Bill C-279 testimony met with jeers
FEDERAL NEWS / Real Women of Canada says bill will shield pedophiles
Bradley Turcotte / National / Thursday, November 29, 2012
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Observers in the gallery of the standing committee on justice and human rights shook their heads Nov 27 as they listened to a representative from Real Women of Canada speak out against trans rights.
 
The third day of hearings on Bill C-279, which would add gender identity to the list of protected minorities under the Canadian Human Rights Act, also saw testimony from the Canadian Human Rights Commission and the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal. Yet it was Diane Watts’s testimony that got the biggest reaction from onlookers.
 
Watts adopted the frequently referenced stance that if the bill passes, sexual deviants will be able to access women’s washrooms where children are present.
 
“There’s a situation in Washington where a man who thinks he’s a female has been allowed entrance into a health club where children change. Since the terms gender identity and gender expression are undefined, they apply to anyone who thinks he or she is another sex,” Watts said, “whether or not he/she has had hormonal treatment or surgery.”
 
Watts also said that taxpayers should not have to pay for sex reassignment surgery and that trans Canadians should not receive special treatment. 
 
“People who think they are transgender should receive compassionate counselling, rather than be encouraged to go against their dissatisfaction with their genetically ingrained gender,” she said. “Their DNA does not change after these treatments.”
 
The bill’s author, NDP MP Randall Garrison, challenged Watts’s statements and called her brief “offensive.”
 
“The connection that you attempt to draw to pedophilia . . . anyone who has taken the time to inform themselves with the issues before us would know and should know that there is no connection between the issues we have before us, gender identity and gender expression, and pedophilia,” Garrison said.
 
Real Women of Canada has refused to meet with trans organizations, declining several requests. When Garrison asked why, Watts said substantial literature on the group’s website answers any questions trans groups -- such as Ottawa’s Gender Mosaic, which requested a meeting with Real Women -- have.
 
When Watts ran out of speaking time, Conservative MP Robert Goguen allotted his time to her.
 
Ottawa trans activist Joanne Law says Watts’s statements have nothing to do with the trans community.
Gender Mosaic's Amanda Ryan says she would like the term "gender expression" to stay in Bill C-279.
(Bradley Turcotte)
 
“We’re trying to get human rights. I’m not a pedophile,” she says. “I’m a real human being. I identify as female, and I need access to washrooms, the healthcare system, to courts, the police and all federal jurisdictions.”
 
Conservative MP Rod Bruinooge said he is concerned about the bill’s ramifications on First Nations communities.
 
Bruinooge said that since First Nations legal systems are unique, they require a transition period to adjust to any amendment to the Human Rights Code, as was the case for the repeal of section 67 in 2007. A complete exemption to Bill C-279 for First Nations communities is also an option, he said. 
 
Conservative MPs Shelly Glover and Kerry-Lynne Findlay disagreed with Bruinooge.
 
Findlay, who served a five-year term on the Canadian Human Rights Tribunal, recounted one case where a First Nations trans person came before the tribunal.
 
“She was very grateful for an opportunity to bring her issues forward before a neutral tribunal that would be applying human rights to her particular issues,” Findlay said. “To think that she would end up excluded, that First  Nations people would somehow be excluded from the very protections that we are trying to afford here in this bill . . . I think it would be a grave injustice to First Nations people.”
 
Bruinooge later changed his mind about an exemption, saying a transition period would suffice. Garrison said he supports a further look at how his bill will affect aboriginal communities.
 
Peter Zanette, a volunteer at Wabano Centre for Aboriginal Health, says he believes Bruinooge’s request for a transition period is a Conservative tactic to slow the bill’s passage.
 
“It’s a red herring that [Bruinooge] is bringing up. It is an unnecessary delay tactic,” Zanette says. “Let us get on with it. Trans people are getting killed; let’s protect them.”
 
The first amendment to the bill is to remove the term “gender expression.” Several MPs, including Conservative MP Kyle Seeback, say they are confused by the term and would like to have it defined.
 
Garrison concedes that the term “gender expression” is confusing. Garrison said “gender identity” will remain in its place. To attempt to define the term “gender expression” would be an undertaking no legislative body has attempted, Garrison said.
 
“If we as a group try to write the definition of gender expression, we will be breaking new ground in Canadian law, in international law. We’ll be doing something that no one else has really done,” Garrison said. “We really can’t do that in this committee. Let’s take the term out.”
 
Amanda Ryan, of Gender Mosaic, wants "gender expression" to remain in the bill.
 
“Expression is what will be the cause of discrimination and violence against us. Expression is what causes people to notice and take action for or against [trans people]," she says.
 
Ryan says gender identity is psychological, while gender expression is physical -- how a trans person dresses and presents to the world.
 
“If gender expression is not in the bill, I would like to see the definition for gender identity,” Ryan says. “Hopefully that does still have an encompassing factor for expression.”
 
The bells of the House of Commons rang before the committee could hear all amendments to the bill, forcing adjournment. The committee will reconvene Dec 4 with a member of the justice department present to conclude the hearings on the bill.  


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Reader Comments


 
"REAL" Women?
Does "REAL" stand for "Rightwing, Extremist And Loud"?
Craig, Wellington NZ
11/29/12 3:19 PM EST
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My thoughts
I am really tired of these left wing groups trying to associate being trans to socially immoral or illegal activity, or telling us it is covered by other existing laws that are supposed to protect us. Evidently they do not fully believe in the facts and findings of the DSIM, a book witten by people with far more understanding on mental health than what these groups seem to be able to muster, nor do they fully comprehend the implications they are imprinting on the general public. This constant bashing and association can only further the wedge between trans and society. For each person they convince, one of us will inevitably feel the ramification of that decision. It is only a matter of time. As for whether the threat of prejudice and hate is real or not, I challenge anyone to walk through a mall with a clearly written sign around your neck saying "I'm Trans" and see what reaction you get. Try going to the washroom - either one - and tell me how that works out for you. It has been said before, and I'll say it again - the only reason we are there is to go pee. Lingering is not an option. Being Trans, we have enough challenges in life. Adding the association of Trans to any socially immoral or illegal activity only multiplies the presures upon us. We are given so little, and yet so much is taken away just because of who we are. But the 3 things they cannot take are our dignity, our integrity, and our courage. Short of a Trans genocide, we will still be here tomorrow, doing what we need to do to survive and get by. Who knows, maybe the next person to extend a smile to you while walking down the street might just be me.
Chantelle, North Bay ON
11/29/12 3:58 PM EST
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@Chantelle
REAL women = "left wing" ?? lol
Sav., Toronto ON
11/29/12 7:47 PM EST
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protection is needed
As I read article after article on bill C-279 I think the comments of those who are against rights for transgendered person is reason enough for the protection. I like most people need to go to the washroom at some point in the date, so using a toilet is important. I even see the right of transgendered persons to access health care. I don't know what the Real Woman speaker does when she goes to the washrooms in public, I go to relieve myself and to fix my make up, and chat with my girlfriends. I would also remind her that there is more chances of a woman or child to be sexual abused in religious centres then in the washrooms.
Axcella, Edmonton Alberta
11/30/12 11:35 AM EST
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Gender Identity Bill passed in Nova Scotia
Yesterday (November 30, 2012), Nova Scotia passed an act to amend the Nova Scotia Human rights Act and Criminal Code to include Gender Identity and Gender Expression. Members from all three parties spoke in favour of the Act, both in the Legislature and in Committee and the bill was passed unanimously. The tide is turning!
Hugo Dann, Halifax Nova Scotia
12/01/12 3:53 AM EST
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Some People are Deliberately Ignorant
Opponents of protecting the rights and medical needs of Transgendered people need to realize that just because they do not understand something does not make it evil or wrong. It is notable that organizations like unREAL Women also refuse to meet with Transgendered people and others who may help them grow in understanding. This is deliberate ignorance, not a merely lack of real knowledge. Therefore, if wise, the parliamentary committee hardly needs to take these groups seriously. And frankly, their constant focus on washrooms only shows their minds are in the gutter. The fact there are places in the world where all public washrooms are unisex. For example, many years ago, while in Scandinavia, I needed to use a unisex washroom and found I actually had more privacy and security than we can ever have in our gender specific washrooms here in America.
Wayne M., Edmonton Alberta
12/01/12 10:32 AM EST
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we can't compromise
'real women' may be bigots, but we can't give in. we need gender identity AND gender expression. working on a fact sheet that demonstrates why. i will not support this bill if 'expression' gets removed. a non-profit org is going to be launched within 48 hours to raise these concerns.. tcac279.org will be the website.
Jennifer McCreath, st john's newfoundland
12/03/12 10:33 PM EST
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