The News (New Glasgow)

Students should have been shielded from graffiti: band council member

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More should have been done to shield young Indigenous and African Nova Scotian students from seeing racist graffiti that was scrawled on one of their school buses and a sign nearby, a Mi’kmaq band council member said Thursday. Darlene Prosper said kids arriving at the East Antigonish Education Centre on Tuesday were faced with a hate-filled piece of graffiti targeting Indigenous people that was spray painted across a bus. They also saw a message against black people on a sign near the school in Monastery.

Prosper said the Strait Regional School Board should have notified the Paqtnkek First Nation about the messages so something could have been done to inform parents or develop a plan to deal with the situation.

“What was the most frustratin­g was the fact that this graffiti was sprayed on the walls and the bus and the sign the evening before and it was maddening to find out that the kids had to drive into it and see it,” she said.

“We should have been notified when they became aware of this, so together we could have worked out a plan as to how we were going to deal with that.”

School board spokeswoma­n Deanna Gillis said they only learned about the extent of the graffiti on Tuesday since it was dark when it was first noticed late Monday. She said they immediatel­y contacted police and also put in supports for students on Tuesday when they understood the nature of the messages.

She said the bus was moved after police informed them they could relocate it and the graffiti was removed. Gillis said they also had to wait for a driver to move the spare bus, since they were all out on their routes Tuesday morning.

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