Cape Breton Post

INQUIRY TOLD HUMAN RIGHTS HAVE BEEN BREACHED

Inquiry told human rights have been breached

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Lawyers for people with disabiliti­es argued Tuesday that keeping people with intellectu­al disabiliti­es in a Nova Scotia hospital ward for over a decade — rather than a community home — breached basic human rights most citizens enjoy.

It was the final day of a marathon human rights hearing in Halifax, attended by 80 people in a packed hotel meeting room and being monitored by advocates for people with disabiliti­es across the country.

Beth MacLean and Joseph Delaney have testified the Department of Community Services violated the province’s Human Rights Act by forcing them to remain at the Emerald Hall psychiatri­c ward in Halifax even though they had been medically discharged.

The human rights complaint they submitted in 2014 argued they should have been provided housing in a “small options’’ home after psychiatri­sts medically discharged them.

Small-options homes are small housing units, with usually three or four residents, where day-to-day support is provided to people with intellectu­al disabiliti­es.

In his closing statements, the complainan­ts’ lawyer, Vince Calderhead, said there is enough evidence to find discrimina­tion against people with disabiliti­es occurred because the province deliberate­ly didn’t provide this housing.

“It’s about holding government­s

accountabl­e for their actions and their inactions. It’s about accountabi­lity,’’ he told the inquiry board chair, J. Walter Thompson.

At the core of Calderhead’s legal argument is a comparison with welfare services, where citizens in need can usually obtain housing in the community as a right.

He contrasted the treatment of people without disabiliti­es receiving welfare or public housing as a right against the testimony that MacLean and Delaney had languished in the psychiatri­c hospital for years as the Department of Community Services told staff and family they had no appropriat­e housing for them in the community. Calderhead told the inquiry chairman this was an instance of government targeting a specific group in society for inferior treatment.

In the case of MacLean, that began when she was placed as a girl in an adult institutio­n in the Annapolis Valley at the age of 14.

“Restrictin­g her to a congregate care, institutio­nalized setting between 1986 and 2000 was discrimina­tory, and that would be appropriat­e for everyone, particular­ly a child, a female child,’’ argued the lawyer.

Once MacLean and Delaney were in the psychiatri­c hospital, in a special unit intended for people with combinatio­ns of mental illness and intellectu­al disabiliti­es, it seemed they couldn’t get out, the human rights inquiry has heard.

“I can’t say that nobody who hears about this case isn’t stunned, isn’t gobsmacked at the prospect of someone sitting for 16 or 17 years in a hospital where she didn’t need to be,’’ Calderhead said of MacLean’s case.

Calderhead also cited the case of Sheila Livingston­e, a woman with disabiliti­es who died while the case wound its way through various delays.

He said it was discrimina­tory that she spent years at the psychiatri­c hospital, only to be moved to housing hundreds of kilometres from her closest family after suffering repeated abuse.

Calderhead said one sign the province has always known that Delaney and MacLean were capable of living outside of the hospital is that it has recently moved to place them in small options homes, after the human rights case began.

He and Claire McNeil, the lawyer for the Disability Rights Coalition, are relying heavily on a 2012 landmark Supreme Court of Canada decision that ruled that Jeffrey Moore, a British Columbia student with disabiliti­es, was entitled to receive special accommodat­ion to access and benefit from public education.

However, Thompson raised a question during McNeil’s final arguments, asking her if there isn’t a difference between the two cases because Moore was refused almost all service, while in the Nova Scotia case the complainan­ts are arguing that they didn’t receive a proper quality of public service.

McNeil responded that in fact the people with disabiliti­es hadn’t received “meaningful services’’ from the province when waiting lists last for more than a decade.

The lack of small options housing and the crucial support systems stemmed back to the 1990s, when changes in federal funding prompted the province to put a moratorium on small options home, the hearing has heard.

The moratorium was a conscious decision by the provincial government, under various political parties, that always posed problems to human rights, Calderhead argued.

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? Beth MacLean, the woman at the centre of a human rights case dealing with persons with disabiliti­es and their attempts to move out of institutio­ns, testifies at the inquiry in Halifax in March 2018. Lawyers for people with disabiliti­es made final arguments Tuesday.
CP PHOTO Beth MacLean, the woman at the centre of a human rights case dealing with persons with disabiliti­es and their attempts to move out of institutio­ns, testifies at the inquiry in Halifax in March 2018. Lawyers for people with disabiliti­es made final arguments Tuesday.

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