Are We Spouses Yet?

Bill 5 - An Act to Amend Certain Statutes as a Result of the Supreme Court of Canada's Decision in M v H

What difference has it made to same sex relationship recognition in Ontario?


What happened...

In October 1999, the Ontario government passed bill 5, An Act To Amend Certain Statutes as a Result of the Supreme Court of Canada's Decision in M v H.

M v H was a same-sex spousal case launched in 1992, when one woman sued another for support after the break-up of their relationship. The case worked its way up to the supreme court of Canada, which found that the Ontario Family Law Act, in not covering same-sex relationships, contravened the equality rights promised to all in the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms. In their final judgement, May 1999, the supreme court gave the Ontario government six months to amend the act.

Ontario's conservative government, anxious that heterosexuals would be offended if lesbians, gays, and bisexuals could think of themselves as spouses, created a separate category called "same-sex partners." In an omnibus bill, they did however include same-sex partners in most of the provisions affecting heterosexual common-law spouses.


What it means - in short

It means that same-sex couples in Ontario have roughly the same status - rights and responsibilities - as heterosexual common-law couples in Ontario.


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What does it really mean, though?

You have to be living with your partner to be entitled to most of these rights, and the relationship has to be 1-3 years old (depending on which provision you're looking at).

So, if you are living in a same-sex relationship, you can:

You cannot:


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What about marriage?

Marriage is principally covered under federal laws, not provincial ones, so the situation is unchanged. Same-sex partners can get married in a church, have holy unions, commitment ceremonies, etc - this is not illegal and never was. But neither the federal nor the provincial government will yet recognize your relationship as existing in law.


What about income tax and old age pensions?

These are covered by federal legislation. Recently, parliament amended over 50 federal laws, including the Income Tax Act and the legislation governing federal old age pensions, to recognize same-sex couples on the same basis as common-law heterosexual couples.


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Who is left out?

Anyone is left out of these provisions whose relationship does not fit into the mould prescribed by the government. For example, if you do not live in the same house or apartment as your spouse, you cannot go on their health benefits plan.

If you have a more extended family structure (many of us do, and many different cultures do), you cannot have it recognized. A person with more than one significant other, for instance. Or a child with more than two parents (for example, where a heterosexual marriage has broken up and one partner (or both) has a same-sex partner also.


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Where can I go for legal advice?

In Toronto, check The Pink Pages , or ads in Xtra!, Siren, Fab for lawyers. Go to a lawyer with experience in the field.

Contact the Foundation for Equal Families at (416) 975-0024.

Contact EGALE by phone at 613-230-1043 or 888-204-7777 or via their contact form.

Outside Toronto, check GayCanada. Go to a lawyer with experience in the field.


Where can I read up on all this?

CLGRO has several publications you can view online (all in PDF format; opens in a new window):

Pamphlet prepared by CLGRO, November 1999


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