Edmonton Journal

New policy may be grand for Ford

- Christie Blatc hfo rd

Oh my, what excellent timing — just as Toronto Mayor Rob Ford prepares to leave rehab and resume office, the Ontario Human Rights Commission releases its new “policy on preventing discrimina­tion based on mental health disabiliti­es and addictions.”

The announceme­nt warranted but small notice in the Toronto press this week.

Alas, the writers of these pieces apparently took the commission at its word that the policy offers “user-friendly guidance” to help landlords, employers and organizati­ons comply with the Ontario Human Rights Code.

Infact, reading the 109-page document is heavy slogging, the literary equivalent of wading in wet cement. It’s the antithesis of user-friendly, rather filled with the ludicrous jargon so beloved by human rights commission­s.

In any case, the grand news for Ford is that it appears he has a wonderful case for a discrimina­tion complaint, in that as a person with acknowledg­ed addiction issues, he is deemed to have a psychosoci­al disability and thus is considered protected by the Ontario Human Rights Code.

(For the record, the code is the governing legislatio­n that protects selected groups of Ontarians. The commission sets policies and standards and promotes respect for human rights. The Ontario Human Rights Tribunal hears complaints of discrimina­tion.)

Ford, ofcourse, is now widely known as Toronto’s crackhead mayor.

A Google search Thursday with the keywords “Rob Ford crackhead” produced a mere 66,600 results.

Readers may recall his longstandi­ng denial that he had any sort of substance problem and steadfast refusal to seek help, despite it being urged upon him by all manner of colleagues on Toronto city council.

(Now, some of said colleagues were rather mean or purse-lipped in how they urged help upon the mayor, though undoubtedl­y they perceived themselves as kind and well intentione­d, so, in the bizarre world, they must be deemed as kind and wellintent­ioned, perception being nine-10ths of any given battle.)

In any case, at the time, Ford’s refusals were deemed to be part of a pattern of dishonesty and were attributed to his innate stubbornne­ss or to some perceived moral weakness — the old way of looking upon addiction.

He was roundly mocked for his lapses and egregious conduct during them, buttons and T-shirts making fun of him were everywhere, newspapers dedicating entire flying squads of reporters to follow him about, breathless details shared about how much he sweated and how incoherent he did or didn’t appear.

And much of that was before he belatedly confessed his problems.

But as the new policy makes clear, such denials are completely common among those with psychosoci­al disabiliti­es and wholly understand­able.

In fact, as the executive summary says in no uncertain terms, “Because of the extreme stigma around certain types of mental health disabiliti­es and addictions, many people may be afraid to disclose their disability to others.

“They may worry about being labelled, experienci­ng negative attitudes fromothers, losing their jobs or housing, or experienci­ng unequal treatment in services after disclosing a mental health issue or addiction.”

The broadening of the disability definition to include addictions has been in the works for almost 15 years, with a court case here and a court case there, but the new policy is the first to lay out standards, guidelines and best practices.

As a decision by the rights tribunal noted in a case last year, the use of “the term crackhead” is itself demeaning.

That April 9, 2013 decision involved a complaint from a long-standing crack-cocaine addict — he’d been addicted for 23 years and had participat­ed in no fewer than 14 recovery programs — who had been clean for eight months when he started a job as a sales agent for a car dealership agency.

Things appeared to be going along swimmingly until he declined an invite for a drink with his boss, explaining that he wasn’t being rude, but was rather a recovering addict. Over time, he told the boss all about his history. And when he relapsed over two weekends in the late summer of 2009, he went to the boss’s house to get some money he was owed.

He thought they were going to go to a bank machine. Instead, the boss took him to two detox sites, over his objections, trying to force him into help.

In fairly short order, the two had a falling out over other monies the agent was owed, and the boss called him “a f---ing crackhead,” which made the agent feel like he’d been slapped in the face. He was ashamed, especially when he learned the boss told a colleague about his addiction history, and others in the business.

He resigned, so depressed he soon slipped “back into fullblown addiction.”

In fairness, from the evidence at the tribunal, the agent seemed a pretty reasonable sort, and the boss an aggressive thug who once even threatened to kill him.

The adjudicato­r found that the agent “experience­d stigmatiza­tion due to his disability,” that his disability “is one which is associated with stigmatiza­tion,” and that he was “vulnerable to negative stereotypi­ng.” The boss was found to have discrimina­ted against him and to have created a poisoned work environmen­t.

He was ordered to pay the agent the commission owed him plus $25,000 for the injury to his dignity.

The decision is cited, with approval, in the new policy.

Imagine, then, the injury Ford — having endured treatment at least as egregious as that and far more widespread and for a far longer period — might be deemed to have suffered, either when council stripped him of most of his powers, or if, come the municipal election in October, he loses.

I am not for a minute serious, but imagining the reception that Rob Ford, pleading such a case, would receive rather illustrate­s the hypocrisy of the whole schmear: Poor addicts good, rich ones not so much.

 ?? Chris Young/The Canadian Press files ?? Toronto Mayor Rob Ford could benefit from the Ontario Human Rights Commission’s new policy on addictions.
Chris Young/The Canadian Press files Toronto Mayor Rob Ford could benefit from the Ontario Human Rights Commission’s new policy on addictions.
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