CCPR/C/67/D/694/1996
Page 2
Views under article 5, paragraph 4, of the Optional Protocol
1.1 The author of the communication is Mr. Arieh Hollis Waldman, a Canadian
citizen residing in the province of Ontario. He claims to be a victim of a
violation of articles 26, and articles 18(1), 18(4) and 27 taken in conjunction
with article 2(1).*
1.2 The author is a father of two school-age children and a member of the
Jewish faith who enrols his children in a private Jewish day school. In the
province of Ontario Roman Catholic schools are the only non-secular schools
receiving full and direct public funding. Other religious schools must fund
through private sources, including the charging of tuition fees.
1.3 In 1994 Mr. Waldman paid $14,050 in tuition fees for his children to attend
Bialik Hebrew Day School in Toronto, Ontario. This amount was reduced by a
federal tax credit system to $10,810.89. These tuition fees were paid out of a
net household income of $73,367.26. In addition, the author is required to pay
local property taxes to fund a public school system he does not use.
The facts
2.1 The Ontario public school system offers free education to all Ontario
residents without discrimination on the basis of religion or on any other
ground. Public schools may not engage in any religious indoctrination.
Individuals enjoy the freedom to establish private schools and to send their
children to these schools instead of the public schools. The only statutory
requirement for opening a private school in Ontario is the submission of a
“notice of intention to operate a private school”. Ontario private schools are
neither licensed nor do they require any prior Government approval. As of 30
September 1989, there were 64,699 students attending 494 private schools in
Ontario. Enrolment in private schools represents 3.3 percent of the total day
school enrolment in Ontario.
2.2 The province of Ontario's system of separate school funding originates with
provisions in Canada's 1867 constitution. In 1867 Catholics represented 17% of
the population of Ontario, while Protestants represented 82%.
All other
religions combined represented .2% of the population. At the time of
Confederation it was a matter of concern that the new province of Ontario would
be controlled by a Protestant majority that might exercise its power over
education to take away the rights of its Roman Catholic minority. The solution
was to guarantee their rights to denominational education, and to define those
rights by referring to the state of the law at the time of Confederation.
2.3 As a consequence, the 1867 Canadian constitution contains explicit
guarantees of denominational school rights in section 93. Section 93 of the
Constitution Act, 1867 grants each province in Canada exclusive jurisdiction to
enact laws regarding education, limited only by the denominational school rights
granted in 1867. In Ontario, the section 93 power is exercised through the
Education Act. Under the Education Act every separate school is entitled to
full public funding. Separate schools are defined as Roman Catholic schools.
The Education Act states: "1. (1) "separate school board" means a board that
operates a school board for Roman Catholics;...122. (1) Every separate school
shall share in the legislative grants in like manner as a public school". As
*The author was represented by Mr. Raj Anand from Scott and Aylen, a law
firm in Toronto, Ontario, until 1998.