National Post

Ontario cuts $25M from funding for special ed

School boards left scrambling to cover gaps

- ALANNA RIZZA

TORONTO • The Ontario government is slashing millions in funding for programs that are aimed at providing students with extra skills and support, leaving school boards to figure out how students will be affected.

A spokeswoma­n for Education Minister Lisa Thompson said $25 million was slashed from the budget after the government reviewed the “Education Programs — Other” fund.

“Despite only accounting for less than one per cent of school board funding, this fund has a long track record of wasteful spending, overspendi­ng and millions of dollars of unfunded commitment­s,” Kayla Iafelice said in an emailed statement.

The fund, which will now total $400 million for the 2018-2019 fiscal year, gives schools money for things like tutors and leadership programmin­g. The cuts will affect each of the province’s 72 school boards differentl­y, as the boards don’t all provide the same programs under the fund, Iafelice said.

An email sent to school boards on Friday contains a list of programs that will see their funding reduced or cancelled.

The cancellati­ons include programs that provide tutors in classrooms, and extra services for Indigenous and otherwise racialized students.

Maria Rizzo, chair of the Toronto Catholic District School Board, said she was “blindsided” by the funding cuts and worries how special needs students in her board will be affected.

“The government gives us money so we can use it for the kids for programs to help them,” Rizzo said. “Anything they take away, they take away from those kids.”

Rizzo and Robin Pilkey, chair of the Toronto District School Board, said they were surprised that school boards were notified about the cuts on Friday evening, when most administra­tors had left work for the weekend.

They said they are not aware of other funding options and they said the weekend was spent analyzing how the cuts would affect their school boards.

“This also comes a week before Christmas — which is a little Scrooge-y if you ask me,” Rizzo said.

The PC government has made significan­t changes to the province’s education system since taking power, such as promising to develop a new sex-ed curriculum, requiring new teachers to pass a math proficienc­y test before teaching the subject and the cancellati­on of Indigenous curriculum writing sessions.

 ??  ?? Lisa Thompson
Lisa Thompson

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada