Toronto Star

Trustee wants to decide own punishment

Nancy Elgie, who made racist remark to parent, offers to serve 3-to-6-month ban

- NOOR JAVED AND KRISTIN RUSHOWY STAFF REPORTERS

Rather than give in to demands that she resign — which a majority of York public school board trustees called for Monday night — Nancy Elgie is instead proposing she be allowed to decide her punishment.

In an unusual move, Elgie made a plea — via her children — to fellow trustees Monday night, saying she’d prefer to offer to sanction herself.

“When the students break the rules, there’s a consequenc­e . . . the same should apply to trustees. They must lead by example,” said her son, Stewart Elgie, who was joined by his siblings and children as he spoke on behalf of his mother.

“At the time of the investigat­or’s findings, I said I want to do what is right to promote healing and recovery in the board and community. Over the past three weeks, I have had a lot of time to think about what that requires.”

“When a trustee breaches the code of conduct, the sanction is to be barred from a number of board meetings. Some have called publicly for such a suspension in this case and I agree that is an appropriat­e sanction here. Therefore, I propose a voluntary sanction that I be prohibited from participat­ing in all board meeting for a period three to six months, if my fellow trustees accept it,” she said, in her statement.

“This sends a clear signal that even when such words are used with no intent to harm, there is harm nonetheles­s,” read Stewart, who stayed for the heated meeting, which could not begin as parents demanded that Elgie resign.

Trustees had discussed the issue in private before the meeting began, but the discussion did not take place as meeting was adjourned.

Typically when a school board trustee is in hot water — and unless they are announcing their resignatio­n — it is fellow trustees who determine what form the discipline take, either a public statement of censure or suspension from a number of meetings following a code of conduct investigat­ion. In this case, Elgie was investigat­ed through an employee investigat­ion, taking away any measures for her colleagues to censure her.

The meeting comes days as after new trustee chair Loralea Carruthers broke her silence calling for Elgie’s resignatio­n, weeks after the Georgina-area trustee apologized for using a racial slur in reference to a black parent.

“If Elgie cares about this board, which I know she does, I call on her to do the right thing and we have heard from trustees at the table, the right thing is for her to resign, said Carruthers during a heated board meeting that had to be adjourned as parents demanded Elgie resign.

And one be one, the trustees asked her to step down. Among them were Trustee Carol Chan, for Richmond Hill who said:

“I agree with my chair that she should step down. Racism is never acceptable,” she said, adding that you can forgive, but there should be consequenc­es.

 ??  ?? Nancy Elgie did not attend last night’s meeting, but her family delivered her statement.
Nancy Elgie did not attend last night’s meeting, but her family delivered her statement.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada