Opposition parties willing to work on improving human rights

Opposition parties willing to work on improving human rights processes


Posted: Apr 02, 2021 6:00 AM AT | Last Updated: April 2
Christine Shupe filed a complaint with the Nova Scotia Human Rights Commission alleging she was sexually harassed at her former workplace.(Robert Short/CBC)
Nova Scotia's opposition parties say they would be willing to consider tabling legislation to strengthen human rights processes in the province after
Christine Shupe contacted the Nova Scotia Human Rights Commission in 2018 to report that she was sexually harassed at her former workplace, Beaver Enviro Depot.
But when staff at the commission wrote the official complaint, they didn't use the employer's legal business name, 2557617 Nova Scotia Limited.
By the time the error was discovered — after the complaint was already referred to a Board of Inquiry — it was too late. A board chair wrote in his decision last week that boards are not permitted under the Human Rights Act to amend complaints.

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