Judge hands province small win on Policy 713, pushes case back to fall
CBC
The legal battle between the Anglophone East district education council and the Higgs government on Policy 713 could continue into the next school year, just days before the start of a provincial election campaign.
Chief Justice Tracey DeWare of the Court of King's Bench had said earlier this spring that she wanted the case resolved before students return to classes in the fall.
But a tangle of legal filings "has created confusion" that could push a potential hearing on an injunction against Policy 713 to the second week of September, DeWare has decided.
That means it will unfold just one week before the legislature is dissolved for the election.
DeWare's Wednesday ruling hands a small victory to the province, which argued the education council could not seek an injunction to block Education Minister Bill Hogan from repealing its own gender identity policy and from dissolving the council.
The province argued there is already a mechanism to resolve disputes between a minister and a council which involves going to court.
DeWare agreed.
"An injunction is not necessary as the Minister of Education's actions are subject to court oversight prior to any order for dissolution," DeWare wrote.
Last year's changes to Policy 713 include a requirement that educators get the consent of parents if a student under the age of 16 wants to adopt a new name or pronoun at school to reflect their gender identity.
Anglophone East believes that violates the equality rights of 2SLGBTQ+ students under the Charter of Rights and Freedoms.
Hogan has already declared he was repealing the education council's policy on implementing Policy 713 — which is at odds with the provincial document — and has vowed to dissolve the council for defying his directives on the issue.
That process requires a court application that DeWare says gives the council the same ability to "enlist the assistance of the court" to challenge the minister — making injunctions against repeal and dissolution unnecessary.
The judge said she is still able to consider the district's other requests, including an injunction against the implementation of Policy 713 itself.
The district issued a press release saying it was celebrating what it called its "first win" in the case. Council member Kristin Cavoukian said no one from the education council would be doing interviews.
The leader of Canada's Green Party had some strong words for Nova Scotia's Progressive Conservatives while joining her provincial counterpart on the campaign trail. Elizabeth May was in Halifax Saturday to support the Nova Scotia Green Party in the final days of the provincial election campaign. She criticized PC Leader Tim Houston for calling a snap election this fall after the Tories passed legislation in 2021 that gave Nova Scotia fixed election dates every four years.