Theodore Goloff was recently a member of delegations that took part in the hearings of parliamentary commissions on cultural questions.
On December 8, in Ottawa, he was representing the Association of English-speaking Jurists of Quebec in the course of the Cross-Canada official languages consultations 2016, implemented by the Department of Canadian Heritage.
A few weeks earlier, on October 27, in Québec City, he presented the point of view of the Lord Reading Law Society before the Committee on Institutions’ clause-by-clause consideration of Bill 62, An Act to foster adherence to State religious neutrality and, in particular, to provide a framework for religious accommodation requests in certain bodies.
