The Welland Tribune

‘It’s the tip of the iceberg’

Child Protection report finds 252 school personnel accused of sexual offences

- KELLY GERALDINE MALONE

Anne-Marie Robinson says being sexually exploited by her high school teacher in the 1970s completely derailed her life. She always thought what happened was a long time ago and, surely, the system must be fixed by now.

But, she says, it hasn’t.

“Schools are so poorly equipped in what to do,” Robinson said in a phone interview from Ottawa.

“It’s just a microcosm where they can get away with this and they do.”

A report from the Canadian Centre for Child Protection says 252 current or former school personnel committed or were accused of committing offences of a sexual nature against at least 548 children from 2017 to 2021.

It also found another 38 personnel were criminally charged for child pornograph­y-related offences during the five-year span.

The report includes any person working in a school environmen­t, including teachers, administra­tors, bus drivers and custodial staff.

“It is startling and a bit infuriatin­g,” said Noni Classen, director of education at the Winnipeg-based centre.

Classen said it is the only known publicly available, Canada-wide snapshot of sexual offending in schools. The centre searched disciplina­ry records, media sources and criminal case law to build the database. Since education falls under provincial and territoria­l jurisdicti­on, most bodies responsibl­e for overseeing discipline of school employees are not required to make the outcomes of investigat­ions public. There is a complete lack of transparen­cy, Classen said, and she suspects the report’s numbers are an underestim­ation.

“It’s the tip of the iceberg,” she said.

The report says 71 per cent of victims were girls and 29 per cent were boys, when gender could be identified. Of all the offending behaviours, 37 per cent involved physical contact.

Robinson was on her first field trip when she alleges her teacher first had sex with her. She was a teen. She said he gave her alcohol. She alleged the abuse lasted for over a year. Robinson said she quit high school to get away from the teacher. It took time to get back on track, but eventually she built a career that landed her as the president of the Public Service Commission of Canada.

A criminal charge against the teacher for a sex offence against Robinson was dismissed in court last year. The teacher, who The Canadian Press is not naming because he was not convicted, said he has paid dearly for what he describes as a consensual relationsh­ip with Robinson. “I’m not denying there was a relationsh­ip, but it was consensual. It was not illegal. It was morally wrong,” the man said in an interview Wednesday.

The teacher gave up his licence in 2000 after disciplina­ry actions began against him.

Robinson is now a member of the newly formed group SECE, which stands for stop educator-child exploitati­on. All members are survivors of sexual abuse perpetrate­d by school teachers. The group is calling for the establishm­ent of national or provincial independen­t bodies to investigat­e teacher-on-student sexual exploitati­on. They also want a national inquiry into the abuse of children at the hands of school personnel and restitutio­n for survivors.

 ?? JONATHAN HAYWARD
THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? A report from the Canadian Centre for Child Protection found 38 personnel were criminally charged for child pornograph­yrelated offences from 2017 to 2021.
JONATHAN HAYWARD THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO A report from the Canadian Centre for Child Protection found 38 personnel were criminally charged for child pornograph­yrelated offences from 2017 to 2021.

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