Mr. Justice Don Burridge (Not exactly as illustrated) |
They might want to hold off on their celebrations.
In his ruling,
Burridge adopted the provincial government’s wording for the travel ban, which
lumps it together with other restrictions on travel.
[4] On 29 April 2020 the CMOH issued Special Measures Order (Amendment No. 11), to take effect on 4 May 2020, limiting entry to residents of Newfoundland and Labrador, asymptomatic workers, and those in extenuating circumstances. On 5 May 2020, the CMOH issued Special Measures Order (Travel Exemption Order), expanding those circumstances when entry into the province would be permitted. As neither Order served as an outright ban on all travel, I will henceforth collectively refer to these two special measures as the “travel restriction”.
The result - and even though he refers to both things as
being distinct at different parts of his ruling - Burridge ignores the very
important distinction between travel restrictions and the order than bans
mainlanders from coming to the province.
And that makes all the difference.
Travel Restrictions
Let’s start by getting the history of the Chief
Medical Officer’s travel-related orders straight.
Her first order under the public health emergency
declaration, issued on 20 Mar 20, directed that people entering the province
enter a period of isolation lasting 14 days on arrival. The reasons for this are simple enough to understand. The disease came from outside the
province. The known incubation period
for the disease was up to 14 days. As
such, anyone who entered isolation on
entry for 14 days would either develop the disease and remain quarantined until
the case resolved or - after 14 days of
nothing – could go on their merry way without any risk to the people of
Newfoundland and Labrador.
The Chief Medical Officers initial order was so
sweeping that – for example – people working in the offshore oil industry or
the fishery or those on the interprovincial ferries or cargo vessels would be
subjected to the ban. The result, had
the thing been left unamended, would have been to cut off the province entirely
from supplies of food and medicine. The
CMO’s order would have shut down the provincial economy.
As it turned out, someone noticed the error and an amended
order appeared the next day giving appropriate exemptions.
Note two things.
First, the order shows the importance to the CMO of travel restrictions
in containing the disease. Second, it
shows the CMO’s tendency to go well beyond what was necessary or to act without
fully considering all the implications of her orders.
In the event, the travel restrictions with the exemptions
for essential travel (including migrant workers) limited the introduction of
disease into the province. Up to the time the CMO introduced the travel ban in
early May, and ever since then, anyone entering the province went into
isolation and either left isolation free of illness or developed the disease
and recover. No one violated the travel
order before the first of May, and none have done so since then. In other
words, the modified travel restrictions from 21 March 2020 have worked as
intended.
The Travel Ban
On 29 April
2020, the CMO announced a new travel
order that would come into effect on 04 May. The CMO characterized it at the time as an
amended order but this was not the case. It explicitly prohibited anyone from
entering the province except for residents, essential workers and, people who
would be given exemption under “extenuating circumstances.” The original order did not define the third
category. It was popularly called the travel ban and it remains a travel ban, except to Don Burridge.
The CMO did not explain why she issued this order, which,
as Burridge found, violated Canadians fundamental rights and freedoms. She simply said it was necessary, “as we move
forward.”
In the context, it appears the CMO’s decision was a
reaction to the political and public pressure to ease restrictions on the
public in what became the “Alert” system of gradually expanded restrictions
that supposedly lessened restrictions.
Burridge quotes Fitzgerald, who gave other explanations
for her decision to ban non-residents from the province. The quotation below includes Burridge’s
underlining:
At the time of introduction, many other provinces were
seeing increasing cases of disease and we were having success at controlling
the outbreak here. There were concerns raised regarding compliance
with self-isolation orders from municipalities and there was concern
that as cases continues [sic] to rise in
other parts of the country, people would attempt to come to Newfoundland and
Labrador to avoid COVID-19, potentially increasing the importation risk.
And even if they were true, Fitzgerald knew that, as
of the 25th of March, the number of new cases started to decline dramatically. SRBP posted about the declining number of new
cases on 13 April 2020 and, as it turned out, the government’s
own analytics team identified the same trend and circulated their findings
within government at the same time. Two
weeks later - that is, as the Chief medical Officer *increased restrictions* the
decline was even more dramatic than it had been earlier in the month.
Burridge’s lengthy decision discusses six
questions. The crucial part comes down
to two paragraphs: one in which he
quotes Dr. Janice Fitzgerald’s rationale for imposing the travel ban – and then
the next paragraph in which Burridge says, in effect channeling Jim Dinn, “Good enough for me.”
What Burridge leaves out is crucial. He ignored the
phantom travelers that Fitzgerald relied on to justify her imposition of what
Burridge found to be violations of Charter rights. There was no
evidence to support Fitzgerald’s rationale in the paragraph he quoted. Fitzgerald did not seek any outside
advice or a second opinion before imposing the ban.
All of that was in evidence in front of him. Burridge
ignored it. He also could have applied a little logic of his own. How can it be, one wonders, that Nova Scotia
and New Brunswick have achieved precisely the same near-complete absence of the
disease as Newfoundland and Labrador but without barring non-residents from
entry?
Her could have also considered the changes Fitzgerald
made to her order. The changes undermine
her contention – accepted by Burridge – that the travel ban on non-residents was
solely for the purpose of protecting vulnerable people in Newfoundland and
Labrador. That may have held up in the
original one but immediately on announcing it, Fitzgerald abandoned the rationale
for her own decision.
She gave in initially by bargaining with the Leader of
the Opposition. Ches
Crosbie told the House of Assembly he bartered support for the arbitrary
detention powers amendments to the public health law in exchange for the
exemption categories Fitzgerald issued on 04 May. The exemptions have a peculiar ring to them,
as they allow all sorts of people to come to the province if they have some
sort of blood connection or were former residents.
And what didn’t fit those categories fell into the
category of secret exemptions. There was
no exemption to grant the complaint in the case Burridge ruled on but yet she
got an exemption once she went to the media.
The same thing happened in other cases. Altogether, more than 15,000 travelers applied
for exemptions and the CMO staff denied entry to only 3,000.
The case should have resolved on facts and evidence
and yet on the crucial point of justification, Burridge abandoned both. That’s the only way he reached his decision that
allowed the government to ban non-residents from entering the province. The the weakness in the decision that will likely lead to another court overturning it, if not in the
Court of Appeal here, then, surely in the Supreme Court of Canada when it gets
there.
-srbp-