Quebec’s largest English-language school board will move forward in its fight against the province’s controversial secularism law, known as Bill 21.
The English Montreal School Board (EMSB) hopes the Supreme Court of Canada will hear its appeal after a vote by its council of commissioners Wednesday.
The move comes after Quebec’s Court of Appeal ruled in late February the law is constitutional and the lower court was wrong to exempt English school boards from it.
Bill 21 bars public sector workers in positions of authority — including teachers, judges, and police officers — from wearing religious symbols on the job. It was passed into law in June 2019.
“We maintain our original position that Bill 21 conflicts with our values and our mission and with those of all Quebecers as expressed in the Quebec Charter of Human Rights and Freedoms,” board chair Joe Ortona said in a statement.
“Its very adoption was contrary to our societal goal of promoting our peaceful co-existence in a pluralistic Quebec.”
Quebec Premier François Legault has roundly defended Bill 21 over the years, saying it has support from the majority of Quebecers.
Under the law, school boards cannot hire new teachers who wear religious symbols. The EMSB says the secularism legislation prevents it from hiring new staff during an ongoing teacher shortage.
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Current employees who do wear religious symbols also cannot change jobs or advance in their careers, the school board added.
“Most importantly it sends a message of intolerance and exclusion to our students and their families,” Ortona said.
While 12 of the EMSB commissioners voted in favour of the motion to appeal the latest ruling, one voted against based on grounds of the mounting financial legal burden. So far, the board has spent $1.3 million on the court challenges over five years.
Quebec Justice Minister Simon Jolin-Barrette said Thursday the provincial government is willing to defend its religious neutrality law in Canada’s highest court. He also questioned the EMSB’s use of public funds to challenge Bill 21.
“It’s really important for us that we will always defend Bill 21, which is an important law for Quebec society,” he told reporters at the provincial legislature.
“And we decided a long time ago that religion and state are separate in our society.”
In February, the victory for the Quebec government on Bill 21 hinged on its pre-emptive use of the Charter’s notwithstanding clause, which shields legislation from most court challenges over violations of fundamental rights. An April 2021 Quebec Superior Court ruling had left the law largely intact, despite what the judge described as “serious and negative” impacts on people who wear religious symbols.
Quebec’s lower court had also exempted English school boards from certain provisions of the law on the basis that minority language education rights — which aren’t covered by the Charter’s notwithstanding clause — weren’t respected. But the appellate court’s three-judge panel rejected that analysis.
The only aspect of Bill 21 that Quebec’s Appeal Court found to be a violation of the Charter was its ban on face coverings for members of the provincial legislature, affirming the lower court’s finding.
— with files from The Canadian Press
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