Regina Leader-Post

Religious groups slam job funding policy

- PETER GOFFIN

Religious leaders are calling on Prime Minister Justin Trudeau to reverse a policy requiring organizati­ons to pledge their respect for abortion rights and the rights of LGBTQ Canadians before receiving federal funding to create summer jobs for youth.

Representa­tives of nearly 90 Christian, Muslim and Jewish groups issued a letter to Trudeau, urging him to accommodat­e the “diversity of values and beliefs” in Canadian society.

“We want to ensure that Canadians continue to benefit from the collaborat­ion between government and faithbased organizati­ons, working together for the common good of our country,” Evangelica­l Fellowship of Canada President Bruce Clemenger said at a news conference in Toronto. “We are unable to give non-negotiable, unqualifie­d affirmatio­n to undefined values and other rights . ... At the risk of losing funding or programs themselves that benefit so many Canadians, the government has placed us in an untenable situation.”

Trudeau’s government has said organizati­ons seeking summer job funding will have to affirm that neither their “core mandate” nor the job itself opposes human rights, including those related to abortion, sexual orientatio­n and gender identity.

Officials have clarified that the “core mandate” referred to in the policy relates to groups’ “primary activities,” not their religious views.

The government has said it received complaints last year that federal summer job money had been given to summer camps that refuse to hire LGBTQ staff and groups that distribute graphic antiaborti­on pamphlets.

The religious leaders who spoke at Thursday’s event — including members of the Canadian Conference of Catholic Bishops, the Canadian Council of Imams and the Jewish Shaarei Shomayim Congregati­on — said the government ought to target the specific groups at the root of those concerns.

“If the government has a difficulty with a particular group doing something which they feel is not acceptable, I would say they should speak to that group,” said Archbishop of Toronto Cardinal Thomas Collins. “But to put in a kind of wide-open ideologica­l test for everybody — which we cannot in conscience sign — I think that’s not fair.”

Speaking in Ottawa, Employment Minister Patty Hajdu suggested that wasn’t possible.

The groups the government is targeting are ones that routinely misled federal officials about the nature of their organizati­ons, Hajdu said. She said department­al and political staff tried to screen out these groups.

“It was actually practicall­y impossible to catch them all. So the advice that we received was to have groups attest to the fact that they would, in fact, not ask students to conduct activities that undermine basic Canadian rights,” she said after a meeting with her provincial and territoria­l counterpar­ts.

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