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Charter Rights: Overview (No. 230)

125 bytes added, 21:42, 17 February 2015
Section 15 applies to government, not the private sector
==Section 15 applies to government, not the private sector==
You can’t use section 15 to challenge every inequality in life. The Charter controls laws and other government actions. It doesn’t control private citizens, businesses, or organizations. Before you can claim the protection of section 15, you must show that you are being treated unequally by a law or by the action of a government official or department or some agency very closely connected to government, such as a school board or labour relations board. If a private individual, organization, or company violates your rights, you may be able to complain under the BC ''Human Rights Code '' or the ''Canadian Human Rights Act''. For more information on this, check script [[Human Rights and Discrimination Protection (Script 236 )|236]] on “Human Rights and Discrimination Protection”, and script [[Protection Against Job Discrimination (Script 270)|270 ]] on “Protection Against Job Discrimination”.
==Section 15 protects people, not companies== Courts have said that section 15 protects people, not companies or other artificial persons, because it gives the right to equality to “every individual”.
=The Supreme Court of Canada’s approach to equality==
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