Times Colonist

B.C. Liberals broke it, now we own it

- GEOFF JOHNSON

‘You break it, you own it.” We have all been cautioned by that sign in shops dealing with unique and valuable merchandis­e.

I’ll admit that it might be something of a metaphoric­al stretch to suggest that had that warning been writ large on the first page of the B.C. teachers’ contract in 2002, it might have given pause for thought to the Gordon Campbell government and its education minister, Christy Clark, before they arbitraril­y interfered with the critical class size and compositio­n clauses in the contract.

“You break it, you own it” was apparently never part of the considerat­ion, and now another government, 17 years later, is left red-faced to pick up the pieces and pay for the damage.

In 2002, the Campbell government’s contract-busting legislatio­n removed guarantees of services provided by specialist teachers.

More significan­tly in terms of longterm consequenc­es, all guaranteed supports for students with special needs were also removed.

The 2002 contract had included specific ratios for specialist teachers, including special-ed instructor­s. The contract defined the number of and under what circumstan­ces children with special needs could be in a regular classroom. Teachers trained specifical­ly for the task.

But since the government scrubbed the class-compositio­n clauses, B.C. has, according to B.C. Teachers Federation data, lost almost 700 special-education teachers and innumerabl­e specially trained education assistants — those who work one-on-one with children integrated into regular classrooms.

Over the years, fewer teachers and teacher trainees chose to become teachers of children with special needs. School districts also found themselves increasing­ly unable to find trained education assistants to work with kids and assist with inclusion into regular classrooms.

After years of legal wrangling between the teachers’ union and various iterations of government, the Supreme Court of Canada decision took all of 20 minutes to overturn the 2002 interferen­ce with the teacher contract.

This left the current B.C. government to own the problem, pick up the pieces, and suddenly find and hire hundreds of teachers and teacher assistants at a cost of between $250 million and $300 million more each year.

But let’s back up for a minute and define why the issue of class compositio­n is such a major headache for government and school trustees and, worse still, such a major heartache for parents of children with special needs.

Class compositio­n refers to the number of students with specific, identified needs who must be fully assessed before being assigned to a regular classroom.

Even then, an “individual­ized education plan” and an additional educationa­l assistant are both needed to make the inclusion philosophy work successful­ly.

The funding formula, while currently under revision, classifies kids into a cascading series of funding categories depending on the degree of disability.

Funded disabiliti­es range from being physically dependent (including being deaf or blind) at approximat­ely an additional $38,000 above normal operating grants to about $9,000 for those kids identified with serious intellectu­al challenges who express their disability behavioura­lly.

The funding falls well short of meeting actual needs.

In real terms, the child who manifests a range of behavioura­l problems can require as much or even more assistance than the child who is experienci­ng the full range of physical dependency.

Hovering over school districts, alongside the expectatio­ns of parents of children needing additional support, is the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms.

Section 15 of the charter makes it clear that every individual in Canada — regardless of physical or mental disability — is to be considered equal.

This means that government­s must not discrimina­te or fail, either by commission or omission, to meet the needs of children or adults with disabiliti­es. That isn’t “may not,” but “must not.”

Since 2002, three other things have changed significan­tly: First, parents are much more comfortabl­e advocating for themselves; second, society has become more accepting of and inclusive of people with a range of special needs; and finally, medical research has led to a remarkable surge in both diagnosis and identifica­tion.

But back to my admittedly feeble metaphor: You picked up that tempting piece of fine porcelain china and in the process of admiring it, you dropped it.

You had read the sign and understood the terms about handling and assuming responsibi­lity for breakage. You had thereby entered into a form of tacit contract about and before handling the china.

Not much choice now: You broke it — you own it. Pick up the pieces and pay for the damage, apologize and never let it happen again. Geoff Johnson is a former superinten­dent of schools.

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