Truro News

Law societies can deny accreditat­ion to Christian university’s school: court

- BY JIM BRONSKILL

Societies governing the legal profession have the right to deny accreditat­ion to a proposed law school at a Christian university in British Columbia, the Supreme Court of Canada has ruled.

In a pair of keenly anticipate­d decisions Friday, the high court said law societies in Ontario and British Columbia were entitled to ensure equal access to the bar, support diversity and prevent harm to lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgende­r and queer students.

e cases pitted two signi cant societal values – freedom of religion and promotion of equality – against one another.

Trinity Western University, a private post-secondary institutio­n in Langley, B.C., was founded on evangelica­l Christian principles and requires students to adhere to a covenant allowing sexual intimacy only between a married man and woman.

Law societies overseeing the profession in Ontario and British Columbia say they would not license graduates from Trinity Western because the covenant amounts to discrimina­tion against LGBTQ people.the Court of Appeal for Ontario had upheld the rejection, while B.C.’S top court sided with the university.

In each case, the Supreme Court ruled 7-2 in favour of the respective law society.

A majority found that the deci- sions to deny accreditat­ion were reasonable because they appropriat­ely balanced the interferen­ce to freedom of religion with the public-interest objectives of the law societies.

In the decision concerning Ontario, ve Supreme Court justices said the province’s law society interfered only with the university’s ability to operate a law school governed by the mandatory covenant.

“ is limitation is of minor significan­ce because a mandatory covenant is not absolutely required to study law in a Christian environmen­t in which people follow certain religious rules of conduct, and attending a Christian law school is preferred, not necessary, for prospectiv­e TWU law students.”

Trinity Western proposed the law school in 2012 and received approval to open from the Federation of Law Societies of Canada and the province’s Ministry of Advanced Education.

e university wanted to ensure its graduates would be eligible to be called to the bar throughout Canada, and therefore applied to the provincial law societies for accreditat­ion of the planned law school.

Six law societies - Alberta, Saskatchew­an, Manitoba, New Brunswick, Prince Edward Island, and Newfoundla­nd and Labrador - have granted accreditat­ion.

In Ontario, the benchers of the Law Society of Upper Canada - since renamed the Law Society of Ontario - denied accreditat­ion to the school in a 28-21 vote.

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