Close X
Thursday, January 16, 2025
ADVT 
National

B.C. Judge Tells Man To Quit Smoking In Langley Condo Ahead Of Human Rights Challenge

The Canadian Press, 26 Jan, 2016 06:48 PM
    VANCOUVER — A "life-long smoker" has been ordered to butt out inside his Langley, B.C., apartment while he waits to challenge his condo corporation with a human rights complaint.
     
    A British Columbia Supreme Court judge has concluded that Paul Aradi must follow a no-smoking bylaw in his building, despite having difficulty standing and walking.
     
    In a ruling posted online Tuesday, Judge Wendy Harris said she will not allow the 70-year-old to continue disregarding the bylaw until the Human Rights Tribunal holds a hearing.
     
    Aradi's rights complaint asks the corporation to accommodate his disability, which he said affects his ability to smoke his cigarettes outside. It's expected the hearing will be held in July, although it has not been formally scheduled.
     
    "That would be approximately six months away from now, which is a significant period for those owners who have expressed concerns about the smell of cigarettes and the effects of second-hand smoke on their health and the use and enjoyment of their property," Harris wrote.
     
    "I reject the respondent's contention that their concerns are exaggerated or ideologically based."
     
    The Canadian Forces veteran purchases his condo in 2002, seven years before the corporation prohibited smoking inside individual units. The corporation did not attempt to enforce the bylaw until December 2013, after other residents began complaining.
     
     
    Aradi began accumulating fines, but did not pay the $2,300.
     
    He instead filed short, hand-written responses.
     
    Aradi asserted the bylaw is discriminatory in creating two classes of citizens, smokers and non-smokers. He also accused the corporation of trying to force him to move because he had complained about certain bills from the corporation.
     
    In affidavits filed in the case, the corporation's secretary states that at least five owners made complaints, ranging from health risks of second-hand smoke to fire risks, foul odour and negative effect on property values.
     
    In her ruling, the judge found that the smoking bylaw was valid and residents have a "reasonable expectation" that it will be consistently enforced.
     
    Harris also found that Aradi did not file his human rights complaint until more than a year after he was first fined.
     
    She accepted he has an addiction to smoking and has mobility limitations. But she also found evidence — including TV news footage — that the man has been able to walk a relatively short distance from his unit to smoke.
     
    He can also drive his car to another location where smoking is permitted, Harris said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Quebec Government In Court To Appeal Injunction Against Assisted-dying Law

    Quebec Government In Court To Appeal Injunction Against Assisted-dying Law
    MONTREAL — Quebec government lawyers will be in court today to appeal an injunction that was aimed at blocking a provincial law on assisted dying. 

    Quebec Government In Court To Appeal Injunction Against Assisted-dying Law

    Valiant US Sikh Store-Owner, 59, Fights Off Armed Robber With Only Slipper

    Valiant US Sikh Store-Owner, 59, Fights Off Armed Robber With Only Slipper
    In a feat caught on surveillance cameras, the 59-year-old Amrik Singh fought off a shotgun-wielding masked robber using only his slipper in the store at his petrol station in Staatsburg, about 150 km from New York City.

    Valiant US Sikh Store-Owner, 59, Fights Off Armed Robber With Only Slipper

    Police Seek Cheetah Spotted Along Southeast B.C. Highway 3A Near Creston

    Police Seek Cheetah Spotted Along Southeast B.C. Highway 3A Near Creston
    RCMP in Creston said the cheetah was spotted along Highway 3A on Thursday at about 4:30 p.m. in the Crawford Bay and Kootenay Bay areas.

    Police Seek Cheetah Spotted Along Southeast B.C. Highway 3A Near Creston

    One Flat Fee Real Estate Donates $1,500 To The BC Children’s Hospital

    One Flat Fee Real Estate Donates $1,500 To The BC Children’s Hospital
    Oneflatfee, the largest flat fee MLS service in western Canadadonated $ 1,500 to the BC Children’s hospital on December 15th

    One Flat Fee Real Estate Donates $1,500 To The BC Children’s Hospital

    Justin Trudeau Makes First Prime Ministerial Trip To Vancouver City Hall Since 1973

    Justin Trudeau Makes First Prime Ministerial Trip To Vancouver City Hall Since 1973
    He spent the morning meeting with Vancouver Mayor Gregor Robertson as the two discussed issues such as infrastructure, affordable housing and climate change.

    Justin Trudeau Makes First Prime Ministerial Trip To Vancouver City Hall Since 1973

    Ivan Henry Wrongful-Imprisonment Case About Risks Of Self-Representation: Crown

    John Hunter says 69-year-old Ivan Henry should bear some responsibility for his conviction after repeatedly refusing legal counsel during his 1982 sexual-assault trial.

    Ivan Henry Wrongful-Imprisonment Case About Risks Of Self-Representation: Crown