Close X
Sunday, November 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

Human Rights Complaint Targets Ontario City's Pool Policy On Female Toplessness

The Canadian Press, 10 Jul, 2017 01:02 PM
    CORNWALL, Ont. — An eastern Ontario city is facing a human rights complaint over its policy on female toplessness in pools, more than two decades after it became legal for women bare their breasts in public in the province.
     
    Cornwall Mayor Leslie O'Shaughnessy said a woman has complained to the Human Rights Tribunal of Ontario alleging the pool policy discriminates on the basis of gender.
     
    "Our policy states that girls over the age of 10 must wear a top," O'Shaughnessy said. "The clause that's in there is specific to females."
     
    City councillors will decide whether to fight the complaint or change the policy in the coming weeks, and were set to be briefed by city lawyers on Monday evening, he said.
     
    The tribunal has not yet scheduled a hearing on the matter and the full details of the complaint haven't been made public, but O'Shaughnessy noted the complainant doesn't live in the city or the surrounding counties.
     
    The complaint also targets an eastern Ontario water park and seven hotel companies.
     
    Cornwall's toplessness policy dates back to 1996 — and O'Shaughnessy said he doesn't know the reasoning behind it.
     
    Bare breasts were a matter of public debate at the time.
     
    In December of that year, the Ontario Court of Appeal ruled that a woman's topless stroll down a street in Guelph, Ont., was not obscene, making it legal for all women in Ontario to be topless in public.
     
    Municipal policies on the issue have been challenged in a number of Ontario cities on the basis of that ruling in the intervening years.
     
     
     
     
     
    Cambridge, Ont., eliminated its toplessness policy after two women were charged with trespassing for swimming topless in protest of the city's ban in 1997.
     
    Guelph, Ont., changed its policy after an eight-year-old girl was told by city staff to cover up while she was in a wading pool wearing only a swim bottom in 2015.
     
    The recent human rights complaint wasn't sparked by a similar incident, according to Scott Lecky, the owner and general manager of the Ramada Cornwall, one of the respondents.
     
    "Nothing really happened," Lecky said. "We got an email from someone we thought was a guest."
     
    The complainant had emailed six or seven months ago to ask if she would be able to swim topless at the hotel, he said.
     
    "Our response was 'we appreciate your email, but you know we have a family establishment here,'" Lecky said. "'We have a lot of kids and families that stay with us and we appreciate if you wore appropriate swim attire while staying at the hotel.'"
     
    Lecky said the documents he was served about two months ago indicate the woman had contacted each of the respondents in a similar manner to ask about their policies on toplessness.
     
    However, the woman never stayed in the hotel, he said, adding it didn't have a firm policy on toplessness and hadn't needed one before.
     
    But after hiring a lawyer, the hotel has made it a policy to allow women to swim topless from now on, he said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Premier Warns NDP, Greens That Delaying Site C Dam In B.C. Could Cost $600M

    Premier Warns NDP, Greens That Delaying Site C Dam In B.C. Could Cost $600M
    VANCOUVER — British Columbia's political leaders exchanged duelling letters over the future of the Site C dam project on Tuesday, with Premier Christy Clark arguing that delays will cost hundreds of millions of dollars.

    Premier Warns NDP, Greens That Delaying Site C Dam In B.C. Could Cost $600M

    Flood Risk Downgraded On Some B.C. Rivers, But Kelowna Residents Still Watchful

    Flood Risk Downgraded On Some B.C. Rivers, But Kelowna Residents Still Watchful
    VANCOUVER — A flood watch is in effect for the South Thompson and Shuswap rivers in B.C.'s southern Interior, but the River Forecast Centre has downgraded the risk on the North Thompson River and on the Thompson River through Kamloops.

    Flood Risk Downgraded On Some B.C. Rivers, But Kelowna Residents Still Watchful

    New Brunswick Boxer David Whittom Remains In Induced Coma After Post-Bout Brain Hemorrhage

    New Brunswick Boxer David Whittom Remains In Induced Coma After Post-Bout Brain Hemorrhage
    Thirty-eight-year-old David Whittom is listed in stable condition at Saint John Regional Hospital.

    New Brunswick Boxer David Whittom Remains In Induced Coma After Post-Bout Brain Hemorrhage

    Autopsy Report Shows Canadian Killed Fighting ISIL Died From Head Injury: Mother

    Autopsy Report Shows Canadian Killed Fighting ISIL Died From Head Injury: Mother
    Tassone was killed on Dec. 21 in the city of Raqqa while fighting militants associated with the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, known as ISIS or ISIL.

    Autopsy Report Shows Canadian Killed Fighting ISIL Died From Head Injury: Mother

    Parking Enforcement Officer 'Powerless' As 3 Toronto Cops Had Sex With Her

    The woman, who cannot be identified due to a standard publication ban, is testifying at the trial of Joshua Cabero, Leslie Nyznik, and Sameer Kara, who have all pleaded not guilty to sexual assault in connection with the alleged incident.

    Parking Enforcement Officer 'Powerless' As 3 Toronto Cops Had Sex With Her

    'Canada's Defence Investments Will Grow Innovative Businesses and Create Jobs'

    'Canada's Defence Investments Will Grow Innovative Businesses and Create Jobs'
    The Canadian aerospace and defence sector supports more than 240,000 jobs and contributes $31 billion annually to Canada's gross domestic product.

    'Canada's Defence Investments Will Grow Innovative Businesses and Create Jobs'