Law school deans object to Trinity Western application
EDUCATION / 'Do we want a law school that expressly discriminates based on sexual orientation?'
Nathaniel Christopher / Vancouver / Monday, January 21, 2013
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The deans of Canada’s law schools are objecting to a Christian university’s bid to establish its own law school in BC because the university upholds a policy that discriminates against gay students.

In a letter addressed to the Federation of Law Societies of Canada, which determines whether common-law degree programs meet requirements set out by Canadian law societies, Council of Canadian Law Deans president Bill Flanagan objects to Trinity Western University’s (TWU) pending application because of its community covenant, which students must sign upon admittance.

Among other things, the declaration explicitly holds students responsible to uphold biblical teachings, which include no premarital sex and no homosexuality. Failure to uphold these commitments, according to the student handbook, could result in discipline, dismissal or a refusal to readmit a student to the university.

“We would urge the Federation to investigate whether TWU’s covenant is inconsistent with federal or provincial law,” Flanagan writes. “We would also urge the federation to consider this covenant and its intentionally discriminatory impact on gay, lesbian and bisexual students when evaluating TWU’s application to establish an approved common law program.”

Dean Bill Flanagan says Trinity Western University's Christian covenant is incompatible with the core value of Canadian law, equality, and should therefore be refused a law school. The BC Civil Liberties Association disagrees.
(Queen's University)
“Canada protects religious rights for all Canadians, and we respect the rights of the LGBT community to hold their views,” responds TWU president Jonathan S Raymond.

“TWU’s covenant is not anti-gay nor discriminatory,” Raymond maintains. “Students sign codes of conduct at universities voluntarily. TWU’s covenant reflects our identity as a Christian university. The Supreme Court of Canada, in 2001, upheld TWU’s right to have a covenant and professional schools. This ruling still stands.”

In 2001, the Supreme Court of Canada upheld TWU’s right to teach Christian values — even if they are homophobic. The high court found the university’s teacher program graduates are entitled to hold “sexist, racist or homophobic beliefs” as long as they don’t act on them in the public school classrooms to which they might be assigned.

“There is an exemption in the BC Human Rights Code that exempts private religious institutions, and this is how Trinity Western is able to maintain this practice,” Flanagan concedes. “It’s likely not inconsistent with provincial human rights legislation.”

Whether TWU is allowed to maintain its Christian covenant is not the point, Flanagan argues. The broader point is “that equality is a core value in Canadian law, including the Charter of Human Rights and all Canadian law schools. The Federation should take this into account. Even if a practice is exempt in the BC Human Rights Code, do we want a law school that expressly discriminates based on sexual orientation?”

BC Civil Liberties president Lindsay Lyster says she doesn’t care what kind of covenant students have to sign as long as they are able to enter the legal profession as competent and effective lawyers.

“The BC Civil Liberties Association intervened in support of Trinity Western when essentially the same issue arose years ago now, with respect to their ability to educate teachers,” she says. “In that case the Supreme Court of Canada clearly said the fact that you are expected to sign on to a code of conduct doesn’t mean you can’t be a teacher and, equally in my view, in a matter of law, that you can’t be a lawyer.

“So, I don’t think that as a matter of law there’s any reason why, because Trinity Western is a Christian university, it can’t have a law school,” she says. “And in fact it’s important to know there is a fine tradition of Christian universities with fine law schools that produce fine lawyers.”

Lyster says lawyers should be judged based on their conduct rather than their choice of university.

“If a member of a law society was acting in a discriminatory manner, that would be something legitimately of concern to that law society,” she says. “We don’t judge members of the professions or law societies on the basis of their beliefs, or the beliefs of the educational institution where they chose to obtain their law degree.”

BC Teachers’ Federation president Susan Lambert disagrees. She says there’s no place in a post-secondary institution for a policy that discriminates based on sexual orientation.

“We have created a constitutional right in Canada that prohibits discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation, and we entrust the courts and lawyers who work in the judicial system to uphold that constitutional right,” she says. “So it’s inherently contradictory for a school that teaches students to exclude the possibility of homosexual relationships to also graduate lawyers who would have to uphold our constitution.”

Vancouver vice-principal James Chamberlain describes TWU’s position as a “love the sinner but hate the sin” perspective.

"As a gay man who grew up in Abbotsford, I know the power of the particular churches to silence and deny people their legitimate identity and right to acceptance," he says. "So I think that Trinity Western is trying to play on two angles here. One, what they think the law says, and the other being what their religious values are, and I don’t believe their religious values and faith-based belief can trump the Canadian law.”

“With the British Columbia College of Teachers investigation that ruled in their favour, I think they may feel buoyed by holding this position, but it’s outdated and it doesn't reflect the contemporary Canadian values legally or socially,” Chamberlain says. “Their archaic position and desire to cling to the past through the lens of their faith doesn't support LGBTQ people."



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Reader Comments


 
fundamentalist wind must be detoxified
Fundamentalist Christianity is an insideous poison running the length of Canada with moderate to extreme infestation levels in well known geographic areas. Any Canadian who values freedom must be consistently vigilent and take steps whenever this social pollution festers its way into the public and political realm. Fumigation of fundamentalism is freedom.
all religion off earth now, Toronto Ontario
01/21/13 9:30 PM EST
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Two Ways To Skin a Christian
If the organizers were smart they would call their program, Muslim Law Studies Based on Christian Principles, I am sure the Muslim connotation wouldn't attract as much criticism as the Christian label does.
Raifon, Campbell River BC
01/22/13 4:00 PM EST
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Partnering with Muslim homophobes
Raifon has a point. If the homophobic Christians at Trinity Western somehow partnered with a homophobic Muslim organization (under some sort of deal that would allow the two organizations to issue separate law degrees out of separarate premises), the politically correct deans of Canada's law schools would quickly drop their opposition out of fear of being called anti-Muslim.
James, Toronto ON
01/22/13 9:09 PM EST
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How did Lindsay M. Lyster get this title?
Swap out Gay with Jewish and see if Linsdays argument is still applicable. Funny how those never discriminated against, don't understand. Call this Lindsays "let them eat cake" decision.
Jase, Mississauga ON
01/23/13 9:12 AM EST
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I Support Trinity Western
As a student I have been looking forward to attending law school at Trinity Western in two years when I graduate. I have had to attend a secular school to complete my undergrad and experience the the world has to offer. I look forward to experiencing school in an environment that supports my believes and live choices. Why is it that we must support everyone elses lifestyle but those that we don't agree with? Christian students have the right to be educated in the environment that they choose. Free from discrimination and harassment by their peers just as much as anyone else does.
carolyn leblanc, sudbury ontario
01/23/13 3:21 PM EST
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You are free to hate
Hate whom ever you want, go to whatever school you wish - you have that freedom, but not at the taxpayers expense or with the official approval of a publicly elected Provincial government. All points of view, are not valid points of view. Hate is not a valid point of view regardless of which "magical book" you use to try and legitimize it.
Jase, Mississauga ON
01/23/13 7:40 PM EST
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kkk
Carolyn, why do you hate Canadian values so much? Why is equality so offensive to you. You know the kkk also claims to hate no one, just hsve beliefs. They have more class than homophobes though...
mk ultra, calgary ab
01/24/13 5:52 PM EST
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christians have rights
KKK, (and perhaps truthfully named so) Equality doesnt mean that diversity be killed for the sake of equality. Just as gay people have a sex positive culture, christians have a sex purity culture. The school would be homphobic if it only had a homosexuality but no premarital sex clause. Gay culture routinely exclues Asians without it being offensive to any ones sense of equality. if christians do something similar... they become evil according to the gays....
Sam, Ottawa ON
01/24/13 8:15 PM EST
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Religious Freedoms.
I will respect your right to your beliefs. But when your beliefs tell me I must believe as you do or else, well then, there is going to be a fight. And any attempt by you and yours to write law in favor of your beliefs is asking for that fight to be bloody. Not so free after all eh Trinity Western University?
barry william teske, vancouver bc
01/25/13 8:36 AM EST
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Sam of Ottawa writes: Gay culture routinely exclue
I guess you've never been to a bathhouse
cristal is my frend, toronto ontario
01/25/13 12:59 PM EST
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All Religious Institutions Should Be Taxed
All religious institutions should be Income-taxed like any other, they want privilege but they don’t want to pay for it, like the rest of us. If they deem that they under religious privilege they have the right to discriminate, than society should demand that they pay taxes for that privilege. I abhor that in part, my taxes are directed to these faith based institutions of schools, churches and colleges, that get to produce and provide society with more and more robotic bigots for the future, but then again isn’t this their religious agenda. Niy
Niy Mvle, Victoria bc
01/26/13 2:13 PM EST
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The Problem
When the government allows a private religious institution to train upholders of the secular and public law, the government is implicitly approving of that private organization's views and teachings. It is clearly against the interests of secular society to put fascistic little bigots on the benches of our courts, deciding cases involving gay bashings or prostitution or other components of sexual morality. It is the implicit improval that is most problematic. This will create the same problem as in the US - fly-by-night evangelical, right-wing Christian "universities" will undercut other law programs, teach discrimination and dominionism and begin clogging the courts with ridiculousness and vexatious lawsuits. Liberty Defense Fund, Alliance Defense Fund, etc. I hate it when my faith is used by bigots to advance their own hateful agenda. (On that note, please read 'Christian' as 'right-wing, evangelical Christian' and not the good institutions that actually welcome LGBT folk as full and equal members of the congregation.)
R MacLeod, Vancouver BC
01/29/13 10:28 PM EST
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