ctv.ca
Quote:
OTTAWA -- A group of families trying to sue the Ontario government and school boards over treatment for children with autism won't get a hearing from the country's top court.
In a decision released without comment Thursday, the Supreme Court of Canada refused permission for the families to appeal earlier rulings that put strict limits on their lawsuit.
In a release, the families said they were disappointed and would meet with their lawyers in the "coming days to determine next steps."
The five families say children with autism are suffering discrimination because the province and school boards fail to provide expensive therapies for the kids in public schools.
"Obviously, the court's decision today was a letdown for us," Taline Sagharian, whose 12-year-old son Christopher has autism, said in the release.
"For almost a decade now, families of children with autism have continued to face an impossible choice between prohibitively expensive private autism programs and an unresponsive public school system."
"The need for change remains desperate."
Ontario Superior Court threw out several of the key claims brought by the families at a preliminary stage in 2007.
The provincial Court of Appeal ruled earlier this year that some of the claims could proceed, but only after they are drastically reworked.
At issue are claims of discrimination under the Charter of Rights, as well as negligence and damage claims against the government and school boards.
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