The Hamilton Spectator

Court does not have power to hear class action against Waterloo police

- DANIELA GERMANO

TORONTO — A judge has ruled that the Ontario Superior Court does not have the jurisdicti­on to hear a proposed class-action lawsuit that accused the Waterloo Regional Police force of gender-based bullying, violence and sexual misconduct.

In a ruling released Friday, Justice Deena Baltman said the case raised “serious, triable issues” relating to workplace culture, but found the court was not the right venue for the case.

The $165-million proposed class action, which was filed in June 2017, was launched on behalf of all past and present female members of the Waterloo Regional Police Service and their families.

An unproven statement of claim filed last year alleged female staff were subjected to unwanted sexual advances, career sabotage and personal attacks during their time on the force.

The suit named the Waterloo Regional Police Services Board and Waterloo Regional Police Associatio­n as defendants. The force said it viewed the suit as “inappropri­ate” and vowed to challenge it.

Baltman found the Superior Court had no jurisdicti­on in the matter and said the claims should be adjudicate­d either at the Human Rights Tribunal of Ontario or before a labour arbitrator.

“The defendants should not regard this result as a vindicatio­n of current practices,” Baltman wrote in her ruling. “Even on the limited and contradict­ory evidence before me, it is apparent that this case raises serious, triable issues relating to workplace culture.

The allegation­s are very troubling and will require close scrutiny should this matter proceed to another forum for adjudicati­on.”

The Waterloo Regional Police Service said Friday’s ruling “reinforces the legitimacy of the grievance and arbitratio­n process prescribed by provincial legislatio­n and which includes external arbitrator­s.”

“Today’s decision in no way diminishes the board’s and police service’s commitment to provide a safe, inclusive, equitable and non-discrimina­tory workplace for all of its members both uniform and civilian profession­als,” it said in a statement.

Court documents name the plaintiffs as Angelina Rivers, Sharon Zehr and Barry Zehr, whose allegation­s of genderbase­d discrimina­tion and sexual harassment spanned from 1988 to the present.

The allegation­s, which have not been tested in court, included male officers making offensive comments and unwanted sexual advances, male officers wrongly disparagin­g their work to supervisor­s and refusing to provide female officers backup when they were dispatched to dangerous situations.

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