Court of Appeal sets initial dual busing hearing date
Reference question examines whether English and French school buses are a constitutional requirement
The judicial reference case on whether New Brunswick is constitutionally required to provide separate school bus transportation systems for English and French students will come before New Brunswick's highest court in Fredericton for the first time on Feb. 16 for a preliminary matter.
The Court of Appeal announced the date when it released its schedule of cases to be heard in January and February of 2016.
- Serge Rousselle sends dual busing case to appeal court
- Dual busing question for top court filed by Serge Rousselle
For several years, the province's English and French school systems have operated their own transportation systems, saying it was constitutionally required under provisions for language duality in education.
Serge Rousselle, who services as the minister of both education and attorney general, then announced in June he would seek a legal opinion on the practice from the Court of Appeal.
The court is being asked: "Is there, in New Brunswick, a constitutional obligation to provide school district transportation in relation to one or the other official language?"
The reference ruling by the court is technically not binding on the provincial government. It is, however, subject to appeal to the Supreme Court of Canada.
Clarifications
- An earlier version of this story indicated the full hearing of the province's reference questions would take place on Feb. 16. That is not the case.Dec 14, 2015 1:03 PM AT