Susan's Place Logo

News:

Visit our Discord server  and Wiki

Main Menu

Victory For Transsexual Persons In Ontario

Started by stephanie_craxford, May 25, 2006, 10:59:16 AM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

stephanie_craxford

News release For Immediate Release

May 24, 2006

The Ontario Human Rights Commission Wins An Important Victory For Transsexual Persons In Ontario

Toronto – A decision concerning the treatment of transsexual persons detained by police was issued by the Human Rights Tribunal of Ontario on Tuesday, May 16, 2006. The complainant's case was referred and argued by the Ontario Human Rights Commission.

The complaint centered on the treatment of a transsexual woman who was strip-searched by Peel Police on several separate occasions. The complainant, a pre-operative transsexual woman, alleged that she repeatedly asked to have female officers conduct these searches, but that her requests were denied. Peel Police policy at the time required a male officer be involved in the search because the complainant had not yet had sex reassignment surgery.

Finding the previous policy discriminatory, the Tribunal ordered that a transsexual detainee who is going to be strip-searched must be given three options: the use of male officers only; the use of female officers only; or a split search involving both.

The Tribunal provided direction on how such searches should be conducted, including a requirement that the officer-in-charge be informed and authorize the strip search. Direction was also given on how to resolve the situation where an officer has serious reason to doubt a detainee's self-identification as a transsexual person. The Tribunal order states that officers are not allowed to "opt out" of performing strip-searches of a transsexual person except in limited circumstances where the officer has significant Human Rights Code or Charter of Rights and Freedoms interests of his or her own to protect. Finally, the order requires Peel Police to produce a training video on transsexuality for all members of its force, in conjunction with experts, and with input from the transsexual community. The Commission must approve the video prior to its release.

"This precedent-setting decision recognizes that transsexual individuals are full and equal members of society who must be accorded respect, dignity and freedom from discrimination," remarked Chief Commissioner Barbara Hall.

In cases where a complaint has been filed and no settlement is reached, the Ontario Human Rights Commission makes a decision based on its investigation and written submissions from the parties. When there is sufficient evidence to warrant a hearing it will refer complaints to the Human Rights Tribunal. For the year ending March 31, 2006, the Commission referred 143 complaints to the Tribunal. The Commission sent an additional 27 cases to the Tribunal after reconsideration of a previous decision.

Afroze Edwards
Sr. Communications Officer
Policy and Education Branch
(416) 314-4528

Jeff Poirier
Manager, Communications
Policy and Education Branch
(416) 314-4539

Steph
  •  

Melissa

Now you can safely go out and rob a bank to pay for SRS Steph.  :D

Melissa
  •  

Jennifer72

I think that I'm going to move to Ontario! I like Canada ever sooo much better anyway!

Jennifer
  •  

stephanie_craxford

It's my favorite place to be and there is lots of room :)

Steph
  •  

Kate Thomas

I ran across this commentary  on the subject by New York Law School Professor Arthur S. Leonard,


http://newyorklawschool.typepad.com/leonardlink/legal_issues/index.html
QuoteOntario Trans Strip-Search Decision

I've just finished reading one of the most extraordinary legal documents that has ever come to my attention, the 125-page ruling by Ontario Human Rights Tribunal Adjudicator Mary Ross Hendriks in the case of Ontario Human Rights Commission and Rosalyn Forrester v. Regional Municipality of Peel, No. HR-0583/584-04, 2006 HRTO 13 (May 16, 2006).

In this revolutionary ruling, Hendriks orders that the respondent police force change its policies so that transgender detainees have a choice concerning the gender of police officers who will strip-search them in confinement, and further orders that the police make a training video and use it extensively to end the ignorance of their members in dealing with transgender members of the public.  The training video is to be made with input from members of the transgender community, several of whom testified.  (Part of the fascination of the opinion is the detailed account of their personal histories by the transsexual expert witnesses, including a courageous woman who "came out" and transitioned while an officer of the Canadian armed forces, winning the full support of the military hierarchy for her courage and honesty.)
QuoteThe opinion is certainly worth reading for anybody interested in the subject, and probably should be mandatory reading for training programs for police administrators.  It can be found on the Tribunal's website, www.hrto.ca, under date of May 16, 2006.




Posted at: May 29, 2006, 09:42:21 AM


link to HRTO decision PFD
https://www.susans.org/Articles/Law/3454.html
"But who is that on the other side of you?"
T.S. Eliot
  •