Close X
Tuesday, November 12, 2024
ADVT 
National

Richmond Condo Owner Files Discrimination Complaint After Strata Council Hold Meetings In Mandarin

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Dec, 2015 10:33 AM
    RICHMOND, B.C. — A Richmond, B.C., man has filed a human rights complaint alleging his strata council's decision to conduct meetings in Mandarin amounts to discrimination.
     
    Andreas Kargut says he filed the complaint as a last resort after the council informed residents that all meetings would be conducted in Mandarin, instead of English, for reasons of efficiency.
     
    Minutes and all other documents are translated to English, but Kargut — who served on the strata council from 2003 to 2014 — says refusal to conduct the meetings in English discriminates against some residents.
     
    No laws require English to be used at strata meetings and Mandarin is spoken by as many as 70 per cent of those living in the complex, which borders Vancouver International Airport.
     
    Kargut says the strata council has ignored a recommendation to hire an independent translator for all meetings, and instead hired a translator that he alleges was unable to handle the task.
     
    Ed Mao, the president of the Wellington Court strata, says council never said it would exclude English, but members find it more efficient to use Mandarin during meetings. (CKNW, Global)

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Cost Of Refugee Plan Pegged At $1.2 Billion Over Six Years

    Cost Of Refugee Plan Pegged At $1.2 Billion Over Six Years
    Some of that will be covered this year by $16.6 million announced by the previous Conservative government during the election and $100 million coming out of an existing pool of funds to respond to international crises.

    Cost Of Refugee Plan Pegged At $1.2 Billion Over Six Years

    Universities Across Canada To Get Funding For Research From Ice Bucket Challenge

    Universities Across Canada To Get Funding For Research From Ice Bucket Challenge
    On Thursday, the university announced it had been awarded $1.6 million so that a research team can spend the next five years investigating a cure for amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, or ALS.

    Universities Across Canada To Get Funding For Research From Ice Bucket Challenge

    Justin Trudeau Treads Cautiously On Foreign Policy During First International Trip

    Justin Trudeau Treads Cautiously On Foreign Policy During First International Trip
    The front-page headline that Prime Minister Justin Trudeau awoke to on Friday in Manila before his return to Canada wasn't as fawning as others about him in the Philippines.

    Justin Trudeau Treads Cautiously On Foreign Policy During First International Trip

    Don't Let Concern Over Refugee Security Checks Mask Racism, Says Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne

    Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne says over-inflated national security concerns around the acceptance of Syrian refugees must not be used as a mask for racism.

    Don't Let Concern Over Refugee Security Checks Mask Racism, Says Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne

    Back To The Future: Is This Oil Downturn A Repeat Of The 1985 Crash?

    Back To The Future: Is This Oil Downturn A Repeat Of The 1985 Crash?
    This is not the worst price crash," said the paper's author, Robert Skinner, executive fellow at the University of Calgary's School of Public Policy.

    Back To The Future: Is This Oil Downturn A Repeat Of The 1985 Crash?

    Newfoundland And Labrador Folk Legend Ron Hynes Dead At 64

    Newfoundland And Labrador Folk Legend Ron Hynes Dead At 64
    His family says he died shortly after 6 p.m. while receiving treatment at the Health Sciences Centre in St. John's. He was 64 years old.

    Newfoundland And Labrador Folk Legend Ron Hynes Dead At 64