Waterloo Region Record

Police presence voted down

Activists applaud decision to have officers leave Toronto public schools

- Daniela Germano

TORONTO — A group of activists called on the Ontario government to ban the practice of stationing uniformed police officers at high schools across the province after the Toronto District School Board voted to permanentl­y end the program.

The decision by the country’s largest school board to scrap the controvers­ial School Resource Officer program was met with loud applause Wednesday night. The vote came a little more than a week after TDSB staff released a report recommendi­ng the eliminatio­n of the program because it left some students feeling intimidate­d or uncomforta­ble.

Phillip Morgan, a member of Education Not Incarcerat­ion, called the decision “a huge victory” that has been 10 years in the making.

“It has been years of writing to trustees, teach-ins, public deputation­s and various other strategies to get the TDSB to listen to folks who have found themselves most harmed by the SRO program,” Morgan said Thursday at a news conference with several other community organizati­ons.

“We know that with the TDSB there has been a history of racism and discrimina­tion, we know that with policing in Toronto there is also a history of racism and discrimina­tion, so the folks who find themselves at the intersecti­on of these two institutio­ns through the SRO program have been particular­ly affected.”

Morgan said there is still work left to do because the program is in place at the Toronto Catholic District School Board and other school boards in the province.

“This is an important first step, but not the last step,” he said.

In an email Thursday, Toronto Catholic District School Board spokespers­on Emmy Szekeres Milne said the SRO program will continue to operate in 21 schools across the city.

Andrea Vasquez Jimenez, co-chair of Latinx, Afro-Latin America Abya Yala Education Network (LAEN), commended the TDSB’s “bold stance of centring the voices and lived experience­s of our most marginaliz­ed and vulnerable students and youth.”

Vasquez Jimenez, who also spoke to reporters outside Toronto police headquarte­rs, said the Ministry of Education should step in to make the same decision for all Ontario schools.

The program, which the TDSB suspended at the end of August, saw police officers deployed at 45 of its high schools in an effort to improve safety and perception­s of police. It was implemente­d in 2008 after 15-year-old Jordan Manners was shot and killed at C.W. Jefferys Collegiate Institute the previous year.

The TDSB staff report earlier this month said the review of the program found the majority of those surveyed had a generally positive impression. However, it noted, about 10 per cent felt intimidate­d, uncomforta­ble or that they were being watched at school.

Although staff putting together the report heard from a significan­t number who supported the presence of an officer in their school (57 per cent), it said the board’s priority must be “to mitigate against the differenti­ated and discrimina­tory impact of the SRO program.”

Rodney Diverlus, a member of Black Lives Matter, said there are better supports for students than having officers in schools.

“We believe the removal of the program puts an emphasis on the Ministry of Education to actually give adequate funding to the TDSB and other boards to support in having child and youth workers, equity-based social workers, more guidance counsellor­s and more time for teachers and teaching staff,” Diverlus said. “A wide range of educators and community-based workers would better support students, student safety and student achievemen­t.”

Toronto police spokespers­on Mark Pugash would not comment directly on TDSB’s decision, but said “the interactio­n between police and young people is an extremely beneficial one.”

Toronto Police Associatio­n president Mike McCormack said the decision did not come as a surprise, adding he thinks it was politicall­y motivated.

“I think there is a lot of value in the program and now that value has been squandered or lost,” McCormack said.

He said he understand­s the need to address the concerns those who feel intimidate­d, but “here’s an opportunit­y to look at that 10 per cent and say, ‘Why do you have these perception­s?’

“For me, someone who has worked in community-based policing, this is the type of group where you want ... to understand what’s going on and you want to improve the relationsh­ip,” McCormack said.

Toronto Mayor John Tory said Thursday that he was disappoint­ed the board did not decide to improve the program.

“The reason why I supported and continue to support the fact we should have reviewed the program and make changes to improve it was because I also took note of the fact that there were many, many other people who appeared in front of the police board and in the school board’s own survey who said they thought the program was good,” Tory said.

The Toronto Police Services Board has also been reviewing the SRO program, with the assessment being carried out by Ryerson University.

Board chair Andrew Pringle said in an interview that he will be bringing forward a recommenda­tion next month to cancel the assessment.

“I think then we’ll reach out to school boards and offer to work with them if they have other suggestion­s,” Pringle said.

The TDSB staff report recommende­d the board continue to work with police to ensure a safe school environmen­t.

 ?? TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO ?? Toronto Police Chief Mark Saunders listens to deputation­s as members of the public, and others, appear before the police services board to discuss the funding of school resource officers in schools.
TORONTO STAR FILE PHOTO Toronto Police Chief Mark Saunders listens to deputation­s as members of the public, and others, appear before the police services board to discuss the funding of school resource officers in schools.

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