Monday, July 25, 2005
Sandra Bell v. City of Toronto, in which Judge Fairgrieve held on Charter grounds that Canadian citizens were entitled to naturalize the land and create wild gardens resembling the original terrain with native plants, regardless of any aesthetic dictates of city or provincial or federal statutes. This was held to be part of freedom of expression. The case was supported by the Canadian Environmental Law Association.
That's neat. I'm in an ongoing fight with the local zoning thugs about whether it's illegal for me to have flowers and trees on my property. I'm looking for something else, whether there is a state action requirement for free speech under the 1982 canadian constitution.
That's neat. I'm in an ongoing fight with the local zoning thugs about whether it's illegal for me to have flowers and trees on my property. I'm looking for something else, whether there is a state action requirement for free speech under the 1982 canadian constitution.
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