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The original version was signed by
The Honourable Robert Douglas Nicholson
Minister of Justice and Attorney General of Canada
This year the validity and purpose of human rights institutions were called into question in a highly polarized debate that pitted a single provision of the Canadian Human Rights Act (CHRA) against the constitutional right to freedom of speech. Section 13 of the CHRA prohibits telecommunications or internet messages that are likely to promote hatred or contempt of minority groups. The narrow focus of this debate has obscured the important protections afforded by the CHRA beyond s. 13 and the immense benefits that all Canadians enjoy precisely because of human rights statutes.
The Government of Canada has set a goal to make Canada a diverse society that promotes linguistic duality and social inclusion. This is a tall order, achieved neither by magisterial edict nor by wishful thinking. The existence of federal and provincial human rights acts, commissions and tribunals, however, demonstrates our commitment to this lofty agenda.
As the custodian of a vital piece of Canada’s human rights protection machinery, the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal helps to define equality and normalize diversity. Through its written decisions of the past three decades it has helped diversify the federally regulated workplace and informed the jurisprudence that affects Canadian society generally in such areas as pay equity, discrimination and harassment on the basis of sex or sexual orientation, and the duty to accommodate persons with disabilities. Although the Tribunal does not promote human rights (that is the job of the Canadian Human Rights Commission), it does advance the aims of the CHRA by providing a forum where human rights complaints can be scrutinized and resolved and by making the hard judgment calls that transport the Act from the statute books to the streets.
J. Grant Sinclair
I submit for tabling in Parliament, the 2007–08 Departmental Performance Report for the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal.
This document has been prepared based on the reporting principles contained in the Guide for the Preparation of Part III of the 2007–2008 Estimates: Reports on Plans and Priorities and Departmental Performance Reports:
Name: J. Grant Sinclair
Title: Chairperson, Canadian Human Right Tribunal
Reason for ExistenceThe Canadian Human Rights Tribunal is a quasi-judicial body that hears complaints of discrimination referred by the Canadian Human Rights Commission and determines whether the activities complained of contravene the Canadian Human Rights Act (CHRA). The purpose of the CHRA is to protect individuals from discrimination and to promote equal opportunity. The Tribunal also decides cases brought under the Employment Equity Act and, pursuant to section 11 of the CHRA, determines allegations of wage disparity between men and women doing work of equal value in the same establishment. The Tribunal’s mission is to provide Canadians with a fair and efficient process of inquiry and determination of complaints of discrimination against federally regulated employers and service providers. The CHRA prohibits employment-related discrimination, including harassment, and prohibits discrimination in the provision of services regulated by federal jurisdiction. In 1996 the Tribunal’s mandate was expanded to include the adjudication of complaints under the Employment Equity Act. The statute requires all federal government departments, as well as federally regulated public sector employers with more than 100 employees, to maintain a workforce that reflects the labour force availability of visible minorities, women, indigenous people and persons with disabilities. For more information on the Tribunal’s organization, operations and members, see About the CHRT on the Tribunal website at www.chrt-tcdp.gc.ca. |
2007-08 | ||
Planned spending | Total authorities | Actual spending |
4.3 | 4.5 | 4.2 |
2007-08 | ||
Planned | Actual | Difference |
26 | 26 | – |
Strategic outcome: Individuals have equal access, as determined by the Canadian Human Rights Act (CHRA) and the Employment Equity Act (EEA), to the opportunities that exist in Canadian society through the fair and equitable adjudication of human rights and employment equity cases that are brought before the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal. |
Alignment to Government of Canada outcomes: a diverse society that promotes linguistic duality and social inclusion |
Program activity: Public hearings under the Canadian Human Rights Act |
Description: Inquire into complaints of discrimination to decide if particular practices have contravened the Canadian Human Rights Act |
Expected results:
|
Performance indicators:
|
Program activity: Review directions given under the Employment Equity Act |
Description: Conduct hearings into requests from employers to review decisions issued to them by the Canadian Human Rights Commission or into applications from the Commission to confirm directions given to employers. |
Expected results:
|
Priority (all ongoing) | Expected result | Performance status | Planned spending | Actual spending |
Monitor Tribunal inquiry performance targets. |
|
Met Partially met, ongoing |
N/A | N/A |
Undertake a Management Accountability Framework assessment. | Modern public service management that fully supports accountability and results for Canadians | Met, ongoing | $15,000 | N/A |
Align the Tribunal’s records management system and platform with government information and technology management policies. |
The Tribunal’s information classification and retrieval systems, as well as its supporting technology platform, sustain business delivery improvement, legal and government policy compliance, citizen access, and accountability by March 2008 |
Partially met, ongoing | $65,000 | $120,750 |
The tools used to assess and report on Tribunal activities, results, outputs and outcomes have evolved in tandem with public service modernization initiatives of the past decade. A new Management Resources and Results Structure and Program Activity Architecture were approved by the Treasury Board in May 2007.
These tools (MRRS and PAA) had not been finalized when the Tribunal prepared its 2007–08 Report on Plans and Priorities (RPP). Like the RPP on which it is based, the current DPR speaks to three management priorities, all of which address the systems (i.e., management and oversight services, human resources management services, information technology services, and information management services) that underpin the Tribunal’s ability to execute its primary program, namely conducting inquiries into complaints referred to it by the Canadian Human Rights Commission. The summary table above reports exclusively on results relating to the three priorities identified in the 2007–08 RPP. However, the discussion that follows (as well as the analysis pursued in Section II) speaks more broadly to the expected and actual results of the Tribunal’s principal program activity—the hearing and resolution of complaints under either act.
The Tribunal is a quasi-judicial body of first instance (i.e., it is the first “court” that passes judgment on the validity of a complaint of discrimination brought by a complainant.) However, even before a complaint is referred to the Tribunal, it is investigated by the Canadian Human Rights Commission, which screens all complaints, investigates them as necessary, and dismisses or resolves the vast majority of them. Once a case is referred by the Commission, the Tribunal has no authority to return it. Thus the size of the Tribunal’s caseload—and, therefore, its ability to meet targeted timelines for case processing and decision writing—is greatly influenced by the volume of cases referred in any year, or, more precisely, over any three-year period, since inquiries into complaints may extend, for reasons principally driven by the parties, for more than a year from their referral date.
The Tribunal is funded by annual appropriations from Parliament through a program expenditures vote to cover the cost of hearings, mediations and administrative operating expenditures (regardless of the number of cases referred by the Commission). Actual spending for 2007–08 was $4.2 million. Over the last decade, funding for Tribunal hearings has remained relatively stable even as its caseload fluctuated widely.
The Tribunal hears cases referred by the Canadian Human Rights Commission, so the number of cases referred annually is unpredictable. Because the Commission dismisses or resolves about 90 percent of the cases that come before it, the Tribunal’s cases are exceptional; they typically involve complex legal questions, new human rights issues or conflicting evidence that needs to be decided in a more formal testimonial environment (i.e., quasi-judicial forum).
Moreover, since 2002 the Commission no longer participates in all of the cases referred to the Tribunal; complainants who once relied on Commission counsel to help guide their case must now proceed on their own. For the Tribunal, inquiries where complainants are unrepresented require considerably more time and resources to process. The filing of documents with the Tribunal is routinely delayed, additional case management attention is required, and the hearings themselves generally move much more slowly.
To offset these challenges, the Tribunal reinstated its mediation services in 2003, streamlined its operating procedures to meet the needs of unrepresented parties, and adopted an aggressive case management approach that actively monitors progress on every case and keeps the complaint process moving unimpeded.
Meanwhile, ongoing pressure to contribute effectively in horizontal government initiatives such as public service modernization is also straining the Tribunal’s resources. To ease this burden, the Tribunal has availed itself of new technologies and has actually sought out and participated, wherever possible, in interdepartmental collaborations.
This year the Tribunal sought to determine whether three of its inquiry performance targets were useful and realistic. These targets, introduced by the Tribunal in 2003, sought to establish goals for the timeliest and most effective inquiry process possible:
Case statistics maintained manually and generated from the automated case management system indicate that all three targets proved elusive in 2007–08. None of the year’s hearings began within the desired time, due entirely to the lack of readiness of the parties. So pervasive was this problem that the Tribunal issued its first ever Practice Note found on the Tribunal’s website at www.chrt-tcdp.gc.ca under About the CHRT – Tribunal Rules and Procedures, stressing the importance of timely hearings and decisions. The note, addressed both to the parties and to Tribunal members, urged all to be vigilant and conscientious in helping to expedite the inquiry process as expected by the Canadian Human Rights Act.
Meanwhile, of the 19 decisions it rendered last fiscal year,2 the Tribunal issued 4 decisions within four and a half months of the close of the hearing (instead of the sought-after target of 17, or 90 percent, within four months of the close of hearings), but none of the 36 cases disposed of this year were concluded within the targeted 12-month timeline.
The volume of active cases, the increasing complexity of the complaints referred and the absence of legal representation for many complainants were again the main factors impeding the Tribunal from meeting its targets. Nevertheless, the resolution of cases was considerably expedited by active case management by the Tribunal, expert mediation services by Tribunal members and an efficient scheduling system to ensure that hearings occur at the earliest availability of the parties.
The Tribunal implemented an active case management system in 2005 to help parties prepare their cases more effectively and to alert Tribunal members to obstacles that are likely to delay a hearing process but could be resolved during the pre-hearing phase of an inquiry. Such issues are becoming increasingly common and they routinely delay the inquiry process if not identified and resolved early on. Anecdotal evidence suggests that early intervention by a Tribunal member in resolving pre-hearing issues has helped prevent cases from lingering unduly. The numbers also bear this out; despite a dramatic spike in case referrals between 2003 and 2005, only one pre-2005 complaint remained outstanding at the end of March 2008.
Meanwhile, given that the generally accepted service standard for rendering decisions in the judicial sphere is six months, the Tribunal has decided to slightly extend its own target for decision writing. It will now aim to deliver a decision within four months of the close of hearing in 80 percent of cases, rather than the previously targeted 90 percent of cases.
The Tribunal’s two other time-related performance targets were also adjusted downward by 10 percent in each category for 2008–09.
These adjusted targets are reflected in the new PAA and MRRS in the 2008–09 Report on Plans and Priorities available on the Tribunal website at www.chrt-tcdp.gc.ca under Reports and Disclosures.
The results of the Treasury Board of Canada Secretariat assessment of the Tribunal against its Management Accountability Framework (MAF) were released in 2007–08. The Tribunal was commended for its largely strong or acceptable assessment ratings. This was deemed noteworthy for a small organization with limited resources, particularly given that it was the Tribunal’s first assessment against the MAF. The Tribunal has, nevertheless, continued to build on its areas of strength and has addressed both areas identified as “opportunities for improvement.”
In 2007–08, the Tribunal:
Tribunal personnel continued to participate in an advisory capacity to the Comptroller General of Canada, through the Small Agency Administrators Network (SAAN), to assist in the development and implementation of procedures for small departments and agencies (SDAs) to comply with the Treasury Board’s internal audit policy. The Tribunal has also begun the development of an audit plan, based on its risk management framework, which it expects to implement in 2008–09. As well, the Tribunal has taken the lead on the SAAN initiative to work with the central agencies and within the SDA community to find and develop opportunities for shared internal services.
In accordance with the Treasury Board’s Standard of Management of Information Technology Security (MITS), the Tribunal completed vulnerability and threat and risk assessments of its network infrastructure in 2007–08 and implemented new security technology and procedures. The Tribunal’s network infrastructure has now received MITS certification and accreditation; the Tribunal is planning to conduct an audit of its information technology system in 2008–09.
In 2007–08, the Tribunal:
To offset the limitations attributable to its tiny size—the Tribunal has a human resource complement of 26 full-time equivalents—Tribunal management continued to collaborate with its federal government counterparts in search of ways to share services. Close consultation with central agencies through the Community of Federal Agencies, the Small Agency Administrators Network and the Heads of Information Technology ensures that the Tribunal remains aligned with the government’s information technology and information management policies.
1 Based on the year’s performance and generally accepted industry standard, the Tribunal revised all these targets in the 2008–09 Program Activity Architecture.
2 The table on judicial reviews in Section II cites this figure as 20 because Tribunal statistics are aggregated on a calendar year basis.
The Tribunal’s single strategic outcome is that individuals have equal access, as determined by the Canadian Human Rights Act and the Employment Equity Act, to the opportunities that exist in Canadian society through the fair and equitable adjudication of human rights and employment equity cases that are brought before the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal. Its ongoing program priority is to carry on business as usual, i.e., to dispose of the complaints brought before it by means of a fair and orderly process of inquiry, including mediated settlement if possible, public hearings and written decisions.
As the custodian of a vital piece of Canada’s human rights protection machinery, the Tribunal benefits Canadians by increasing the thread count in the fabric of Canadian society. In providing a forum where human rights complaints can be scrutinized and resolved and by articulating findings and observations on important issues of discrimination in the form of formal decisions, the Tribunal gives effect to the principles enshrined in federal human rights legislation. The proximate result of the Tribunal’s program is that complainants can air their grievances and achieve closure in a respectful, impartial forum. In the longer term, Tribunal decisions create meaningful legal precedents for use by employers, service providers and Canadians at large.
Although the Tribunal (including its predecessors) has been part of the human rights landscape in Canada for decades, Tribunal decisions have not always enjoyed the authority they do today. Until recently, allegations of institutional bias and lack of independence undermined the effectiveness of Canada’s human rights enforcement machinery, and requests for judicial reviews of Tribunal decisions and rulings were commonplace. For example, all eight of the Tribunal’s written decisions issued in 1998 were challenged. Statutory changes in 1998 raised the stature and perceived independence of the Tribunal, resulting in fewer challenges to Tribunal decisions and greater approbation by the Federal Court when Tribunal decisions are appealed. Ultimately, this acceptance benefits both complainants and respondents, since Tribunal decisions are increasingly perceived as definitive and the parties can get on with their lives. Written decisions become part of the public record. As well as specifying whether a respondent’s actions have run afoul of the Act, Tribunal decisions provide guidance, where appropriate, on how to bring policies and practices into line with the legislation to prevent discrimination in future. Such explanations benefit not only the parties involved, but also all employers and service providers and their employees and clients. It is therefore an expected (and sought after) result of Tribunal decisions that they will be accepted by the parties involved and, if judicially challenged, upheld by the reviewing court. Such acceptance benefits all of society since it expedites justice and reduces the cost of protracted appeals.
That’s why the Tribunal monitors the number of judicial reviews of its decisions and the proportions of these that uphold or overturn Tribunal decisions.
As the table below illustrates, a majority of the Tribunal’s 58 decisions issued in the past four years have remained unchallenged.
2004 | 2005 | 2006 | 2007 | TOTAL | |
Cases referred | 139 | 99 | 70 | 82 | 390 |
Decisions rendered | 14 | 11 | 13 | 20 | 58 |
Upheld | 6 | 1 | 0 | 0 | 7 |
Overturned | 0 | 0 | 2 | 0 | 2 |
Judicial review withdrawn or struck for delay | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 2 |
Judicial review pending | 0 | 1 | 1 | 7 | 8 |
Total challenges | 7 | 2 | 4 | 7 | 20 |
What has been a challenge in recent years is the effort required to provide speedy justice to complainants. The complexity of cases, the vigorous advocacy at inquiries and the amount of time that Tribunal members must spend resolving pre-hearing issues continue to test the Tribunal’s resourcefulness.
The Tribunal is therefore pleased to report that, despite its uncharacteristically heavy caseload over the past four years, it has avoided developing a case backlog. This success is largely attributable to an efficient case management process introduced in 2005 and the success of mediations. Still, at the end of 2007,3 98 case files remained active, compared with 100 a year earlier and 147 in 2005.
Despite these challenges, the Tribunal has remained steadfast in its commitment to striving for the earliest possible disposition of cases. The Tribunal expects that, by helping the parties determine with greater precision which issues must be decided at hearing, active case management will continue to yield major process improvements by reducing the number of issues to be addressed at hearing.
In the meantime, the Tribunal has enjoyed continuing success with its mediation program. In 2007–08, 71 percent4 of Tribunal-mediated complaints were settled to the satisfaction of the parties, compared with 64 percent of mediated cases referred during 2003 and 2004, 87 percent of mediated cases from 2005, and 88 percent of mediated cases from 2006. Combined with the business process improvements outlined above, the growing success of the Tribunal’s mediation service has enabled the Tribunal to process larger numbers of complaints without the need for more financial resources.
As a key mechanism of human rights protection in Canada, the Tribunal gives effect to the Canadian ideals of pluralism, equity, diversity and social inclusion.
In 2007–08, the Tribunal issued 19 final decisions determining whether the CHRA was infringed in a particular instance (subject to rights of judicial review before the Federal Court). Although these decisions have a direct and immediate impact on the parties involved, they also have more far-reaching repercussions, giving concrete and tangible meaning to an abstract set of legal norms. Although the CHRA prohibits discriminatory practices and exempts certain discriminatory practices from remedy, it does not provide examples. Nor does the Act define the term discrimination. Tribunal decisions are therefore the primary vehicle through which Canadians see the impact of the legislation and learn the extent of their rights and obligations under the Act.
The following summaries of Tribunal decisions from 2007–08 illustrate the kinds of complaints brought before the Tribunal and how such cases affect all Canadians. Summaries of these and other Tribunal decisions rendered in 2007 can be found in the Tribunal’s 2007 annual report.
Upon her return from maternity leave, a Bell Canada employee requested a modified schedule to enable her to breastfeed her baby, who had been born with a serious health condition and needed prolonged breastfeeding to strengthen his immune system. In her complaint she alleged that her employer’s decision to deny her request was discrimination on the basis of sex and family status in violation of the CHRA.
In its decision, the Tribunal found that Bell Canada had treated the complainant’s request for accommodation as a medical issue. Requesting medical notes and reports in support of her requests and periodic updates from the complainant’s physician to support the continuation of the request of accommodation, Bell Canada had characterized the complainant as a disabled person. The Tribunal also found that by discouraging the complainant’s request for daily unpaid leave to nurse her child, Bell Canada subjected the complainant to adverse differential treatment on the basis of her sex within the meaning of section 7 of the Act. The Tribunal further found that Bell Canada had no policy on accommodating breastfeeding, and that it had failed to prove that the complainant’s early departure, up to one hour before the regular end of her shift to nurse her child, would have caused the organization undue hardship.
The Tribunal ordered Bell Canada to prevent such discrimination from recurring. Bell Canada was ordered to establish policies relating to employee requests for breastfeedingrelated accommodation that were consistent with the findings in its decision. The complainant was awarded compensation for pain and suffering and compensation for Bell Canada’s reckless conduct. She was also compensated for lost income for the wages she Section II—Analysis of Program Activities by Strategic Outcome 13 failed to earn during her visits to her physician’s office to obtain the requested medical notes and reports.
Results for Canadians |
While significant attention has been given in human rights jurisprudence to a woman’s right to breastfeed in a public place, the Cole decision marks the first opportunity the Tribunal has had to apply the workplace accommodation principles in the CHRA to a female employee’s decision to nurse her child. A noteworthy aspect of this decision is the Tribunal’s exploration of the distinction between the physiological aspects of gender (in this instance, of pregnancy and maternity) and the physiological aspects of disability. The fact that accommodating maternity in the workplace has a physiological rationale does not require that maternity be “medicalized” or treated as a disability. Disability accommodation and gender accommodation remain conceptually different from one another. This analysis will serve as a useful foundation for future discussion. |
Mr. Knight alleged that the respondent, the Société de transport de l’Outaouais (STO), discriminated against him because of a disability in relation to employment, contrary to section 7 of the CHRA.
Mr. Knight had earlier been involved in a workplace accident that caused him to injure his right hand. Following the accident, the complainant received income replacement benefits from the Commission de la Santé et de la Sécurité au Travail (CSST) and was assessed by a doctor who determined that he had permanent functional limitations.
When the complainant applied for a position with the respondent, he was asked to undergo a medical exam. When the doctor learned of the complainant’s disability, he told him that his hiring would be delayed until he could review the CSST’s file. After the review, the doctor determined that the complainant did not meet the requirements for the position. The STO later informed him that he had not been hired.
In reviewing the evidence, the Tribunal found that, although the respondent had considered accommodating the complainant, it had erroneously concluded that doing so would cause it undue hardship. For example, the possibility of offering the complainant a driver’s job was never properly examined and, given the circumstances, too much weight was attached to the effect of accommodation on employee morale and the collective agreement. Moreover, the STO relied on the CSST’s determination of the complainant’s work restrictions, despite the fact that the STO had made its own, more positive observations of the complainant’s abilities, and had been provided with a more recent and more positive prognosis from the complainant’s physician. For those reasons, the Tribunal substantiated the complainant’s allegations and ordered the STO to take steps to integrate him into the workplace and to compensate him for lost wages.
Results for Canadians |
This decision examines the interplay between the regime established by Parliament to accommodate disabled persons and provincial statutory regimes that deal with compensation for workplace injury. In both schemes, employers have a duty to accommodate employees who become disabled due to workplace injury. However, a decision by the provincial authority as to a disabled employee’s work restrictions is not always binding on an employer that must discharge obligations set out in the CHRA. The Knight decision contributes tangibly to the dialogue between these two regulatory regimes, which straddles the constitutional division of powers. |
The complainants, George Vilven and Robert Neil Kelly, had worked for the respondent, Air Canada, since 1986 and 1972, respectively. They alleged that Air Canada discriminated against them on the basis of age, contrary to sections 7 and 10 of the CHRA, by requiring them to retire at age 60. Mr. Kelly also filed a complaint against the Air Canada Pilots Association (ACPA), alleging a contravention of sections 9 and 10 of the CHRA. Finally, the Fly Past 60 Coalition challenged the constitutionality of section 15(1)(c) of the CHRA, claiming it violated section 15(1) of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms.
The Tribunal found that the termination of the complainants’ employment with Air Canada on the basis of the mandatory retirement policy established a prima facie case of discrimination under section 7 of the Act. Furthermore, the sole fact that ACPA had agreed to this policy through the collective agreement and pension plan established a prima facie case of discrimination against the union respondent.
However, under section 15(1)(c) of the CHRA, if the respondents could prove that age 60 was the normal age of retirement for similar positions, the case against them would fall. In this situation, the onus to prove that the normal age of retirement was 60 rested with Air Canada since it had greater access to the relevant information and superior financial resources. In comparing Air Canada with other major international airlines, the data revealed that age 60 was the normal age of retirement for the majority of positions in other major airline companies. Moreover, age 60 had been designated as retirement age by the industry in an international standards document. The result was that Air Canada’s mandatory retirement policy could not be viewed as a discriminatory practice under the CHRA; it imposed the “normal age of retirement” for similar positions.
With regard to the constitutional challenge put forward to the “normal age of retirement” defence, the Tribunal found that the mandatory retirement policy did not violate the dignity of the complainants and did not fail to recognize them as full and equal members Section II—Analysis of Program Activities by Strategic Outcome 15 of society. Thus the section 15 Charter claim failed. For all these reasons, the complaints were dismissed.
Results for Canadians |
This decision contributes to the interpretation and understanding of the CHRA in a number of ways. First of all, it provides Canadians with an examination and analysis of the “normal age of retirement” exemption for the otherwise discriminatory practice of mandatory retirement. This exemption has been in the CHRA since its original enactment, but has received relatively little consideration by adjudicators. Secondly, the Vilven and Kelly decision addresses an issue of particular significance to the Canadian demographic, examining as it does the impact of an aging workforce on the organization of labour in society. Finally, the decision illustrates how the equality principles mandated by federal human rights legislation measure up against the main equality guarantee enshrined in the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms. |
The complainants, who were born outside Canada and who sought to acquire Canadian citizenship retroactively from birth, alleged that Citizenship and Immigration Canada had discriminated on the basis of sex when it failed to grant citizenship to their mother, who had been born outside Canada to a Canadian mother and an American father. Under the law as it stood at the time of their mother’s birth in 1955, a person born abroad could inherit Canadian citizenship only if the person’s father was Canadian.
In other words, in situations where only one parent was Canadian, the law differentiated in the transmission of Canadian citizenship depending on the gender of the Canadian parent.
Although the law was later changed to eliminate this distinction for future cases, the complainants were unsuccessful in their claim for retroactive Canadian citizenship. They alleged that the Canadian government’s refusal to acknowledge their entitlement from birth to Canadian citizenship constituted adverse differentiation on the grounds of sex in the provision of services. The Tribunal dismissed the complaint.
First, the Tribunal found that citizenship was not a “service” within the meaning of the CHRA, asserting that such a characterization would ignore the fundamental role that citizenship plays in defining the relationship between individuals and the state.
However, the Tribunal also found that (even if citizenship were a service) the complainants were not victims of discrimination within the meaning of the CHRA; the citizenship legislation that abolished differential treatment for the future—but did not 16 Canadian Human Rights Tribunal correct it for the past—did not target the complainants, but rather their mother. Yet she was not asserted to be a victim in the complaint and no order was sought for her benefit. Finally, granting the complainants the relief they sought for themselves would have entailed retroactively changing their mother’s citizenship status as of her birth; such action was never contemplated by the CHRA.
Results for Canadians |
This decision represents one of the few instances where a decision maker has explored the meaning of services in the context of the CHRA and set some limits on the concept. Such guidance is useful since “services” is not defined in the Act and its meaning is harder to delineate than other terms such as “employment.” The decision also offers a thorough discussion of issues that can emerge in cases where the CHRA is invoked in regard to legal situations that pre-date its enactment. Finally, the decision provides guidance on the notion of standing in the context of the CHRA, a contribution of particular importance because the Act recognizes a potential distinction in any given case between “complainants” and “victims.” |
The majority of Tribunal decisions in fiscal year 2007–08 were not the subject of judicial review proceedings. As noted elsewhere in this report, we perceive the downward trend in judicial reviews as an indicator of a greater acceptance of the Tribunal’s interpretation of the CHRA by the parties and the reviewing courts.
3 Case referral and processing statistics are kept on a calendar year basis only.
4 Several files opened late in the fiscal year are still in the early stages of inquiry. As a result, the settlement rate for cases opened in 2007-08 is expected to increase.
Strategic outcome: Individuals have equal access, as determined by the Canadian Human Rights Act (CHRA) and the Employment Equity Act (EEA), to the opportunities that exist in Canadian society through the fair and equitable adjudication of human rights and employment equity cases that are brought before the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal. | ||||
Program Activity | Actual Spending, 2007–08 | Alignment to Government of Canada Outcome | ||
Budgetary | Non-Budgetary | Total | ||
Public Hearings under the Canadian Human Rights Act | 4.2 | 0 | 4.2 | A diverse society that promotes linguistic duality and social inclusion |
Review Directions Given Under the Employment Equity Act | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Note: No funding was provided or expenses were incurred for the program activity, Review Directions Given Under the Employment Equity Act, during the period covered by this performance document.
2007-08 | ||||||
($ millions) | 2005–06 actual |
2006-07 actual |
Main estimates |
Planned spending |
Total authorities |
Total actuals |
Public Hearings under the Canadian Human Rights Act | 3.8 | 4.6 | 4.3 | 4.3 | 4.5 | 4.2 |
Total | 3.8 | 4.6 | 4.3 | 4.3 | 4.5 | 4.2 |
Less: Nonrespendable revenue | ||||||
Plus: Cost of services received without charge | 1.2 | 1.2 | 1.2 | 1.2 | 1.2 | 1.1 |
Total Tribunal spending | 5.0 | 5.8 | 5.5 | 5.5 | 5.7 | 5.3 |
Full-time equivalents | 26 | 26 | 26 |
2007–08 ($ millions) | |||||
Vote or Statutory Item | Truncated Vote or Statutory Wording | Main estimates | Planned spending | Total authorities | Actual spending |
15 | Program expenditures | 3.9 | 3.9 | 4.1 | 3.8 |
(S) | Contributions to employee benefit plans | 0.4 | 0.4 | 0.4 | 0.4 |
Total | 4.3 | 4.3 | 4.5 | 4.2 |
The following tables are available on the Treasury Board Secretariat’s website at:
www.tbs-sct.gc.ca/dpr-rmr/st-ts-eng.asp.
Comparison to the TBS Special Travel Authorities The Canadian Human Rights Tribunal follows the TBS Special Travel Authorities. Comparison to the TBS Travel Directive, Rates and Allowances |
Financial statements are prepared in aczcordance with accrual accounting principles. The unaudited supplementary information presented in the financial tables in the DPR is prepared on a modified cash basis of accounting in order to be consistent with appropriations-based reporting. Note 3 of the financial statements reconciles these two accounting methods.
2008 | 2007 | |
Expenses | ||
Operating Expenses | ||
Salaries and employee benefits | 2,606,198 | 2,564,490 |
Rentals | 1,114,759 | 1,320,641 |
Professional services | 890,934 | 1,223,070 |
Transportation and telecommunications | 420,105 | 452,578 |
Amortization | 67,589 | 51,545 |
Materials and supplies | 62,392 | 68,982 |
Repair and maintenance | 34,957 | 25,469 |
Communications | 26,855 | 39,892 |
Miscellaneous | 13,990 | 9,700 |
Total Expenses | 5,237,779 | 5,756,367 |
Revenues | ||
Miscellaneous revenues | 1,829 | 25 |
Total Revenues | 1,829 | 25 |
Net Cost of Operations | 5,235,950 | 5,756,342 |
2008 | 2007 | |
Assets | ||
Financial Assets | ||
Accounts receivable and advances (Note 4) | 51,634 | 53,471 |
Total Financial Assets | 51,634 | 53,471 |
Non-financial Assets | ||
Prepaid expenses | 14,000 | 14,000 |
Tangible capital assets (Note 6) | 150,770 | 96,654 |
Total Non-financial Assets | 164,770 | 110,654 |
TOTAL ASSETS | 216,404 | 164,125 |
Liabilities | ||
Accounts payable and accrued liabilities (Note 5) | 337,267 | 383,003 |
Vacation pay and compensatory leave | 69,007 | 83,511 |
Employee severance benefits (Note 7b) | 450,284 | 431,825 |
TOTAL LIABILITIES | 856,558 | 898,339 |
Equity of Canada | (640,154) | (734,214) |
TOTAL LIABILITIES AND EQUITY OF CANADA | 216,404 | 164,125 |
2008 | 2007 | |
Equity of Canada, beginning of year | (734,214) | (623,037) |
Net cost of operations | (5,235,950) | (5,756,342) |
Current year appropriations used (Note 3) | 4,177,771 | 4,561,439 |
Revenue not available for spending | (1,829) | (25) |
Refund of previous year expenses | (10) | (4,300) |
Change in net position in the Consolidated Revenue Fund (Note 3) | 43,899 | (77,891) |
Services received without charge from other government departments and agencies (Note 9) | 1,110,179 | 1,165,942 |
Equity of Canada, end of year | (640,154) | (734,214) |
The accompanying notes form an integral part of these financial statements. |
2008 | 2007 | |
Operating Activities | ||
Net cost of operations | 5,235,950 | 5,756,342 |
Non-cash items: | ||
Amortization of capital assets | (67,589) | (51,545) |
Services provided without charge by other government departments | (1,110,179) | (1,165,942) |
Variations in Statement of Financial Position: | ||
Increase (decrease) in accounts receivables and advances | (1,837) | 32,665 |
Increase (decrease) in liabilities | 41,781 | (98,434) |
Cash Used by Operating Activities | 4,098,126 | 4,473,086 |
Capital Investment Activities Acquisitions of tangible capital assets |
121,705 | 6,137 |
Financing Activities Net cash provided by Government of Canada |
4,219,831 | 4,479,223 |
The accompanying notes and schedules form an integral part of these financial statements. |
The Canadian Human Rights Tribunal (the Tribunal) is a quasi-judicial body created by Parliament under the Canadian Human Rights Act to inquire into complaints of discrimination and to decide if particular practices have contravened the Act. The Tribunal may only inquire into complaints referred to it by the Canadian Human Rights Commission, usually after a full investigation by the Commission. The Commission resolves most cases without the Tribunal’s intervention. Cases referred to the Tribunal generally involve complicated legal issues, new human rights issues, unexplored areas of discrimination, or multifaceted evidentiary complaints that must be heard under oath.
The Tribunal’s mandate also includes hearing matters under the Employment Equity Act (EEA).
These financial statements have been prepared in accordance with Treasury Board accounting policies which are consistent with Canadian generally accepted accounting principles for the public sector. Significant accounting policies are as follows:
• | Vacation pay and compensatory leave are expensed as the benefits accrue to employees under their respective terms of employment. |
• | Services provided without charge by other government departments for accommodation, the employer’s contribution to the health and dental insurance plans and legal services are recorded as operating expenses at their estimated cost. |
Asset Class | Amortization Period |
Machinery and equipment Furniture and fixtures Informatics hardware & software |
5 to 10 years 10 years 3 years |
The Canadian Human Rights Tribunal receives most of its funding through annual Parliamentary appropriations. Items recognized in the statement of operations and the statement of financial position in one year may be funded through Parliamentary appropriations in prior, current or future years. Accordingly, the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal has different net results of operations for the year on a government funding basis than on an accrual accounting basis. The differences are reconciled in the following tables:
a) Reconciliation of net cost of operations to current year appropriations used
2008 | 2007 | ||
(in dollars) | |||
Net cost of operations | 5,235,950 | 5,756,342 | |
Adjustments for items affecting net cost of operations but not affecting appropriations | |||
Add (Less): | Services provided without charge | (1,110,179) | (1,165,942) |
Amortization of tangible capital assets | (67,589) | (51,545) | |
Variation in vacation pay and compensatory leave | 14,504 | 12,122 | |
Variation in employee severance benefits | (18,459) | 0 | |
Add: | Miscellaneous revenue | 1,829 | 25 |
Refund of previous year expenses | 10 | 4,300 | |
Adjustments for items not affecting net cost of operations but affecting appropriations | |||
Add: | Acquisitions of tangible capital assets | 121,705 | 6,137 |
Current year appropriations used | 4,177,771 | 4,561,439 |
b) Appropriations provided and used
2008 | 2007 | |
(in dollars) | ||
Vote 15 – Program expenditures | 4,102,548 | 4,289,378 |
Statutory Amounts | 351,898 | 346,782 |
Less: | ||
Lapsed appropriations: Operating | (276,675) | (74,721) |
Current year appropriations used | 4,177,771 | 4,561,439 |
c) Reconciliation of net cash provided by Government to current year appropriations used
2008 | 2007 | |
(in dollars) | ||
Net cash provided by Government | 4,219,831 | 4,479,223 |
Revenue not available for spending | 1,829 | 25 |
Refund of previous year expenses | 10 | 4,300 |
Change in net position of the Consolidated Revenue Fund: | ||
Variation in accounts receivable and advances | 1,837 | (32,665) |
Variation in accounts payable and accrued liabilities | (45,736) | 110,556 |
(43,899) | 77,891 | |
Current year appropriations used | 4,177,771 | 4,561,439 |
4. Accounts Receivable and Advances
The following table presents details of accounts receivable and advances:
2008 | 2007 | |
(in dollars) | ||
Receivables from other Federal Government departments and agencies | 48,537 | 48,279 |
Receivables from external parties | 2,597 | 4,692 |
Employee Advances | 500 | 500 |
Total: | 51,634 | 53,471 |
5. Accounts Payable and Accrued Liabilities
The following table presents details of accounts payable and accrued liabilities:
2008 | 2007 | |
(in dollars) | ||
Accounts payable to other Federal Government departments and agencies | 111,670 | 31,916 |
Other accounts payable and accrued liabilities | 225,597 | 351,087 |
Total | 337,267 | 383,003 |
6. Tangible Capital Assets (in dollars)
Capital Asset Class | COST | ACCUMULATED AMORTIZATION | 2008 Net book value | 2007 Net book value | ||||||
Opening Balance | Acquisitions | Disposals And writeoffs | Closing Balance | Opening Balance | Amortization | Disposals and write-offs | Closing balance | |||
Machinery and equipment | 12,796 | 0 | 0 | 12,796 | (5,230) | (1,302) | 0 | (6,532) | 6,264 | 7,566 |
Furniture and fixtures | 21,863 | 0 | 0 | 21,863 | (12,803) | (2,520) | 0 | (15,323) | 6,540 | 9,060 |
Informatics hardware and software | 342,673 | 121,705 | 0 | 464,378 | (262,645) | (63,767) | 0 | (326,412) | 137,966 | 80,028 |
Total | 377,332 | 121,705 | 0 | 499,037 | (280,678) | (67,589) | 0 | (348,267) | 150,770 | 96,654 |
Note: Amortization expense for the year ended March 31, 2008 is $67,589 (2007 - $51,545).
7. Employee Benefits
a) Pension benefits: Employees of the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal participate in the Public Service Pension Plan, which is sponsored and administered by the Government of Canada. Pension benefits accrue up to a maximum period of 35 years at a rate of 2 percent per year of pensionable service, times the average of the best five consecutive years of earnings. The benefits are integrated with Canada/Québec Pension Plans benefits and they are indexed to inflation.
Both the employees and the department contribute to the cost of the Plan. The 2007-08 expense amounts to $256,531 ($254,841 in 2006-07), which represents approximately 2.1 times (2.2 in 2006-07) the contributions by employees.
The department’s responsibility with regard to the Plan is limited to its contributions. Actuarial surpluses or deficiencies are recognized in the financial statements of the Government of Canada as the Plan’s sponsor.
b) Severance benefits: The Canadian Human Rights Tribunal provides severance benefits to its employees based on eligibility, years of service and final salary. These severance benefits are not pre-funded. Benefits will be paid from future appropriations. Information about the severance benefits, measured as at March 31, is as follows:
2008 | 2007 | |
(in dollars) | ||
Accrued benefit obligation, beginning of year | 431,825 | 431,825 |
Expense for the year | 53,560 | 61,340 |
Benefits paid during the year | (35,101) | (61,340) |
Accrued benefit obligation, end of year | 450,284 | 431,825 |
8. Contractual Obligations
The nature of the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal activities can result in some large multi-year contracts and obligations whereby the department will be obligated to make future payments when the services/goods are received. Significant contractual obligations that can be reasonably estimated are summarized as follows:
(in dollars) | |||
2009 | 2010 and thereafter | Total | |
Goods and services | 130,132 | 43,403 | 173,535 |
The Canadian Human Rights Tribunal is related as a result of common ownership to all Government of Canada departments, agencies, and Crown corporations. The Canadian Human Rights Tribunal enters into transactions with these entities in the normal course of business and on normal trade terms. Also, during the year, the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal received services that were obtained without charge from other Government departments, as presented below.
Services provided without charge:
During the year the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal received without charge from other departments accommodation and the employer’s contribution to the health and dental insurance plans. These services without charge have been recognized in the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal Statement of Operations as follows:
2008 | 2007 | |
(in dollars) | ||
Accommodation | 962,962 | 1,020,000 |
Employer’s contribution to the health and dental insurance plans | 147,217 | 145,942 |
Total | 1,110,179 | 1,165,942 |
The government has structured some of its administrative activities for efficiency and cost-effectiveness purposes so that one department performs these on behalf of all without charge. The costs of these services, which include payroll and cheque issuance services provided by Public Works and Government Services Canada, are not included as an expense in the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal’s Statement of Operations.
The Canadian Human Rights Tribunal has a single mission: To contribute to the purpose of the Canadian Human Rights Act (CHRA) and the Employment Equity Act (EEA) in protecting individual Canadians from discrimination and promoting equality of opportunity. Accordingly, the Tribunal has one main activity—the hearing and determination of complaints of discrimination referred to it under the CHRA and EEA.
The Minister of Justice speaks to Parliament regarding issues relating to the operation of the Tribunal. The Chairperson of the Tribunal, as deputy head, has supervision over the direction of the Tribunal’s work, including allocation of work among its members and the management of its internal affairs and resources.
The Tribunal’s Senior Management Committee, chaired by the deputy head, has responsibility for managing activities related to the Tribunal’s hearings program and is accountable for program performance. It is the principal form for deliberations on issues relating to program operations. The Management Committee has responsibility for administering the Tribunal’s internal services, resources, property, personnel, procurement and expenditures. It focuses on policy and planning issues and advises the Senior Management Committee on matters relating to general supervision and direction of the Tribunal’s hearing program.
Gregory M. Smith, Registrar
Canadian Human Rights Tribunal
160 Elgin St
11th floor
Ottawa, Ontario
K1A 1J4
Tel: 613-995-1707
Fax: 613-995-3484
E-mail: registrar@chrt-tcdp.gc.ca
Web: www.chrt-tcdp.gc.ca