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Documentary about Canadian Transgender Musician Rae Spoon Hits Sundance!

1/24/2014

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"My Prairie Home', a documentary about Canadian musician Rae Spoon, is the only Canadian entry in the Sundance film festival.  Rae Spoon grew up in a Pentecostal home, waiting for the rapture.  For more of the story including a music sample and a sneak preview, go to Huffington Post.

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Common law partners don't suffer social disapproval any more; so can't claim same financial regime as married partners, says SCC

1/19/2014

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The Supreme Court of Canada has held that common law partners do not experience disadvantage in Canadian society any more, and so they cannot claim that their equality rights are breached in comparison to married people.
The result is that a Quebec common law partner who broke up with her spouse cannot succeed in her claim to have the same laws applied to her as are applied to married or civil union partners when they break up.In Quebec v A, A had argued that her equality rights under the Charter of Rights were infringed, because when she broke up she could not claim a division of property or spousal support as people who were married or in a common law relationship could do.   To succeed, she had to show that common law partners suffered disadvantage and that the exclusion from the law contributed to the continuing stereotype or disadvantage.  The Supreme Court of Canada said that although there was a period of Quebec history during which de facto (in fact, rather than married) spouses were subjected to both legislative hostility and social ostracism, nothing in the evidence suggests that de facto spouses are now subject to public opprobrium. 
This has been one of my more confused/confusing posts.  Here's the thing:  (1) yes, in B.C. common law and married partners, (including same sex) have EXACTLY the same rights and responsibilities - as they should - but in PQ the situation is different.  They enacted a 'domestic partnership' regime which lets people essentially sign up for common law status (I call it 'marriage light' ).  This case was brought by people who were neither married nor in a domestic partnership.  Personally, I think the SCC got it wrong, because I don't think prejudice against people who are "not really married" is over by a long shot.  And I think people kind of 'slide into' living common law: they get together, decide to live together...then maybe have children...then...  find the relationship ending with no rights attached.  The flip side though is that such a relationship ends with no responsibilities attached.  For every ending, one partner wishes they did, and one is glad they don't, have a regime like a marriage regime governing the financial aspects of their breakup.  NOTE: in BC you 'become' common law after you have lived together for 2 years.  In Ontario, it takes 3 years; federally, it takes 1 year.  

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