Skip to main content

LGBT Rights Group Wants NS to Amend Human Rights Act

NSRAP in the Halifax Pride Parade

A Nova Scotian activist group wants the province to do more to protect transgendered people from discrimination. “This is really a matter of equality,” says Kevin Kindred, chairman of the Nova Scotia Rainbow Action Project (NSRAP). “All Nova Scotians deserve equal protection under the law and right now those protections aren’t clearly in place for transgendered people.”

While Nova Scotia’s Human Rights Act currently protects sex and sexual orientation, gender identity is not included. According to Kindred, this leaves transgender people open to discrimination and harassment. “This government has said it is committed to making our communities safer for all Nova Scotians,” he said. “For transgender people, that safety includes having a Human Rights Act that tells the province that they deserve to be treated equally to anyone else.” The Human Rights Act offers legal protection in a variety of areas including workplace discrimination, housing discrimination, and discrimination in providing services.

The movement to protect gender identity and gender expression isn’t limited to Nova Scotia. The Northwest Territories included gender identity in its human rights law in 2002. Ontario and Manitoba have both recently updated their provincial laws to include similar protections. Federally, an NDP private member’s bill is working its way through Parliament, and thus far has passed second reading--with support even from some members of the Conservative party. NSRAP is collecting signatures for a petition it plans to present to Justice Minister Ross Landry.

Over 1,100 signatures have been collected and Kindred hopes for more. The bulk of signatures were collected at Halifax Pride but copies of the petition were also available at Venus Envy and the Youth Project.

NSRAP marched in the Halifax Pride parade on Saturday, July 28th, to raise awareness of the need to amend the Human Rights Act. “This is how Pride began in Halifax twenty-five years ago, by demanding human rights protections for all” concludes Kindred, “We are all human and all deserve to be treated equally under the law.”

NSRAP will also be present at Pride Cape Breton on Saturday, August 11.