Cape Breton Post

Gay firefighte­r wins compensati­on for abuse

- BY KEITH DOUCETTE THE CANADIAN PRESS

A firefighte­r has won compensati­on after enduring abuse and equipment tampering at a Halifax naval base because he is gay.

The Workers’ Compensati­on Appeal Tribunal says the unidentifi­ed man was subject to “multiple incidents of traumatic events’’ while a firefighte­r for the Department of National Defence.

The man, now in his 50s, was a military and civilian firefighte­r at the base. He filed his appeal with the tribunal in February 2012 after his initial claim was rejected.

During a hearing last month, he testified that he endured insulting and humiliatin­g comments, was threatened with physical assault, and on one occasion discovered that part of his protective equipment — his breathing apparatus — had been tampered with.

“The worker discovered that his breathing apparatus . . . had been tampered with so as to allow outside air, gases and smoke to enter his facemask directly in the event of a fire,’’ the ruling says.

The tribunal also said the worker testified that co-workers posted gay pornograph­y in his dorm room.

Appeal commission­er K. Andrew MacNeil said he accepts the worker’s testimony as a credible, “believable narrative’’ and notes that no contrary evidence was provided by any party.

MacNeil said psychologi­cal reports are in “essential agreement’’ that the worker suffered a psychologi­cal disorder caused by his workplace experience­s.

“It is remarkable that the worker remained in the workplace as long as he did, and even more remarkable that the treatment to which he was subjected was allowed to continue through to the worker’s departure from the workplace,’’ wrote MacNeil.

The tribunal allowed the appeal and directed the Nova Scotia Workers’ Compensati­on Board to “assess the benefits payable in relation to the claim.’’

A spokeswoma­n with the compensati­on board said there would be no appeal of the tribunal’s ruling, which has since been implemente­d by the board.

The ruling follows a Federal Court case last March in which former navy sub-lieutenant Paul Ritchie asked for a judicial review of a Canadian Human Rights Commission decision to dismiss his claim of discrimina­tion based on sexual orientatio­n.

A December 2014 report from commission’s investigat­or concluded that, as the military itself admitted, Ritchie was at times treated differentl­y as he studied at the Naval Engineerin­g School in Halifax. The report alleges Ritchie overheard a commanding officer refer to him as a “faggot’’ while speaking to another officer and that the Canadian Armed Forces submitted the incident was noncorrobo­rated and was never reported to them at the time.

The report found that even in cases where Ritchie was treated differentl­y, there was no conclusive evidence it was due to his sexual preference. The court’s decision was reserved.

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