Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
National

Alberta Threatens To Pull Funding For 28 Schools Over Gay-Straight Alliances

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 14 Nov, 2018 01:16 PM
    EDMONTON — Alberta Education Minister David Eggen is directing 28 privately run schools to post rules affirming the rights of LGBTQ students or risk having their funding pulled by next school year.
     
     
    Eggen says he doesn't want to take such a drastic step, but children have a right to be safe at school.
     
     
    The posted rules include the provision that students can set up a gay-straight alliance in the school if they wish.
     
     
    Gay-straight alliances are support groups set up by students to help LGBTQ students feel accepted and reduce bullying or abuse.
     
     
    Private schools receive as much as 70 per cent of their funding from the province.
     
     
    Eggen has given the faith-based schools until the end of June to comply or funding will be withdrawn next fall.
     
     
    "I sincerely hope that we will not need to take this step," Eggen said Wednesday. "But I have been clear — following the law is not optional. Ensuring vulnerable children feel safe and included at school is not optional."
     
     
    All public, separate, francophone, and charter schools have policies in place, representing more than 98 per cent of kindergarten to Grade 12 students, Eggen added.
     
     
    Gay-straight alliances have become a divisive political issue in Alberta.
     
     
    The Opposition United Conservatives say while all children must be treated fairly and equally, the rights of parents cannot be pushed to the sidelines.
     
     
    The party passed a policy this year saying parents should be told if their child joins a school club of a religious or sexual nature, but advocates say that would deter children from joining and could out them before they are ready.
     
     
    United Conservative Leader Jason Kenney says parents should be told if a child's safety could be at risk.
     
     
    The gay-straight alliances are being challenged in court by United Conservative Party member John Carpay's advocacy group Justice Centre for Constitutional Freedoms. The Centre argues parents should be told if their child joins a gay-straight alliance, which it has called "ideological sexual clubs'" that make graphic information on gay sex available.
     
     
    Premier Rachel Notley is calling for Kenney to kick Carpay out of the party for comments Carpay made in a weekend speech.
     
     
    In his remarks, Carpay warned of the ongoing dangers to individual freedoms, likening the LGBTQ rainbow flag to totalitarian symbols such as the hammer and sickle for communism and the swastika in Nazi Germany.
     
     
    Carpay apologized in a statement Sunday for drawing the comparison, calling it unintentional.
     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Calgary Can Feel More Confident Than Vancouver Did For Olympic Vote: John Furlong

    CALGARY — The leap of faith Calgarians are asked to make about the 2026 Winter Games isn't as big as the one Vancouverites navigated for 2010, says John Furlong.

    Calgary Can Feel More Confident Than Vancouver Did For Olympic Vote: John Furlong

    Absent From Ottawa, Montreal Liberal MP Nicola Di Iorio Says He Is On Assignment For PM

    OTTAWA — Liberal MP Nicola Di Iorio broke his silence about his absence from Parliament Hill on Friday, saying he is performing unspecified tasks assigned by the prime minister himself.

    Absent From Ottawa, Montreal Liberal MP Nicola Di Iorio Says He Is On Assignment For PM

    Ottawa To Purchase A Sixth Arctic And Offshore Patrol Vessel: Harjit Sajjan

    Ottawa To Purchase A Sixth Arctic And Offshore Patrol Vessel: Harjit Sajjan
    HALIFAX — Concern over a potential lack of work for Halifax's Irving Shipbuilding turned to cheers Friday as the federal government announced it would purchase a sixth Arctic and offshore patrol vessel for the Royal Canadian Navy.

    Ottawa To Purchase A Sixth Arctic And Offshore Patrol Vessel: Harjit Sajjan

    No Changes Planned To Assisted-Death Law, Ottawa Says After Dying Woman's Plea

    HALIFAX — Ottawa remains confident in its assisted dying legislation, and doesn't plan changes despite a Halifax woman's deathbed plea, federal Justice Minister Jody Wilson-Raybould said Friday.

    No Changes Planned To Assisted-Death Law, Ottawa Says After Dying Woman's Plea

    Greyhound Exit Leaves Gap For Homeless, Domestic Violence Shelters

    Greyhound Exit Leaves Gap For Homeless, Domestic Violence Shelters
    CALGARY — Organizations that help the homeless and those fleeing domestic violence say they have lost a vital resource with Greyhound's exit from the West —and they're not sure how well a patchwork of alternatives will be able to fill the gap.

    Greyhound Exit Leaves Gap For Homeless, Domestic Violence Shelters

    'Terrible Tragedy':Trial Of Rohinie Bisesar In Fatal Stabbing Hears Of Her Mentall Illness

    'Terrible Tragedy':Trial Of Rohinie Bisesar In Fatal Stabbing Hears Of Her Mentall Illness
    TORONTO — If Rohinie Bisesar had been treated for her severe mental illness, maybe Rosemarie Junor would still be alive.

    'Terrible Tragedy':Trial Of Rohinie Bisesar In Fatal Stabbing Hears Of Her Mentall Illness