The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Bare breast battle brews

- BY THE CANADIAN PRESS

An eastern Ontario city is facing a human rights complaint over its policy on female toplessnes­s in pools, more than two decades after it became legal for women bare their breasts in public in the province.

Cornwall Mayor Leslie O’Shaughness­y said a woman has complained to the Human Rights Tribunal of Ontario alleging the pool policy discrimina­tes on the basis of gender.

“Our policy states that girls over the age of 10 must wear a top,’’ O’Shaughness­y said. “The clause that’s in there is specific to females.’’

City councillor­s will decide whether to fight the complaint or change the policy in the coming weeks, and were set to be briefed by city lawyers Monday evening, he said.

The tribunal has not yet scheduled a hearing on the matter and the full details of the complaint haven’t been made public, but O’Shaughness­y noted the complainan­t doesn’t live in the city or the surroundin­g counties.

The complaint also targets an eastern Ontario water park and seven hotel companies.

Cornwall’s toplessnes­s policy dates back to 1996 — and O’Shaughness­y said he doesn’t know the reasoning behind it.

Bare breasts were a matter of public debate at the time.

In December of that year, the Ontario Court of Appeal ruled that a woman’s topless stroll down a street in Guelph, Ont., was not obscene, making it legal for all women in Ontario to be topless in public.

Municipal policies on the issue have been challenged in a number of Ontario cities on the basis of that ruling in the intervenin­g years.

Cambridge, Ont., eliminated its toplessnes­s policy after two women were charged with trespassin­g for swimming topless in protest of the city’s ban in 1997.

Guelph, Ont., changed its policy after an eight-year-old girl was told by city staff to cover up while she was in a wading pool wearing only a swim bottom in 2015.

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