Lawyer challenging Sask. pronoun law ‘relieved and happy’ after appeal decision
A lawyer for Egale Canada was very happy with the decision that came down on Monday morning from the Saskatchewan Court of Appeal on the provincial government’s pronoun law.
In a 4-1 decision, the court largely ruled against the government’s appeals, allowing a challenge of the controversial law to proceed. The law, titled the Parents’ Bill of Rights, requires schools to get parental consent before changing the name or gender that a student 16 or younger uses in school.
“We were relieved and happy to see the decision,” said Bennett Jensen, director of legal at Egale Canada and co-counsel for UR Pride, which brought forward the challenge.
By rejecting the government lawyers’ arguments that the courts didn’t have jurisdiction to weigh in on the pronoun law because of the government’s use of the notwithstanding clause, Jensen said the appeals court upheld the position of the court system as a check on government.


