Northwest Territories Human Rights Commission

Northwest Territories Human Rights Commission
Human rights commission, Quasi-judicial
Industry Human rights commission, Quasi-judicial, Investigative
Founded Yellowknife, Northwest Territories, Canada, 2004
Headquarters Yellowknife, Northwest Territories, Canada
Key people
Charles Dent (Chairman), Deborah Mcleod (Director)
Number of employees
5 (F2012)[1]
Website

The NWT Human Rights Commission is an independent body which is responsible for a number of duties under the NWT Human Rights Act (HRA).

History

In 2004, the Commission was established by the enactment of the NWT Human Rights Act. The Human Rights Act is the successor legislation to the Fair Practices Act. The enactment of the Act brought NWT in line with other jurisdictions which have comprehensive human rights legislative regimes.[2]

Structure and Function of the Commission

The Commission itself is composed of two distinct yet overlapping entities which are collectively known as the Commission.

Members of the Commission are appointed by the Northwest Territories Legislative Assembly for a term of four years. These members collectively have a set of roles and responsibilities.

The Director is an officer of the Commission and is also appointed by the legislature for a four-year term. The Director is responsible for carrying out instructions given by the Commission, but also has a completely separate and independent mandate which is outside the role of the members of the Commission.

The Commission

The Commission is responsible for the following:[3]

  • Promoting awareness and understanding of the HRA
  • Educating key stakeholders of relevant human rights issues
  • Approving the annual budget
  • Determining when the Commission should be directly involved in an adjudication of great public significance

The Director

The Director is responsible for the following:[4]

  • Carrying out instructions from the Commission which fall under their mandate
  • Hiring and managing staff of the Commission
  • Investigating individual complaints
  • Referring individual complaints to adjudication[5]

Adjudication

The Commission does not render decisions on the merits of individual complaints. The responsibility of adjudicating disputes rests with the Northwest Territories Human Rights Adjudication Panel, a totally separate entity.[6]

Key Publications

The Commission provides a variety of publication in many different languages and alternative formats.

  • This is a comprehensive, plain language guide providing a complete overview of the HRA

References

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