B.C. Court of Appeal dismisses bid by City of Nanaimo to overturn human rights award
VANCOUVER — The B.C. Court of Appeal says the British Columbia Human Rights Tribunal was reasonable when it found the City of Nanaimo fired a Black employee and discriminated against him on the basis of race.
The city had unsuccessfully sought a judicial review in B.C. Supreme Court of the tribunal’s decision that awarded Nanaimo’s former chief financial officer, Victor Mema, more than $600,000 for racial discrimination after his dismissal in 2018.
The Appeal Court ruling released Wednesday says that Mema had been appointed in 2016 and the tribunal found that he was the victim of discrimination because his race played a role in the decision to suspend and later fire him.
The ruling says those decisions were made by city council, which had considered a misconduct report against Mema over his use of a corporate credit card.


