At Confederation When the
Constitution Act, 1867 was enacted, education was one of the major issues which the
Fathers of Confederation had to deal with. At that time, it was generally accepted that teaching Christian religion was a necessary component of education in the publicly funded school systems, and also that there could be considerable local variation in the form and organisation of public schools. Section 93 therefore assigned exclusive jurisdiction over education to the provinces, with certain guarantees for separate and denominational schools. There was also a very limited scope for federal intervention in certain cases. The issue of education was particularly important in the
Province of Canada, which would be split after Confederation into the provinces of
Ontario and Quebec. The population of what was to be Quebec was primarily French-speaking and Catholic, but with a significant minority of English-speakers who were mainly Protestant. The situation was complicated by the fact that in some areas of Quebec, the English-speaking Protestants were the local majority and the French-speaking Catholics were the local minority. In what was to be Ontario, the population was primarily English-speaking and Protestant, but with a significant minority of Catholics, some of whom were French-speaking. Prior to Confederation, the religious component of schools had been a major issue in the Province of Canada. The system that had evolved was that the public schools in each province would be under the control of the religious majority, either Protestant or Catholic, but that the religious minority in each province would have a right to their own denominational or separate schools.
Other provinces New Brunswick and Nova Scotia Neither
New Brunswick nor
Nova Scotia had separate or denominational schools as a matter of law at Confederation, and neither province subsequently established them. A dispute in New Brunswick over the creation of a new public school system resulted in the first major court case under section 93,
Maher v Town Council of Portland, which confirmed that there had not been any denominational or separate schools established by law at Confederation in New Brunswick.
Manitoba When Manitoba entered Confederation in 1870, section 22 of the
Manitoba Act, 1870 gave the province jurisdiction over education. Section 22 used slightly different wording from section 93, reflecting the fact that there were no public schools in the region at the time, but maintained the option of an appeal to the federal government. The province established publicly funded denominational schools shortly after 1870, but abolished them in 1890. The abolition triggered two significant court cases which went on appeal to the
Judicial Committee of the Privy Council in Britain, and caused a major political crisis for the federal government. For the first and only time, the federal government introduced remedial legislation under paragraph 93(4), but
Prime Minister Tupper did not succeed in passing it before being defeated in the
federal election of 1896, largely on the
Manitoba Schools Question.
British Columbia and Prince Edward Island Neither
British Columbia nor
Prince Edward Island had denominational or separate schools when they entered Confederation in 1871 and 1873.
Alberta and Saskatchewan From 1870 to 1905, the area between Manitoba and British Columbia was the
North-West Territories, created by federal legislation. The federal laws relating to the North-West Territories required that the territorial government institute a system for publicly funded schools with a religious component. In 1901, the Legislature of the North-West Territories enacted two ordinances, the
School Ordinance and the
Ordinance respecting Assessment and Taxation in School Districts. The ordinances instituted a system of public schools, with the option for the local religious minority in a district, either Protestant or Catholic, to establish separate schools. When the federal government of
Sir Wilfrid Laurier was considering establishing the two provinces of Alberta and Saskatchewan from the North-West Territories in 1905, the schools question became a major point of contention in Parliament. The initial versions of the two bills put forward by the Laurier government were ambiguous on exactly what type of school system the government proposing. Some members of Parliament interpreted the bills as establishing denominational schools generally, not simply the option for local separate schools. One of the leading western members of Laurier's government,
Clifford Sifton, resigned from
Cabinet over the issue. A compromise was eventually reached where the
Alberta Act and the
Saskatchewan Act each contained a specific version of paragraph (1) of section 93, protecting the rights to separate schools as set out in the schools ordinances of 1901.
Newfoundland and Labrador Newfoundland and Labrador joined Confederation in 1949. As with Manitoba, section 93 did not apply directly to Newfoundland and Labrador. The province's powers over education were set out in Term 17 of the
Newfoundland Terms of Union. Term 17 followed the framework of section 93, but instead continued a system where six different denominations could each run their own schools: Catholic, Anglican, United, Moravian, Presbyterian, and Salvation Army. ==Relationship with
Charter rights==