A Saskatoon woman is campaigning to have size and physical appearance added to the Saskatchewan Human Rights Legislation as protected grounds against discrimination.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 want other people to feel held back,鈥 Hayley Roesler told CTV Saskatoon.
She wants to address stereotypes such as laziness and 鈥済ive people the opportunity to show that they鈥檙e capable.鈥
In Canada, there are under the Canadian Human Rights Act, including age, race, gender, sexual orientation and disability. However, there are no laws in place against appearance-based discrimination.
Roesler petition is part of a campaign launched in Ontario called 鈥,鈥 which aims to amend laws across the country to ensure everybody has equal opportunity.
鈥淚t doesn鈥檛 matter what size you are on the spectrum, at the end of the day you鈥檙e a human being and every human being deserves human rights and deserves to be treated with dignity,鈥 campaign founder Jill Andrew told CTV Saskatoon.
According to research from Rudd Centre for Food Policy and Obesity at Yale University, 43 per cent of overweight people say they鈥檝e experienced weight bias from employers and supervisors. More than 50 per cent of doctors felt overweight patients were 鈥渦nlikely to comply with treatment.鈥
鈥淲e know that sometimes people who fall into the category of 鈥榥ot looking the way they're supposed to鈥 aren't given the promotions the same way that their thin, 鈥榗onventionally鈥 attractive counterparts are.鈥
Andrew鈥檚 petition has more than 8,000 supporters in Ontario and there are also petitions in Alberta, Manitoba and British Columbia.
The Saskatchewan petition has almost reached its 200 signature target.
It will be delivered to the Supreme Court of Canada, Saskatchewan Human Rights Commission and other provincial decision makers.
With a report from CTV Saskatoon鈥檚 Angelina Irinci