The Welland Tribune

Nova Scotia argues supported housing for disabled is ‘ not a right’

- MICHAEL TUTTON

HALIFAX — Nobody has the unfettered right to live in government­assisted housing of their own choosing, a lawyer for the Nova Scotia government told a human rights board of inquiry Monday.

“It is not a right guaranteed by the government,” said Kevin Kindred, the counsel for the Attorney General, during opening arguments in a case advocates say could help people with disabiliti­es move into supported housing in the community.

The inquiry is considerin­g the case of two people seeking to move out of locked- door, hospitalli­ke settings and a third complainan­t who has died since the case started.

Vince Calderhead, the lawyer for the three complainan­ts, told the inquiry that Nova Scotians with disabiliti­es who are kept in institutio­ns are the “last vestiges of the ... county asylum” where impoverish­ed citizens were once housed. Calderhead said it contravene­s the Human Rights Act to keep people with intellectu­al and physical disabiliti­es in facilities where they lack control over their own lives, can seldom go out, and may be hundreds of kilometres from their family.

He cites sections that prohibit discrimina­tion in the provision of government services on the basis of physical or mental disability.

“When the government provides social assistance to people in Nova Scotia, the way it provides it to people with disabiliti­es cannot be worse than people without disabiliti­es. That is the essence here,” he told reporters after the morning session.

However, Kindred argued before inquiry chairman John Walter Thompson that while the province supports the principle of community- based care, it’s not a human right as defined in the legislatio­n.

Housing programs offered to people on social assistance also have limits and waiting lists, said Kindred: “When the government does provide housing solutions it can only do so in a way that involves limited choices and a system of limited capacity.”

The arguments being made to the board of inquiry about waiting lists and inadequate services are better made to the minister of Community Services, argued the provincial lawyer.

“You’re here in your role as a board of inquiry ... and that role isn’t to make policy decisions about reform or how to best serve the needs of people with disabiliti­es ... This is not a public inquiry of the government’s programs for persons with disabiliti­es as much as sometimes the complaint seems to be set up with something like that in mind,” he said.

“Most social problems the government is called to address are not discrimina­tion.”

Still, the case, which will be heard over the next two months, is already surfacing details on the difficulti­es of the lives of people with disabiliti­es in the province.

Two nieces of Sheila Livingston­e, the complainan­t who died during various delays in the case, were on hand as Calderhead told her story to the inquiry chairman.

The lawyer said Livingston­e had lived in institutio­ns for much of her life, but for 18 years did well in a small options home.

When she was temporaril­y hospitaliz­ed, she lost her place in the community and remained in a locked- door facility for a decade.

“After a series of assaults on her, and complaints about those assaults, she was offered a placement not in the Halifax area but in Yarmouth. Why Yarmouth? Because there was a bed,” said Calderhead.

The location of the supported home was 300 kilometres from her friends and family.

The lawyer said he has documentat­ion from the province showing from 2011 officials believed she could have lived in the community.

“In the fall of 2016 she died with no family member around. ... That is a feature of the province’s treatment of people with disabiliti­es,” the lawyer told the judge.

After the hearing, Jackie McCabe- Sieliakus, Livingston­e’s niece, said she’s hoping the hearing prompts changes.

“A lot of people are in the system like Sheila. Sheila suffered a lot and I think the government needs to step up and everybody needs to hear the story,” she said.

“It won’t make a difference to Sheila now. But it will make a difference to other people.”

 ?? ANDREW VAUGHAN/ THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Kevin Kindred, Justice Department counsel for a Nova Scotia human rights board of inquiry dealing with persons with disabiliti­es and their attempts to move out of institutio­ns and into small homes, listens on in Halifax on Monday.
ANDREW VAUGHAN/ THE CANADIAN PRESS Kevin Kindred, Justice Department counsel for a Nova Scotia human rights board of inquiry dealing with persons with disabiliti­es and their attempts to move out of institutio­ns and into small homes, listens on in Halifax on Monday.

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