The Guardian (Charlottetown)

CLOW, M. Evelyn

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The funeral for M. Evelyn Clow was held Thursday, June 28, 2018 from MacLean Funeral Home Swan Chapel to St. Andrew’s United Church, Vernon where the service was conducted by The Reverend Karen MacNeill. The scriptures were read by Emily Perrin and Rhonda MacLurePer­rin. Words of remembranc­e were given by Jackie Sharkey and Danielle Sharkey, Lana Chaisson and Laurel Lee MacLure, and a special musical remembranc­e was shared by Lauchie MacLure. The procession­al hymn was “I, the Lord of Sea and Sky”. Vocalist Mary Lou MacLure’s recordings of “The Old Country Church” and “I See God” were played. The recessiona­l hymn was “I See a New Heaven’. The music director was Andrea Ellis. In attendance were members of the PEI Women’s Institute Board of Directors and the staff of the Dr. John Gillis Lodge. Honourary pallbearer­s were all members of the U.C.W. and alumni of the Flat River/South Pinette Women’s Institute. Pallbearer­s were Alan Buchanan, Jimmy Campbell, Victor Clow, David Cooper, Lauchie MacLure, Lynwood MacPherson and Ray Sharkey. Flowerbear­ers were Connor Chaisson, Lana Chaisson, Kaye Kennedy, Laurel Lee MacLure, Janice Panton and Jacqueline Sharkey. Interment took place in St. John’s Presbyteri­an Church Cemetery.

Several people with physical disabiliti­es will argue at a human rights hearing that the Nova Scotia government has effectivel­y discrimina­ted against them by failing to enforce a regulation that requires restaurant­s to have accessible bathrooms.

The five complainan­ts will challenge the province’s Department of Environmen­t at a Human Rights Commission board of inquiry Thursday, saying the language in the regulation is vague and does not take the experience­s of people with disabiliti­es into account.

“We’re only asking for the government to have a public health standard that applies to everybody — not just people who don’t use wheelchair­s,” said Warren

Reed, one of the complainan­ts.

Under Nova Scotia’s Health Protection Act, food establishm­ents must have washrooms available for the public in a “convenient location,” unless exempted by an administra­tor.

But while the regulation requires restaurant­s to have their bathrooms convenient­ly located, Reed said that sometimes they are inconvenie­nt — even inaccessib­le — for people with disabiliti­es.

Some establishm­ents, he said, have their washrooms up or down a set of stairs in a building that doesn’t have an elevator, while others may have doors that are difficult to open or stalls that aren’t wide enough.

Reed says Nova Scotia’s accessibil­ity standards are ambiguous as to where exactly they apply: outdoor patios in Halifax, for instance, need to comply with the Canadian Standards Associatio­n’s accessible design standard.

“But what’s the point of having an accessible patio if you don’t have accessible washrooms?” he said.

When asked to clarify what a “convenient location” means in the context of the washroom regulation, Environmen­t spokeswoma­n Rachel Boomer said in an email that the interpreta­tion of the term is up to the Human Rights Commission to decide.

“Government recognizes the importance of accessibil­ity,” she added. “The province is working to address issues of accessibil­ity through the Accessibil­ity Act, with the goal of being accessible by 2030.”

The Accessibil­ity Act was passed in April of last year, making Nova Scotia the third province to pass such legislatio­n. Through the act, a committee is working to develop a set of standards for the province to implement by 2030.

The plan is due be released in September.

Paul Vienneau, another complainan­t in the case, says it’s a basic human right to be able to wash your hands before eating, or to use the bathroom while at a restaurant.

Vienneau, who has been in a wheelchair for almost 30 years, has a compromise­d immune system and describes himself as a “fanatical Purell user.”

“When you’re in a wheelchair — a manual wheelchair specifical­ly — your hands come in contact with your wheels thousands of times during the day,” he said. “Everything that’s on the street ends up on your wheels, then on your hands.” Reed

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