The Province

Students say safety measures fall short, protest with classroom boycott and `die in'

- GORDON McINTYRE — With a file from Scott Brown gordmcinty­re@postmedia.com

A couple of dozen high school students in New Westminste­r staged a brief classroom boycott and symbolic “die-in” on Tuesday to protest what they call a lacklustre response by authoritie­s to COVID-19.

“We pretend to be dead to illustrate the consequenc­es of these unsafe protocols,” one of the student organizers, Elena Massing, said before the group, made up of Grades 9-12 students at New Westminste­r Secondary School, marched in small, staggered, isolation-respecting numbers to a small park by the office of School Board District No. 40.

“The school has not done enough in terms of mental health,” Massing said.

“They've only instated one counsellor and that's just not enough for a student body of just over 2,000 kids.”

They also want masks to be mandatory in the classroom.

So far Dr. Bonnie Henry hasn't made that a provincial requiremen­t so it is not part of department of health or education protocols.

“So a lot of students aren't wearing masks,” Grace Hodges, another organizer of the event, said.

“That's causing a lot of anxiety among students.”

Students at the school, among the biggest in the province, received emails on Monday warning them one student had tested positive for COVID-19.

Provincewi­de, there have been 31 exposure notices for B.C. schools, 21 of them in the Fraser Health Region with 15 of those in Surrey.

The New West students also said they are concerned that students in low-income families who study online and don't access to high-speed internet are being punished academical­ly. They also are asking that TransLink increase bus service because buses are so packed.

Hodges expressed frustratio­n at what she said is a lack of communicat­ion between students and the school administra­tion and district.

“There's been almost radio silence on their end for students who have basic concerns, there's been a lot of miscommuni­cation that's caused a lot of stress that has not yet been resolved.”

Karim Hachlaf, the superinten­dent of School District No. 40, pointed out he held a town hall with several hundred students a few weeks ago, in which he answered questions.

Following that, he held another virtual meeting for individual students who wanted to follow up, including two of the organizers of Tuesday's event, he said.

“I'm always happy to see students who want to be engaged, whether it's a surprise or not,” Hachlaf said of the protest held outside the district office. The district has redistribu­ted some of its regional counsellin­g to the secondary school given the demand and given the feedback it has heard from students, he said.

“And I can share with you that with the recent announceme­nt of federal funds ($242.4 million in onetime funding for the 2020-21 school year in B.C.) we will be allocating additional trained counsellin­g staff to the secondary school.

“That is about to happen, actually. It hasn't yet taken place, but it is going to happen.”

Organizing Tuesday's boycott and die-in isn't something Massing and Hodges, both Grade 11 students, have done before.

“And I don't think it's something we should be doing, we shouldn't have to be doing all of this,” Massing said.

“It should be the district's responsibi­lity to look for these issues and figure out how to address them.”

 ?? MIKE BELL ?? Grace Hodges, left, and Elena Massing were among about two dozen New Westminste­r Secondary School students who participat­ed in a `die-in' Tuesday near the school board offices.
MIKE BELL Grace Hodges, left, and Elena Massing were among about two dozen New Westminste­r Secondary School students who participat­ed in a `die-in' Tuesday near the school board offices.

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