Lindsay A. Waddell

Gibraltar Mines Ltd. v. British Columbia (Human Rights Tribunal), 2022 BCCA 234

Lindsay A. Waddell of Moore Edgar Lyster LLP and Heather Hoiness of the Office of the Human Rights Commissioner of B.C. successfully represented the Commissioner in an application for leave to intervene in the B.C. Court of Appeal. The appeal concerns the proper interpretation of family status discrimination under the B.C. Human Rights Code. The Chambers Justice agreed that the Commissioner has a unique and broad perspective and that her participation in the appeal on the statutory interpretation issue would be of assistance to the Court. Lindsay and Heather will also represent the Commissioner at the upcoming appeal.

Read the decision here…

Providence Health Care (St. Paul’s Hospital) v. Health Sciences Association of British Columbia (unreported)

Lindsay A. Waddell and Natasha L. Edgar successfully represented the Union in this grievance. The Employer had denied the grievor’s request for Special Leave, after she travelled to visit her imminently palliative father on a day that she was booked on Union Leave. In denying her request for Special Leave, the Employer failed to comply with the mandatory language of the Special Leave provision in the Collective Agreement. The Arbitrator agreed that the mandatory language of the Special Leave provision would require specific language prohibiting its application, that the Employer had failed to comply with the requirements of the Special Leave provisions of the Collective Agreement and granted the grievance.

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Gibralter Mines Ltd. v. Harvey, 2021 BCSC 927

Lindsay A. Waddell successfully represented the Human Rights Commissioner for British Columbia in the Commissioner’s first application for leave to intervene since her office was created. The Commissioner sought leave to intervene in the proceeding – a petition for judicial review of a BC Human Rights Tribunal decision involving the interpretation of family status discrimination under section 13 of the BC Human Rights Code - on the basis that the interpretation of family status discrimination under the Code clearly engages her statutory mandate. Mr. Justice Gomery found that the Commissioner had a direct and obvious interest in the legal issue, and that her submissions would assist the Court. Lindsay will represent the Commissioner at the hearing of the judicial review later this month.

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The Parent obo the Child v. The School District, 2020 BCCA 333

Lindsay A. Waddell and Sara Hanson successfully represented the Respondent, the Parent obo the Child, in upholding the chamber judge’s decision which found that the BC Human Rights Tribunal erred by applying the incorrect legal test for determining whether the Parent could rely on lawyer advice error to allow his late-filed complaint to proceed in the public interest under s. 22(3) of the BC Human Rights Code. The Court of Appeal further agreed with the Parent’s submission that the incorrect legal test was an extricable error of law that rendered the decision as a whole patently unreasonable as defined in section 59(4) of the Administrative Tribunals Act. 

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Providence Health Care (St. Paul's Hospital) and Health Sciences Association, unreported

Lindsay A. Waddell and Natasha L. Edgar successfully represented the Union in this grievance. The Employer had prevented the grievor from changing her vacation leave to union leave in order to attend a union training course. In denying the leave, the Employer had failed to follow the union leave requirements in the Collective Agreement. The Arbitrator agreed with the Union that union leave is an important right that had been bargained for, the Employer had not properly complied with the union leave provisions of the Collective Agreement, and granted the grievance.

Read the decision here.

College of Midwives of British Columbia v. MaryMoon, 2020 BCCA 224

In College of Midwives of British Columbia v. MaryMoon, 2020 BCCA 224, the BC Court of Appeal upheld a prohibition on the use of occupational titles reserved to members of health professions colleges to describe a person’s work as a justified limitation on freedom of expression.

Lindsay Waddell and Daniel McBain of Moore Edgar Lyster LLP represented the intervenor, the College of Speech and Hearing Health Professionals of British Columbia (“CSHBC”). CSHBC argued that the prohibition was necessary to enable members of the public to identify who is, and who is not, a regulated professional, and that this was particularly important to newly regulated professions that do not have the benefit of widespread public recognition. Without a restriction on title usage, newly regulated professions would not be able to build the necessary public awareness and health care consumers would be vulnerable to unqualified and unregulated individuals.

Read the decision here.

Association of Professional Engineers and Geoscientists of the Province of British Columbia v. Heringa (unreported)

The Association successfully argued that the Member’s failure to provide information it requested during a complaint investigation was serious professional misconduct that thwarted the Association’s ability to conduct its investigation efficiently and undermined its public interest mandate. The penalty sought by the Association was ordered.

Read the determination on liability here.

Read the determination on penalty and costs here.