Reinstate scrapped Ontario sex-ed curriculum, lawyers argue in human rights case
TORONTO — Lawyers for a transgender girl fighting the Ontario government’s repeal of a modernized sex-ed curriculum say the document should be reinstated to protect their 11-year-old client and other LGBTQ students from discrimination, at least until a new lesson plan is developed.
In closing arguments Thursday at the province’s human rights tribunal, the legal team said the government was putting the sixth-grader identified only as AB at a disadvantage by not having mandatory gender identity lessons in the current temporary curriculum.
“AB needs this information now,” her lawyer Marcus McCann said. “If this information is not taught this year there is no way to go back and teach it … that window will have passed.”
The case before the tribunal was launched in August and focuses on the impact of the curriculum repeal on LGBTQ students.