Times Colonist

Anti-SLAPP legislatio­n missing in action in B.C.

- ERICA STAHL Erica Stahl is a staff lawyer at the West Coast Environmen­tal Law Associatio­n.

When it comes to protecting freedom of speech, the B.C. government is all talk. In May, the government introduced Bill 32, the Protection of Public Participat­ion Act, to protect British Columbians from strategic lawsuits against public participat­ion (SLAPP suits), but that bill died on the order paper on Nov. 27.

SLAPP suits are filed by deep-pocketed companies, often on questionab­le grounds, for the purpose of silencing their critics. Large corporatio­ns might haul ordinary people into court for speaking out at a public meeting, circulatin­g a petition, posting comments on social media or simply talking to a neighbour.

These suits do not need to win in court to succeed at their main objective, which is to make people too afraid to speak out on issues of public importance — from the environmen­t to public health and human rights.

In a notorious SLAPP suit from 2012, Taseko Mines sued the Wilderness Committee for defamation over online articles stating that Taseko’s proposed New Prosperity mine could threaten the environmen­t and fish by turning a nearby lake into a “dump site for toxic tailings.” When the Wilderness Committee posted statements on its website calling the lawsuit a SLAPP suit, Taseko promptly sued them for that, too.

Taseko eventually lost. The trial court ruled in favour of the Wilderness Committee on every ground, and this ruling was upheld on appeal. But even so, Taseko’s SLAPP suit kept the Wilderness Committee tied up in court for years and cost the organizati­on greatly in stress, time and resources.

A SLAPP suit defendant whom we’ll call Jane Doe (we cannot share her name due to the settlement she signed with the company that SLAPPed her) explains that SLAPP suits often result in heavy financial and emotional costs, even if the case never makes it to court.

“The thing about SLAPP suits is that they aren’t really meant to be ‘won’ so much as to break the resolve, and often the bank accounts, of the defendants. And in fact it doesn’t even seem to matter if they go to trial, as the longer it takes, the plaintiff has more opportunit­ies to pile additional names into the defendant column.

“Part of me knows that I should maybe feel elated for coming out relatively unscathed. But, I don’t. What I feel is a sort of ‘survivors guilt.’ Like I abandoned my friends when I signed that agreement not to speak of the plaintiffs or their company again. But if I am honest, the thing that bugs me the most is that I feel deterred from getting involved again, but I know that if I let that feeling take root, the plaintiffs may as well have won.”

SLAPP suits like these are a tactic used by bullies. They shut down debate and cast a chill over public participat­ion. We live in a participat­ory democracy — we are supposed to voice our views in public debates. By suing people for speaking out, SLAPP suits attack one of the foundation­s of our social contract: The right and responsibi­lity of citizens to participat­e in public discourse and public life.

B.C.’s courts acknowledg­e the faults in our system that allow such claims to proceed, but judges are reluctant to fix them from the bench when the real responsibi­lity should lie with the legislatur­e. High-profile judicial experts, former attorneys general, and organizati­ons ranging from the Union of B.C. Indian Chiefs to Canadian Journalist­s for Free Expression and West Coast Environmen­tal Law have joined the call for B.C. to pass an anti-SLAPP law.

Attorney General David Eby, in introducin­g Bill 32, argued that “the ability of citizens to participat­e freely in discussion and debate on matters of public interest without fear of undue legal threat is vital to a vibrant democratic society.”

Bill 32 would have allowed people hit with a SLAPP suit to apply to have the case dismissed early on. Ontario and Quebec both have anti-SLAPP legislatio­n, as do Australia and the majority of the United States. It’s a proven tool that strikes the right balance between protecting freedom of speech and public participat­ion on the one hand, and protecting people from defamatory statements on the other.

Bill 32 was the only bill introduced by the government this session that failed to pass, and officials have been curiously silent about the death of this important legislatio­n. British Columbians deserve to know what happened.

Simply put, anti-SLAPP legislatio­n works. We need it in B.C. Let’s put the Protection of Public Participat­ion Act put back on the table.

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