Carleton
students bar anti-abortion groups: Denied funding, space on campus
Katie Rook, National Post; with files from CanWest News Service
December 07, 2006
Carleton University's
student council has voted to deny funding to campus anti-abortion
groups.
A carefully worded policy amendment, passed on Tuesday night during a
council meeting, also bars student groups with anti-choice mandates
from council-managed spaces. "What we were speaking out against is
those anti-choice behaviours that the majority of students feel are
very discriminatory towards women," said Shawn Menard, president of
Carleton University Students' Association (CUSA).
"Where we draw the line in terms of anti-choice is that anti-choice is
a stance that aims to limit or remove a woman's right to choose her
best option in the case of pregnancy.
"Anti-choice often wishes to use the law to force women to bring
unwanted pregnancy to term and they usually advocate for the
recriminalization of abortion or a return to the board-granted abortion
process," he said, adding the students' association did not want to
fund that kind of activity.
Mr. Menard denied the amendment targeted specific campus groups, but
council was widely criticized last week when Carleton Lifeline, a
fledgling student group identifying itself as pro-life, claimed such a
policy amendment was discriminatory.
The newly approved policy reads: "CUSA further affirms that actions
such as campaigns, distributions, solicitations, lobbying efforts,
displays, events, etc. that seek to limit or remove a woman's options
in the event of pregnancy will not be supported."
The amendment passed by a vote of 26-5.
Don Hutchinson, general legal counsel for the Evangelical Fellowship of
Canada,
was one of about 150 people who attended Tuesday night's debate and
said council failed to distinguish between anti-choice and pro-life.
"Basically, [Carleton Lifeline is] being told they can be pro-life, but
they can never speak out and suggest that Canada should have an
abortion law which the Supreme Court of Canada has said is a decision
to be made by Parliament," Mr. Hutchinson said. "It is fair to say
abide by [council] rules, but those rules have to be fair and equal in
their treatment of everyone, and it's not fair and equal to single out
groups that hold a position that is open to free discussion in our
society and to say that free discussion is not permitted on a
university campus."
The faith-based advocacy group is threatening to take CUSA to court
over the policy, contemplating seeking a court injunction to block the
student association policy from being implemented.
The Evangelical Fellowship has also offered legal representation to
Carleton Lifeline should it launch a human rights complaint against
CUSA. Carleton Lifeline had previously claimed their rights to freedom
of speech under the Charter of Rights and Freedoms were being infringed.
Martha Jackman, a professor of constitutional law at the University of Ottawa,
questioned how the Charter might be relevant to the controversy.
"Essentially, a claim that a Charter right has been breached can only
be brought against an entity that is part of the government, for the
purposes of the
Prof. Jackman said. "Clearly the Carleton student association is not
government. They are a private student organization, but the question
can still be raised is Carleton
University the government or
a government delegate?"
Carleton Lifeline says it will wait until January to decide whether to
take legal action.
CUSA and a group such as Carleton Lifeline have competing equality
interests, Ms. Jackman said.
"There are certain forms of speech we constrain because there are other
competing interests we think are more important, and this is a case
where it is not a radical position on the part of the student
government to decide that between freedom of expression for
anti-abortion groups and respect for reproductive autonomy and equality
rights of women, we come down on the side of women's equality rights."
Mr. Menard said he has not seen Carleton Lifeline's mandate, but
suspected the group would be a candidate for funding if they abstained
from anti-choice behaviour.
"We're not trumping freedom of speech, people have an individual right,
but whether or not we fund a group, that's the question," he said.
krook@nationalpost.com, National Post 2006
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