07) URGENT CALL FOR SENATE TO SUPPORT BILL C-16
PV Commentary
The struggle to protect trans people in Canada from discrimination was in the
headlines again during May, as the Senate’s Legal and Constitutional Affairs
Committee conducted hearings into Bill C-16, legislation to amend the Canadian
Human Rights Act to add gender identity and gender expression to the list of
prohibited grounds of discrimination. The Bill also amends the Criminal Code to
extend legal protections against hate propaganda to any section of the public
that is distinguished by gender identity or expression.
The precursor to this legislation, Private Member's Bill C-279, eventually
failed last year due to the complicated Parliamentary amendment process. Bill
C-16 is a critical step in recognizing that trans
rights are human rights, and has passed second reading in the Commons.
Senators are currently hearing from trans people
(including trans and gender creative kids and their families) who support the
passing of the Bill.
But other interventions are also being made by Senators and some transphobic witnesses who are whipping up fear of "the
other," and raising arguments that C-16 would threaten safety, gender
equality, feminism, and free speech.
In response, on May 17 a number of prominent women’s anti-violence organizations
released the following joint statement to the Senate, which must pass the Bill
before it can be sent back to the Commons for third and final approval:
We are writing in support of Bill C-16, an act to amend the Canadian Human
Rights Act and the Criminal Code, adding gender identity and gender expression
to the list of prohibited grounds of discrimination. We include the Ontario
Coalition of Rape Crisis Centers, the Ottawa Coalition to End Violence Against
Women, Ontario Association of Interval and Transition Houses, Ryerson
University Office of Sexual Violence Support and Education, and Women’s Health
in Women’s Hands Community Health Centre.
It is disconcerting that the hearings for C-16 only included one representative
from sexual violence prevention and support services. Violence against women,
sexual violence and gender based violence organizations are not a monolithic
group. The testimony provided by a rape crisis centre/shelter at the C-16
hearing on May 10th does not represent or align with organizational practices
of many of sexual violence and violence against women services. This testimony
perpetuated harmful myths about trans and gender
diverse people, including that trans women are not real women and that trans people
are not subjected to gendered violence. Trans women
are women, and trans, two-spirit and gender diverse people are, in fact, at
heightened risk for sexual violence.
Barriers such as harassment in schools, discrimination in employment and
housing, as well as familial and peer rejection, create the economic and
institutional conditions for homelessness, gender-based discrimination and risk
of violence. In
As individuals and organizations committed to ending gender-based violence in
Bill C-16 will bolster efforts to ensure sexual violence support services are
available to all survivors of violence across
(The
above article is from
the June 1-15, 2017, issue of People's