Non-profit group has public interest standing in mental-health law case: top court
OTTAWA — A not-for-profit organization has standing to challenge mental-health law in a British Columbia court, even though no individuals are plaintiffs in the case, the Supreme Court of Canada has ruled.
The court’s unanimous decision Thursday came six years after the Council of Canadians with Disabilities contested the constitutionality of mental-health legislation in B.C. that allows non-consensual psychiatric care.
Two individual co-plaintiffs discontinued their claims, but the council hoped to proceed in court without them.
The council promotes the equality, autonomy and rights of people living with physical and mental disabilities in Canada, pursuing these goals through advocacy, policy development, and advancement of rights — sometimes by way of litigation.

