Toronto Star

Peel board sorry, admits racism in banning activist

Community advocate welcomes apology, says more work to be done

- KRISTIN RUSHOWY

The Peel school board has publicly apologized to a leader in the Black community and acknowledg­ed that banning him from all of its properties was racist.

In a notice sent out Wednesday, the board said it “extends apology to community leader Idris Orughu for acts of discrimina­tion and anti-Black racism.”

The board, it added, “is taking many steps in its efforts to dismantle anti-Black, African and Caribbean racism and achieve racial equity. One of these important steps is to acknowledg­e past mistakes to enable reconcilia­tion.”

Orughu told the Star he welcomed the apology. “It tells us that the board is ready and willing to turn a different page.”

However, he added, “there is still a lot of work to be done … it will take awhile, and we want to see action. This gesture tells us that the current leadership are willing to hear us, acknowledg­e the wrong that was done … and work with the community.”

In March, the Peel District School Board — the second largest in the province — issued a trespass notice against Orughu, saying “he engaged in disrespect­ful communicat­ion towards members of the board of trustees on Feb. 11, 2020, and made harassing and threatenin­g comments on Feb. 25, 2020, to members of the board of trustees, requiring the interventi­on of Peel Regional Police.”

Orughu said he was not told what he was alleged to have said, or did.

Police did not lay any charges, and no one heard any such threats — nor did he make any, Orughu said.

The Peel board has been under provincial supervisio­n since June, after Education Minister Stephen Lecce sent in three investigat­ors to probe allegation­s of racism and dysfunctio­n.

Lecce issued 27 specific orders to the board, then sent in a human rights and employment lawyer to investigat­e why little progress had been made.

Having lost all confidence, he then appointed Bruce Rodrigues, a former director of education and head of the standardiz­ed testing body EQAO, to run the board as a provincial supervisor.

At Queen’s Park, Lecce said it was “most regrettabl­e” the way the Peel board treated Orughu. “To be kicked out, to be targeted for opposition (to anti-Black racism) … is contrary to the values of democracy, decency, and civility, which we need,” said Lecce. “So I welcome the decision by the board, by the superinten­dent, to express … a wholeheart­ed apology … to that gentleman.”

Orughu and other advocates are now appealing to Lecce to keep Rodrigues in place as supervisor until the next municipal election in 2022, given there is no trust with the current trustees or senior staff and that it will “take time to disentangl­e the harm that has happened.”

 ??  ?? In March, the PDSB issued a trespass notice against Idris Orughu on racist grounds.
In March, the PDSB issued a trespass notice against Idris Orughu on racist grounds.

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