Toronto Star

Students to lose jobs after cuts by province

Ford government’s decision to axe $25M from education called ‘deplorable, despicable’

- ISABEL TEOTONIO EDUCATION REPORTER KRISTIN RUSHOWY QUEEN’S PARK BUREAU

Nearly 100 students will be laid off from their part-time jobs at the Toronto Catholic school board because the programs they work for are being axed by the Ford government as part of the province’s $25-million funding cut to school boards.

Those job losses are just the “tip of the iceberg” because all of Ontario’s 72 school boards are being affected by funding cuts or reductions to specialize­d grants.

“It’s deplorable and despicable,” said Toronto Catholic District School Board chair Maria Rizzo. “Kids will suffer in the long run (by the cuts).”

Areport by the board’s staff to its trustees outlines which of its programs have been affected by the cuts and reductions because of the 2018-2019 funding changes to EPO (Education Program-Other).

Cancelled programs include the Focus on Youth’s after-school program, which operates in high-needs urban neighbourh­oods and employs about 60 part-time students, mostly from high school.

Also on the chopping block is the Tutors in the Classroom program, which will affect about 35 university and college students.

“Those kids are going to be laid off,”

Rizzo said, adding the Progressiv­e Conservati­ve government is having an impact on students who rely on those jobs to pay for tuition and gain work experience. And those job losses are just at that one board, she said, adding she assumes hundreds will be affected provincewi­de.

Taylor Dallin, a TCDSB student trustee, called the job losses “astounding” and worries they may harm some students from lower-income families.

“Seeing them lose their jobs and having funding for the programs (cut) will be extremely detrimenta­l to not only these individual­s but to the greater community at large,” said the Grade 11 student at Cardinal Carter Academy for the Arts.

“I feel like we’re going to see quite the ripple effect.”

Dallin said students were “blindsided” by news of the funding cuts and reductions, saying the programs “are extremely important to maximize the potential of youth.”

Other cancelled programs include those that help support Indigenous students, the physical activity needs of elementary and secondary students, and projects such as SpeakUp, which encourages students to lead projects in their schools.

According to the report, the TCDSB estimates the cancelled programs amount to about $655,000 in EPO funding. But because these programs are being cut in the middle of the school year, the report notes that the board has already spent about $255,000 on them.

Other programs will receive reduced funding, but it’s unclear how much less. The province is expected to provide more details by the end of the week. New Democrat MPP Marit Stiles called the cuts a “slap in the face” to parents who took part in the government’s public consultati­ons on changes to the education system, which wrapped up Saturday — a day after the province announced the $25-million funding loss. For this school year, EPO funding will be $400 million.

“They are causing utter chaos in our school boards and in our schools,” Stiles, the NDP’s education critic and a former Toronto school board trustee, said Tuesday in the legislatur­e.

She accused the government of “taking an axe to programs” that help vulnerable students.

“Overwhelmi­ngly, the programs affected are designed to help at-risk youth,” Stiles said.

“The government has yet to share what actual research they have conducted that shows that children getting physical activity or children getting programmin­g to help them succeed if they are at risk or providing leadership opportunit­ies for children are programs that need to be cut.” Education Minister Lisa Thompson noted the government will continue to spend $400 million in EPO funding this school year — even though $425 million was promised by the previous government last March.

“We’re moving forward with thoughtful investment­s that make a difference in the classroom environmen­t,” Thompson said during question period in the legislatur­e.

She has previously said that following a line-by-line audit of spending, the changes were “responsibl­e.” Her spokespers­on has previously said some of the EPO spending was “wasteful.”

Thompson also said “tens of thousands of people responded” to the government’s education consultati­ons.

“I can’t wait to start diving into that data, it’s so rich,” she said. “That consultati­on was based on informing our direction for the next school year of 2019 ... that’s what our consultati­on was based on.”

Speaking with reporters, Premier Doug Ford revealed that the government received about 35,000 responses as part of its public consultati­on process, calling it “the largest consultati­on in Ontario’s history.”

And when asked whether the cuts in EPO funding are responsibl­e because they affect vulnerable children, he said, “We’re reviewing everything right across the board ... we have to go line item by line item.”

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