B.C. court rejects top doctor's effort to dismiss COVID-19 vaccine mandate lawsuit
B.C. court rejects top doctor's effort to dismiss COVID-19 vaccine mandate lawsuit

The B.C. Supreme Court has rejected the provincial government's attempt to dismiss one of the lawsuits challenging COVID-19 vaccination requirements for health-care workers.
Lawyers for provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry had argued that the Canadian Society for the Advancement of Science in Public Policy, which brought the lawsuit, lacked the necessary standing to raise the issue before the courts.
CSASPP's suit seeks to have Henry's public health orders requiring workers in most health-care settings to be vaccinated thrown out on the grounds that they violate the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms and fail to provide reasonable exemptions and accommodations.
Henry's response to the lawsuit submits that the orders are reasonable, precautionary public health measures.
The decision issued this week by Justice Simon R. Coval does not come to a conclusion on the merits of CSASPP's allegations, but rather on the organization's standing to have its case heard.
Coval concluded that the organization did have the "public interest standing" required to bring the claim, despite the province's arguments to the contrary.
Henry's lawyers submitted that the CSASPP's claim did not raise a "serious justiciable issue," arguing it was "devoid of any meaningful particulars" that would make it worth the court's time.
Coval disagreed, writing that the petition raises "substantial questions" that are clearly within the purview of the justice system.
The provincial health officer also argued that CSASPP had not demonstrated a "genuine interest" in the questions at hand, noting that the organization's explicit purpose is to challenge COVID-19-related measures in British Columbia.
"The PHO submits that CSASPP has no history of involvement in the issues raised by the petition, and the evidence connecting its membership to health care is vague and weak," Coval wrote in his decision.
"The PHO says CSASPP is merely a 'purpose-built anti-COVID-19 measures entity.'"
The justice largely agreed with this assessment of the organization and its purpose, writing:
"In my view, creating a society committed to one side of an issue is not sufficient to create a genuine stake for purposes of standing … The members of such a group are obviously interested in the issue but do not necessarily have a stake different from the community generally."
Nevertheless, Coval held that CSASPP had demonstrated a genuine interest in the legal questions it raised by making a reconsideration request to Henry when the vaccination orders were first issued, and including Henry's denial of the reconsideration request in its complaint to the court.
Finally, Henry's lawyers argued that CSASPP's claims were redundant, since several other health-care workers are already suing the province over the vaccination mandate.
Coval again agreed, but only to a point. The justice wrote that ongoing litigation brought by health-care workers who lost their jobs because they were unvaccinated rendered CSASPP's challenge of the public health orders unnecessary.
However, that case does not address the request that Henry reconsider her order and allow more exemptions, something the justice said could be addressed in the CSASPP case.
"CSASPP’s standing appears unnecessary for access to justice for impacted health-care workers," Coval wrote. "Nevertheless … CSASPP’s petition appears to be a reasonable and effective means of bringing forward the evidence and claims regarding the reconsideration request and response."
Though he concluded that the organization should have public interest standing and be allowed to continue with its lawsuit, Coval dismissed a claim of private interest standing brought by the CSASPP's executive director Kipling Warner.
Warner, a software engineer, claimed he had been directly and adversely affected by the vaccine mandate, saying his ability to access medical services in a timely manner had been restricted by Henry's orders, and citing a long wait for surgery as an example of this harm.
"In my view, Mr. Warner offers no evidentiary basis, beyond this unsupported, conclusory statement, to suggest any right at stake, or any personal or special impact from the impugned orders," Coval wrote. "There is nothing, for example, to suggest his wait for surgery was unusual or impacted by the impugned orders. In my view, for these reasons, he does not satisfy the requirements for private interest standing."
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
Canada outperformed most G10 countries during first two years of pandemic response: study
Canada handled key aspects of the COVID-19 response better in the first two years of the pandemic than most G10 countries, according to a new study by researchers from the University of Toronto, Unity Health Toronto and St. Michael's hospital.

G7 leaders confer with Zelenskyy, prep new aid for Ukraine
Leading economic powers conferred by video link with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy on Monday as they underscored their commitment to Ukraine for the long haul with plans to pursue a price cap on Russian oil, raise tariffs on Russian goods and impose other new sanctions.
Avalanche dethrone Lightning to win Stanley Cup for 3rd time
After years of playoff disappointments, the Colorado Avalanche are back atop hockey's mountain with a 2-1 Game 6 win against the two-time defending Stanley Cup champions Tampa Bay Lightning.
Republican calls overturning Roe v. Wade a 'victory for white life'
U.S. Rep. Mary Miller of Illinois, speaking at a rally Saturday night with former U.S. President Donald Trump, called the Supreme Court's decision overturning Roe v. Wade a 'victory for white life.'
What's the impact of a Russian debt default?
Russia is poised to default on its foreign debt for the first time since the Bolshevik Revolution more than a century ago, further alienating the country from the global financial system following sanctions imposed over its war in Ukraine.
PM Trudeau to meet India's Modi one-on-one at G7 sidelines
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy addressed G7 leaders virtually at their summit in Germany as they discussed the threat to global stability posed by Russia's invasion of his country.
NASA launches first rocket from Australian space centre
NASA has successfully launched a rocket from Australia's remote Northern Territory, making history as the agency's first commercial spaceport launch outside the United States.
Connecting Indigenous inmates to their culture: Grand Chief performs at Manitoba prison
Behind prison walls, National Indigenous People's Day was celebrated this month, with inmates at a Manitoba federal prison granted access to music, drumming and sharing circles — positive steps forward to reconnect Indigenous inmates with their culture and rehabilitate a group that is incarcerated at a disproportionate rate.
Hundreds of thousands celebrate return of Toronto Pride parade to downtown streets
Hundreds of thousands of people lined the streets of downtown Toronto on Sunday as the city's Pride parade returned for the first time in two years.