A woman who has waited years to establish her Canadian citizenship in
court is considering expanding her case into a class-action lawsuit to
include thousands of other so-called “lost Canadians.”
Jackie
Scott, 68, was refused citizenship even though she came to Canada with
her British mother and Canadian father at the age of two and spent most
of her life here. A judicial review of that denial was to have started
on Monday, but as the proceedings got under way, Ms. Scott put it on
hold so she and her lawyers could broaden the court action.
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Ms. Scott had initially asked the court to determine whether she was a citizen.
But
“it’s not just about me,” she told reporters afterward, saying she
could not in good conscience become a Canadian without doing everything
she can to help other “lost” individuals.
Ms. Scott was born in England in 1945 to a Canadian serviceman father and a British mother and later migrated to Canada.
The
government claims that Ms. Scott’s father was legally considered a
British subject at the time because Canada’s first citizenship act did
not come into effect until 1947.
“What happened today is quite
interesting and it’s going to result in a historic decision as to what a
Canadian is and when Canadians actually came into being,” one of Ms.
Scott’s lawyers, James Straith, said outside the court.
“What we
hope to do now is come back and get a final order from the court where
the court finds not just in Jackie Scott’s case, but in every one of
these cases of Lost Canadians,” Mr. Straith said.
The government
argued in a written response to Ms. Scott’s application for judicial
review that “Canadian citizenship is a creation of federal statute. In
order to become a Canadian citizen, a person must satisfy the applicable
statutory requirements.”
But Mr. Straith said he finds that claim very troubling.
If
the government is “able to maintain that citizenship is only something
that is defined by Parliament, and not simply defined by the law and
Constitution of Canada, then they have a lot more flexibility on what
they can do with citizenship and where they can allow and deny
citizenship,” he said.
Ms. Scott’s decision to expand the court
action came after Judge Luc Martineau refused to allow a government
document to be brought before the court.
The document – a 1943
pamphlet issued to Canadian soldiers – deals “with the historic rights
of Canadians as they were going overseas,” Mr. Straith said.
It states that the soldiers “were fighting as citizens of Canada, not as merely British subjects,” he said.
But
due to the narrow nature of a judicial review, such a document is not
permitted. Ms. Scott and her lawyers decided a trial setting could lead
to a more meaningful ruling.
“Then the court can make a finding,
binding on everyone, that as a matter of fact Canadian citizens did or
did not exist prior to Jan. 1, 1947,” Mr. Straith said. “It’s an
opportunity to get this dealt with once and for all.”
Ms. Scott’s
judicial review has been adjourned. Over the next few weeks, she and her
lawyers will determine whether to pursue a class-action lawsuit, or
petition the court for a declaratory statement.
Although the
timeline is still uncertain, Ms. Scott should be back in front of a
judge in September. If the new action is denied, the judicial review
will go forward.
How many people might be affected by a class action or declaratory statement is unclear.
“I
would guess that there are probably several thousand people that are
affected like Jackie,” said Don Chapman, the founder of the Lost
Canadians.
But “the problem is you don’t know,” he said.
When
the federal government overhauled its citizenship laws in 2009,
approximately 750,000 lost Canadians gained citizenship. However,
because the changes applied only to those born in or after 1947,
individuals like Ms. Scott were excluded.
And although Ms. Scott
said it would have been nice to leave the court on Monday with
confirmation that she’s Canadian, she knows she is not the only one
affected by a feeling of statelessness.
“We’ll eventually be all
dead — we’re a bunch of senior citizens,” she said of the remaining lost
Canadians.
“It’s like the government is waiting for [us] to go away
through attrition.”
“I guess I’ll just have to be stubborn enough and stick around and make sure it’s resolved,” she said.
THE CANADIAN PRESS
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