Calgary Herald

Carter family wants bill amended

- JOAN BRYDEN

OTTAWA • Parliament­arians are being urged to amend a proposed new law on medically assisted dying by the children of the woman whose suffering was central to the Supreme Court’s decision to strike down the ban on assisted death.

Lee and Price Carter say their late mother would not have qualified for medical help to end her life under the restrictiv­e provisions of the bill introduced last week by the Trudeau government in response to the top court’s ruling.

Instead, they say their mother and people like her would be forced to endure unbearable suffering, potentiall­y for years.

“I’m shocked that this government’s proposal would exclude the very case this issue was tried on,” Lee Carter told a news conference Thursday on Parliament Hill.

“We fought for a half a decade and won our case at the highest court in the land and this bill would erase the victory that we achieved for people like my mom. We ask ourselves, what was the point?”

Kay Carter suffered from spinal stenosis, a painful condition that left her bedridden, unable to move or even feed herself. She found the loss of autonomy and dignity intolerabl­e but was not, according to her children, facing imminent death.

The 89-year-old travelled secretly to Switzerlan­d in 2010, where she legally obtained medical help to die. Her children, with the help of the British Columbia Civil Liberties Associatio­n and several other plaintiffs, carried on the court battle to legalize the practice in Canada.

The proposed federal law would allow assisted death only for consenting adults, at least 18 years of age, who are in “an advanced stage of irreversib­le decline” from a serious and incurable disease, illness or disability and for whom a natural death is “reasonably foreseeabl­e.”

The bill is more restrictiv­e than the conditions prescribed by the Supreme Court, which ruled in the Carter case that medical help in dying should be available to clearly consenting adults with “grievous and irremediab­le” medical conditions who are enduring physical or mental suffering that they find intolerabl­e.

“Canadians should be angry that this legislatio­n restricts the definition for who dies and who suffers,” said Price Carter.

“It is unacceptab­le for this new law to say that some people must simply endure suffering because their illness isn’t terminal. It is not for the government to tell them that they must be forced to go on living.”

BCCLA executive director Josh Paterson said the government has invented additional restrictio­ns, “seemingly out of thin air,” that the top court never contemplat­ed and which make the proposed law unconstitu­tional. At a minimum, he said the government must delete the requiremen­ts that a person’s medical condition must be advanced, irreversib­le and incurable and that natural death must be reasonably foreseeabl­e.

If it does not, Paterson said grievously ill people will be left with “the very cruel choice” that the Supreme Court explicitly said they have the right to avoid: “to take their lives prematurel­y while they’re still physically able; or having to ask the help of their family members, who might potentiall­y have to commit a crime to assist someone to die; or else they will just have to suffer intolerabl­y, trapped potentiall­y for agonizing years and years into the future.”

Justice Minister Jody Wilson-Raybould and her department’s officials have insisted the bill is consistent with the top court’s ruling. They’ve also maintained Kay Carter and the other plaintiffs in the case were close to death and therefore would have been eligible for an assisted death under the proposed law.

 ?? PATRICK DOYLE / THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Kay Carter, mother to Price, left, and Lee was crucial in the decision to strike down a ban on assisted dying.
PATRICK DOYLE / THE CANADIAN PRESS Kay Carter, mother to Price, left, and Lee was crucial in the decision to strike down a ban on assisted dying.

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