Truro News

No review of how university handled anti-abortion group’s demonstrat­ion

- By JOhn cOtter

A campus group that staged an anti-abortion protest at the University of Alberta that sparked a noisy counter-demonstrat­ion by other students and faculty has lost a court challenge over how the school handled the event.

UAlberta Pro-Life was seeking a judicial review of the university’s decision not to investigat­e the group’s complaint that counterdem­onstrators should have been discipline­d for blocking its displays in 2015 that included pictures of dismembere­d fetuses.

The group also wanted a review of the university’s decision that the group would have to pay $17,500 to cover security costs for a similar anti-abortion protest it wanted to hold in 2016.

The centre wanted the court to rule that charging a security fee infringed on freedom of expression under the charter.

Justice Bonnie Bokenfohr of Court of Queen’s Bench dismissed both applicatio­ns.

Bokenfohr ruled that UAlberta Pro-Life was treated fairly and the university was within its right to require the club to pay for security if it wanted to hold another protest.

“The university recognized that the event was a form of expression and expressly stated that it

“Free speech is not a clean process where people will always take turns and treat each other with deference … We have to expect that profound disagreeme­nts over controvers­ial topics may be loud and vigorous. It follows that the university should tread lightly in applying disciplina­ry processes when people are engaging in a conflict of ideas.” University of Alberta court submission

values the expression of diverse points of view,” she wrote.

“The decision balanced this against the university’s obligation to ensure safety and security and the financial impact on university operations.”

University of Alberta officials were not immediatel­y available for comment.

Jay Cameron, a lawyer for a group called the Justice Centre for Constituti­onal Freedoms, represente­d UAlberta Pro-Life in court last June.

Cameron argued that campus security did nothing to prevent a “mob” of counter-protesters from disrupting the display. He also argued the school failed to adequately investigat­e a complaint filed by members of Pro-Life.

There was no doubt that club members were harassed mercilessl­y, he said.

“If the university wins, the mob wins,” he said at the time.

Cameron said the group will appeal Bokenfohr’s decision.

“We are disappoint­ed that a party who did nothing wrong and had permission to be there would be punished and censored for the misdeeds of others,” he said Thursday.

“The university code of student behaviour says it stands for free speech, but it takes courage to stand for something and not just pay lip service to it.”

The university argued that its discipline officer handled the case properly when he found that rules spelled out in the school’s code of student behaviour were not broken by the pro-choice protesters.

The officer had determined that the counter-demonstrat­ion was itself a form of free speech.

“Free speech is not a clean process where people will always take turns and treat each other with deference,” read the officer’s conclusion that was included in the university’s brief submitted to the court.

“We have to expect that profound disagreeme­nts over controvers­ial topics may be loud and vigorous. It follows that the university should tread lightly in applying disciplina­ry processes when people are engaging in a conflict of ideas.”

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