National Post

Top court to hear appeals by Christian law school

- Diana Mehta

The Supreme Court of Canada agreed Thursday to hear two appeals involving a private Christian university that demands all students sign a code of conduct forbidding sexual intimacy outside heterosexu­al marriage.

Trinity Western University has been seeking accreditat­ion in all provinces for future graduates of its proposed law school but has faced pushback from law societies in Ontario, British Columbia and Nova Scotia over its controvers­ial conduct code.

The Ontario and British Columbia cases, which pit religious freedom against equality rights, are now before the country’s top court.

Trinity Western’s “community covenant” or code of conduct requires students to abstain from, among other things, obscene language, harassment, lying, stealing, pornograph­y, drunkennes­s and sexual intimacy “that violates the sacredness of marriage between a man and a woman.”

Critics say it discrimina­tes against people in the LGBTQ community who are looking to enter the legal profession.

But the university, which is located in the Fraser Valley community of Langley, B.C., and enrols about 4,000 students annually, has said its law school will allow evangelica­l Christians to study law in an environmen­t that supports their beliefs.

It also notes that it does not ban admission to gay, lesbian, bisexual or transgende­r students or faculty, and said its community off ers “an environmen­t in which sexual minorities are supported, loved and respected.”

The university said Thursday that it was pleased the Supreme Court would resolve the issue.

“We believe that the court will protect the TWU religious community,” university president Bob Kuhn said in a statement.

The university added that most jurisdicti­ons in Canada have recognized its bid to operate a law school as “a positive step that increases the number of law school spaces in Canada.”

In Ontario, the Law Society of Upper Canada voted in April 2014 not to accredit Trinity Western’s planned law facility, citing its controvers­ial covenant as discrimina­tory.

That prompted a court fight that involved the Court of Appeal for Ontario siding with the law society after finding the university discrimina­ted against the LGBTQ community. Trinity Western then said it would take its fight to the Supreme Court.

In British Columbia, however, the university scored a victory in November when an appeal court overturned that province’s l aw society’s refusal to accredit the school’s law graduates.

Trinity Western was also engaged in a legal fight with the Nova Scotia Barristers’ Society, but that regulatory body decided not to go further after the province’s appeal court denied its efforts to prevent the university’s law graduates from getting accreditat­ion.

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