The Telegram (St. John's)

FOTOLIA Quebec urged to reconsider

School Boards Associatio­n says P.E.I., Nova Scotia tried similar reform and it’s not working

- PHILIP AUTHIER POSTMEDIA NETWORK

QUEBEC — School board officials from outside Quebec are warning the Legault government not to convert the province’s boards into service centres and scrap elections for francophon­e voters.

Arguing democratic­ally electing representa­tives to help run the education system is a “cornerston­e” of Canadian society, the Canadian School Boards Associatio­n (CSBA) held a news conference Monday urging Quebec to reconsider.

They said Quebec must not make the same mistake as two other provinces, Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island, which undertook similar streamlini­ng reforms as Quebec proposes in Bill 40.

Tabled in the National Assembly last week, the bill proposes to convert Quebec’s school boards into service centres run by boards of directors, including parent volunteers and members of the community.

Elections for francophon­e boards are to be abolished but maintained in the English system.

But CSBA president Laurie French said Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island have tried a similar formula and it is not working, with a decline in student performanc­e and success rates.

In 2018, the Nova Scotia government dissolved the province’s seven elected regional school boards and created one provincial advisory council made up of people appointed by the minister of education.

The director general of the advisory council reports directly to the deputy minister of education. Only the Frenchspea­king minority board has been allowed to continue to exist and hold elections.

French said they have been contacted by the teachers’ union in Nova Scotia, which has numerous examples of parents who feel they have nowhere to go with their issues because they have no access to school commission­ers.

There were busing problems when schools opened this fall and there was no one locally to call for help, she added.

“It’s very difficult to call the minister’s office for individual parents in that situation,” French said.

“Local school boards provide that contact and that level of accountabi­lity and assistance in their individual communitie­s.”

She added all Quebecers should have the right to democratic­ally elected governing school boards.

And Shawn Davidson, president of the Saskatchew­an School Boards Associatio­n, also on hand for the news conference, said western provinces are going the opposite way by “enhancing” the school board system, not stripping it down.

That followed a public outcry when the government tried to merge boards.

“In my province, we would argue school boards should be representa­tive of communitie­s,” Davidson said.

“The community is much larger than just the parent groups.

“To think that something is less empowered, less democratic and less representa­tive of the entire community, which education serves, we think is highly short-sighted.”

 ??  ?? CSBA president Laurie French says Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island have tried a similar formula to Bill 40 and it is not working, with a decline in student performanc­e and success rates.
CSBA president Laurie French says Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island have tried a similar formula to Bill 40 and it is not working, with a decline in student performanc­e and success rates.

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