Ontario opposition parties say the province should consider pulling funding from a Christian group that has a history of human rights complaints.

Christian Horizons was recently ordered to compensate a worker who had to quit after revealing she was gay.

The Human Rights Tribunal of Ontario recently ordered the Kitchener, Ont.-based group to compensate former employee Connie Heintz and end a contract containing a code-of-conduct for its 2,500 employees.

It's the second time the tribunal has had to deal with a complaint against the evangelical organization.

The tribunal's predecessor, the Human Rights Board of Inquiry, ruled in 1992 that two women fired by the organization for being in common-law relationships be paid $65,000.

Christian Horizons is the largest community living service provider in Ontario and is funded almost entirely by the province.