Appeal Court tosses case brought by B.C. health executive fired for vaccine refusal
VANCOUVER — The Federal Court of Appeal has dismissed a bid by a fired B.C. health executive to seek employment insurance benefits, nearly five years after he lost his job for refusing the COVID-19 vaccine on religious grounds.
Donald Sturgeon was the Interior Health authority’s executive director of medical affairs, but was fired in November 2021 due to his refusal to be vaccinated.
Sturgeon’s bid for benefits has gone through several layers of appeals, including from the Social Security Tribunal, the Federal Court and now the Appeal Court.
He argued his bid for benefits wasn’t a challenge to the health authority’s vaccination policy, but rather the tribunal’s apparent “failure” to interpret how misconduct is weighed against religious freedom that is guaranteed by the Charter of Rights and Freedoms.


