Candidate targets Catholic school funding
Liberal leadership hopeful proposes to merge school boards
TORONTO — A Liberal leadership hopeful wants Ontario to end the public funding of Catholic schools.
Alvin Tedjo would like to see the four public and separate school systems merged into secular English and French boards.
“For students, this change means the convenience of attending their closest school, less time on the bus and access to an optional religious curriculum,” Tedjo said Thursday. “For teachers and early childhood educators, it means smaller class sizes, availability of more resources and the freedom to teach in any publicly funded school.”
Tedjo, a Catholic with three young children in GTA separate schools, said it’s a question of fairness.
“As a Catholic I have a choice, but others don’t have that choice.”
Citing a 2012 Federation of
Urban Neighbourhoods study, Tedjo estimated merging the systems could save between $1.2 billion and $1.6 billion. While provinces like Quebec and Newfoundland abandoned the public funding of Catholic schools years ago, defunding separate schools in Ontario would require a constitutional amendment.
The Green party of Ontario has long advocated for a secular public system. But Education Minister Stephen Lecce said the Progressive Conservative government has no plans to move in that direction.
“(It’s) a constitutionally protected system in Ontario that benefits millions of youngsters,” Lecce, who attended private and public Catholic schools, said at Queen’s Park.
“I am an unabashed defender of choice for families. I believe Catholic education and public education is an important offering and … we will defend vigorously the maintenance of that system,” he said.
Twenty years ago, the United Nations Human Rights Committee said it was discriminatory to use taxpayers’ money to fund one religion’s schools over other faiths.
Greg Oliver, president of the Canadian Secular Alliance, praised Tedjo for his plan.
“We applaud Alvin’s proposal to create a single, publicly funded school system for each official language,” said Oliver.
“All Ontario children should learn and play together in a multicultural and pluralistic setting. Teachers deserve an employment market free from religious discrimination.”
A runner-up in Oakville-Burlington North in the 2018 election, Tedjo is one of four confirmed candidates in the Liberal leadership contest that will be decided at a delegated convention on March 7 in Mississauga.
The front-runner is widely seen to be former minister Steven Del Duca, who lost Vaughan-Woodbridge to Progressive Conservative Michael Tibollo in last year’s election MPP Michael Coteau (Don Valley East), also a minister in former premier Kathleen Wynne’s cabinet, MPP Mitzie Hunter (Scarborough Guildwood), another ex-minister, and Kate Graham, who finished third last year in London North Centre, are the other candidates.
Former MPP Arthur Potts (Beaches-East York) is expected to enter the contest within days.
Coteau, who has landed endorsements from party stalwarts like Sheila Copps, noted that the Liberals have a “tradition of support for Catholic education in Ontario.”
“I want to assure Ontario’s 2.25 million Catholic families that under my leadership, the Ontario Liberal party will never abandon, diminish or compromise Catholic education,” he said.