Evangelical and Catholic Groups Call for Curbs on Human Rights Commission after Anti-Christian Ruling



John Henry-Westen reports on LifeSiteNews.com:

The editor of Canada’s national Catholic magazine of news, opinion and analysis, Father Alphonse de Valk, has renewed his call for the federal government to rein in the far-reaching powers of human rights commissions in Canada. The move comes in light of the recent ruling by the Ontario Human Rights Commission (OHRC) in the case of Christian Horizons, a service organization for the disabled . . .

The OHRC on April 15 decided that, because Christian Horizons required a former employee to sign a Lifestyle and Morality Statement that prohibited homosexual relationships, Christian Horizons must: pay lesbian Connie Heintz two years’ wages and $23,000; no longer require its employees to sign a lifestyle and morality statement; develop ‘anti-discrimination’ policies; provide ‘training’ to all employees and managers; and review all of its employment policies to ensure they are in compliance with the Ontario Human Rights Code . . .

Don Hutchinson, General Legal Counsel for the Evangelical Fellowship of Canada, was also incensed with the decision . . .

Related:

Ministry fined for firing homosexual employee

Ontario: Christian Ministry fined $23K for firing employee who engaged in homosexual behavior

Canada: Group must pay homosexual worker who had to quit job

Canada: Catholic Insight Magazine legal fees rising from “hate” complaint

Canada’s Human Rights Kangaroo Court



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