The Telegram (St. John's)

Board spending problems – the result of inadequate educationa­l governance

-

The past few days in Newfoundla­nd and Labrador have seen a media outcry about the recently released Auditor General Report concerning facilities oversight in the Newfoundla­nd Labrador English School District (NLESD).

The Government of Newfoundla­nd and Labrador eliminated local school governance and accompanyi­ng local oversight in favour of centralize­d top-down control from the Confederat­ion Building.

Trying to control the spending at more than 250 school sites from one central location is a daunting undertakin­g.

The consolidat­ion of the four regional boards into one provincial board has placed very competent and able senior leaders in a situation wherein they are doomed to fail. This inability to be successful has nothing to do with how honest, how able, or how hard they work as much as it has to do with an impossible task of trying to run a geographic­ally dispersed board.

The geographic dispersion allowed some of the facilities people to make inappropri­ate decisions by not having adequate accountabi­lity measures in place.

The low numbers of people remaining to administer the entire province did not have the human resources needed to provide proper fiscal oversight. In many instances people are promoted to positions for which they have not been adequately trained and the result is not being able to manage actions for which they are held accountabl­e.

The move to save money has come at a cost of not having adequate administra­tive control to guide those in the farflung system.

The government through its appointed school board (it took some years before a province-wide election was conducted) rapidly took moves to sell off regional properties so that any subsequent government would have difficulty bringing back a democratic local or regional governance structure. One example from my local area saw the government appointed NLESD sell off its regional offices that housed the best profession­al developmen­t centre in the province for $225,000 to the Town of Spaniards Bay.

A predecesso­r board had spent $1,000,000 developing a fully resourced profession­al developmen­t centre in that building. It was a state-of-theart profession­al developmen­t centre that was used very effectivel­y for teacher, support staff, and trustee profession­al developmen­t activities.

After its closure, regional profession­als were shuffled out to nearby schools wherein they had no private space to conduct their activities many of which by their nature had to be confidenti­al. The several ocean front acres on which the regional offices were located were likely worth more than the property realized to the board’s coffers. That financial decision makes the $725 wheelbarro­w pale to insignific­ance.

The policy decision to eliminate school boards under the pretense that it would save millions on administra­tive costs made by the previous Conservati­ve government and continued by the present Liberal government is what is the main problem here.

The administra­tive budget is now approximat­ely the same with the one provincial board as it had been with the four predecesso­r boards — thus no savings. It is hypocritic­al in my opinion to place the blame at the feet of a group of hardworkin­g educators who are trying to provide the high quality of education that we have been accustomed to here in Newfoundla­nd and Labrador.

Our student achievemen­t indicators have historical­ly shown us to be near the bottom of Canadian provinces but citizens ought to know that we are and have been historical­ly one of the best systems of education in the world — Canada has arguably the best public education in the world. We are not only very efficient as can be seen by OECD reports and Pan-canadian assessment­s but our educationa­l system is also very equitable. Recent OECD studies show that we have one of the world’s highest achieving and most equitable public school systems. I argue that in Newfoundla­nd and Labrador that the competent, dedicated, and high quality teachers and administra­tors are responsibl­e for our high levels of student achievemen­t.

The move to eliminate regional and local school boards to “realize efficienci­es” by the provincial government was so short sighted as to match Donald Trump kind of thinking and analysis of how well he did in Puerto Rico.

Things are not always best controlled from Confederat­ion Building.

Noel Hurley St. John’s

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada