour leaders say
Union officials dissect
legislation during day-long workshop
PATRICIA
DSOUZA
The day began with a rousing
game of diversity bingo, in which social groups replace numbers on the bingo
card. But as getting-to-know-you games go, this one was a stretch.
There were plenty of grandparents
and people over six-feet tall, but not a single person of African ancestry.
By the end of the game no one had a full card, but everyone knew exactly how
many left-handers were present. And just about all participants realized they
had a long way to go toward understanding what diversity in Nunavut really means.
The day-long human rights
workshop on Feb. 7 was the final event of Iqaluit Union Week, organized by the
Northern Territories Federation of Labour (NTFL), to coincide with a meeting
of the Public Service Alliance of Canada (PSAC).
Fridays workshop
was a line-by-line examination of Nunavuts proposed human rights law.
A report from the workshop will be presented to a legislative assembly standing
committee reviewing the bill.
The group, made up mostly
of union organizers from Yellowknife, took a dim view of the bill. But theyve
been through this process before. The Northwest Territories passed a similar
law in the most recent sitting of its legislative assembly, after more than
two years of public debate.
"We got nowhere. We
came up against a wall called the legislature," said Bob Haywood, president
of the NTFL, during a public discussion about the bill on Feb. 6. "I feel
like here were going to run into the same thing."
Most agreed that the bill
is a progressive piece of legislation, but far from perfect. "There are
flaws in it," Haywood said.
Some aspects of the bill,
such as the definition of disability, which is so broad it includes alcohol
and drug addiction, and the inclusion of the word "harassment," are
major steps forward, some said.
Harassment is not in the
Yukon or NWT human rights acts. "They would not go near it in the NWT when
we brought it up," said Debbie McLaughlin, PSACs regional rep for
the NWT and Nunavut.
The definition of family
status, however, is so narrow it sets the bill two steps back.
It includes "the status
of being related to another person by blood, marriage or adoption," but
makes no provisions for same-sex relationships, even though sexual orientation
is a prohibited ground for discrimination. It also may not extend to the Inuit
practice of custom adoption, some participants said.
Some things are absent
altogether. "On the issue of pay discrimination, the act is totally silent,"
said Jean-François Des Lauriers, PSACs regional executive vice-president.
"Were kind of scratching our heads about why this is the case."
But the most glaring omission
is the lack of a human rights commission, a structure that would investigate
claims and educate Nunavummiut about the law.
While the bill sets out
guidelines for a human rights tribunal, that is only the judicial arm of the
body. Members of the tribunal would hear cases but you would no more file a
complaint with them than you would file a court case with Judge Bev Browne.
Premier Paul Okalik, the
minister of justice, spoke of creating a "small, simple body" when
he introduced the bill in November.
"In Inuit culture,
you try and deal with a problem as it comes up, as soon as possible, so it does
not fester. We dont want a huge body that would be costly and slow,"
he told Nunatsiaq News during the sitting of the assembly in Pangnirtung.
But while several Canadian
jurisdictions operate with only one body, they usually incorporate the tribunal
function into the commission not the other way around, as the Nunavut
bill seems to do.
"The fact that there
is no commission in this bill seems like really quite a serious flaw,"
said Shelley Wright, director of the Akitsiraq Law School and a specialist in
human rights issues.
But thats not all.
The most severe punishment outlined by the bill is a $25,000 fine.
Thats just the cost
of doing business for many big corporations, said Shawn Hoey, regional vice-president
for the Union of Northern Workers.
In addition, the offence
and fines section of the bill does not take into account traditional forms of
punishment, which may not involve money at all. Thats a major omission
for a bill that seeks to make "special provision for Inuit culture and
values that underlie the Inuit way of life."
Despite its lofty goals,
the bill makes little attempt to reflect the values of Inuit society, union
representatives said, and it doesnt include many of the suggestions put
forth by elders at community consultations before the bill was drafted.
"Elders and Inuit
want the act to include Inuit values they want a system that is not totally
adversarial, in which the healing process is parallel to the process of formal
complaint. Thats absent from the legislation," Des Lauriers said.
"Im a little
leery that were moving much too fast with legislation that is not really
what people want."
Whether the legislation
is what the people of Nunavut want hasnt yet been determined though. There
were only two Inuit participants in the Friday session.
Submissions to the legislative
assembly on the review of the human rights bill will be referred to the standing
committee Ajauqtiit, chaired by Uqqummiut MLA David Iqaqrialu. The committee
has not announced whether it will open its sessions to the public.
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