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Animal rights activists thrilled after parts of Ontario agriculture law deemed unconstitutional

Animal rights activists thrilled after parts of Ontario agriculture law deemed unconstitutional

CBC
Tuesday, April 30, 2024 02:40:45 PM UTC

Animal advocates are celebrating after parts of a controversial Ontario agriculture law that made it illegal to get a job on a farm under false pretences to expose conditions inside were deemed unconstitutional.

Justice Markus Koehnen struck down parts of Bill 156, the Security from Trespass and Protecting Food Safety Act, earlier this month after advocacy group Animal Justice, along with an activist and a journalist, launched a Charter challenge in 2021.

They argued the new law infringed on their freedom of expression because they could not tell the outside world what was happening inside a farm if they gained access to the property through a false pretence.

The act required consent from the owner to be on a property where animals are kept, raised or slaughtered. That consent was voided under the law if someone lied to get on the land.

"The act limits the mode of expression by preventing undercover exposes or even eyewitness descriptions of the conditions in which animals are raised or slaughtered if the person providing the description gained access to premises using false pretences," the judge wrote in his decision.

"In light of the foregoing, I find that one of the purposes and one of the effects of the act and the regulation is to infringe on the applicants' freedom of expression."

The province enacted the legislation in response to demands from the agricultural industry and about 120 municipal resolutions calling on the government to do more to control trespassing, the decision said.

Ontario argued the legislation was aimed at "protecting animal safety, biosecurity, and the safety of farmers as well as preventing economic harm that can arise from threats to animal safety and biosecurity."

Part of the case focused on lying.

"If lies can amount to protected speech in a context as odious as Holocaust denial, they should be equally protected when someone denies having a university degree or being affiliated with an animal rights group to obtain employment at or entry to an animal auction, petting zoo, rodeo, fair or circus," the judge decided.

The news thrilled Camille Labchuk, executive director of Animal Justice.

"It's a decisive victory over unconstitutional 'ag-gag' laws that were designed and had the effect of covering up serious animal cruelty on farms," she said.

"In light of this ruling, we're looking forward to getting back to doing investigative work in Ontario as soon as possible."

The animal advocates had submitted undercover video of farms that were eventually aired on national television broadcasts and led to criminal charges and convictions in some cases. None of that would have happened without lying to get a job in the first place.

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