Close X
Saturday, November 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

Manitoba Liberal Says Obesity Should Be Protected Under Human Rights Code

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 07 Oct, 2016 12:41 PM
    WINNIPEG — A Manitoba politician wants obese people protected from discrimination under the province's human rights code.
     
    Jon Gerrard, one of only three Liberal legislature members, has introduced a private member's bill to forbid discrimination based on people's "physical size and weight."
     
    The code already forbids discrimination on other grounds such as sex, religion and disability.
     
    Gerrard says no other jurisdiction in Canada prevents discrimination against obese persons, and Manitoba should lead the way.
     
    He says his bill was prompted, in part, by a man who alleges he was refused proper medical treatment because of his size.
     
    Bills from opposition members rarely become law, but the Progressive Conservative government says it will take a look at Gerrard's idea.
     
    "Obesity is a serious health concern that affects a significant segment of our population," Amy McGuinness, press secretary to Justice Minister Heather Stefanson, wrote in an email Thursday.
     
    "Our government is currently reviewing the implications of the bill."
     
    There have been human rights commission rulings in favour of obese people, but the cases have involved people who were considered disabled by their obesity and they were protected under the disability category.
     
    In 2010, the Quebec Human Rights Commission ruled a morbidly obese woman was discriminated against by her condominium association for denying her a handicapped parking spot.
     
    Gerrard says obese people can suffer discrimination in the workplace, in housing and other areas. And he has read about many concerns in the health care system from obese people "who should have had screening tests but didn't, who should have had immunizations but didn't, who didn't get the kind of care they should have got," he said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Daphne Odjig, Whose Art Blended Ojibwa With Picasso And Van Gogh, Dies At 97

    Daphne Odjig, Whose Art Blended Ojibwa With Picasso And Van Gogh, Dies At 97
    An elder of Canadian aboriginal artists whose work appeared in galleries around the world has died.

    Daphne Odjig, Whose Art Blended Ojibwa With Picasso And Van Gogh, Dies At 97

    Edmonton Judge To Decide On Mistrial In Travis Vader Murder Case Oct. 31.

    EDMONTON — An Edmonton judge says he will decide at the end of the month whether to declare a mistrial for a man he found guilty of murdering two seniors.

    Edmonton Judge To Decide On Mistrial In Travis Vader Murder Case Oct. 31.

    Controversial Filmmaker Nate Parker Receives Applause At Vancouver Film Festival

    Controversial Filmmaker Nate Parker Receives Applause At Vancouver Film Festival
      Parker has been criticized for comments he made during an interview with "60 Minutes" journalist Anderson Cooper that is scheduled to air Sunday.

    Controversial Filmmaker Nate Parker Receives Applause At Vancouver Film Festival

    Japanese Thwart Canadian Parents' Struggle To Access Abducted Children

    Japanese Thwart Canadian Parents' Struggle To Access Abducted Children
    Tim Terstege is planning to climb Mount Fuji on Oct. 13, the day four years ago his wife disappeared with his then-four-year-old son.

    Japanese Thwart Canadian Parents' Struggle To Access Abducted Children

    Hijab-Wearing Student Prevented From Taking Exam For Refusing To Show Ears

    Hijab-Wearing Student Prevented From Taking Exam For Refusing To Show Ears
    The Young Woman Refused To Partly Pull Back Her Islamic Scarf Because She Didn't Want To Show Her Male Teachers Her Ears.

    Hijab-Wearing Student Prevented From Taking Exam For Refusing To Show Ears

    War Canoe Takes Prince William And Kate To Haida Gwaii As Royal Tour Winds Down

    War Canoe Takes Prince William And Kate To Haida Gwaii As Royal Tour Winds Down
    HAIDA GWAII, B.C. — Prince William and Kate arrived at a small village off the coast of B.C. on Friday in a replica 15-metre Haida war canoe, ferried to the remote island by paddlers wearing T-shirts opposing liquefied natural gas development.

    War Canoe Takes Prince William And Kate To Haida Gwaii As Royal Tour Winds Down