Close X
Tuesday, September 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

School Division Defies Alberta Government, Won't Submit Policy On LGBTQ Students

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 19 Feb, 2016 12:11 PM
    EDMONTON — An Alberta school division has voted to defy the education minister and not submit a policy on transgender and other sexual minority students.
     
    Clark McAskile, chair of the Fort Vermilion School Division, says the decision was made unanimously by the board at a meeting on Jan. 18.
     
    "We just felt there was no need to change the policies that already provide for that level of tolerance and understanding," McAskile said Thursday. 
     
    "We feel we do a very good job of caring for our students and providing for their educational needs."
     
    Alberta's 61 school boards have been directed by Education Minister Dave Eggen to write draft policies to make schools safer and more accepting of LGBTQ students. The drafts are due by March 31.
     
    Eggen said he is aware of the situation in Fort Vermilion and will work with the board on its draft policy.
     
    "I'm meeting with the Fort Vermilion school board very soon and I'm looking forward to that in the spirit of what we're trying to do here, to help vulnerable children," he said.
     
    "It's not meant to be an adversarial process."
     
    McAskile said he welcomes the discussion.
     
    "Our meeting with the minister may very well shed new light on some issues that we hadn't considered, or our point of view may give him some areas that he hadn't considered either," he said.
     
    The Education Department said there haven't been any other school divisions declining to work with the province.
     
    Eggen has a number of options to sanction school boards that do not follow government directives. One is to dissolve the board, but the minister said he is not considering that with Fort Vermilion.
     
    "Dissolving is a very extreme provision," said Eggen.
     
    Fort Vermilion is a sprawling, public school division tucked away in the northwest corner of the province. It includes the municipalities of High Level and Fort Vermilion.
     
    The department has handed out 12 guidelines it expects to see reflected in the policies. They were sent a month ago and have become the focus of heated debate.
     
    Suggestions include allowing students to join sports teams, dress and use washrooms based on their sexual identity or on what they perceive their gender to be.
     
    Schools would not be allowed to inform parents of a student's decision on those matters.
     
    Eggen has declined to say which, if any, of the guidelines must be strictly adhered to, which can be honoured in a conceptual sense and which can simply be honoured in spirit.
     
    McAskile said that has led to questions from trustees.
     
    "There was some concerns with how specific the guidelines were, especially when it came to change rooms, sports teams, some of that stuff. Those things probably would not be well accepted by the parents," he said.
     
    He said the guidelines may also lead to construction changes that could be difficult to implement on tight budgets.
     
    Some of Alberta's Catholic church leaders have been highly critical of the guidelines, which also affect Catholic schools. They say church teachings state that one's sexuality is a God-given gift and to alter it is to challenge divine will.
     
    They also say Catholic schools already provide safe, caring environments for all students.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Canadian Economic Growth Inches Forward 0.3% In November: Statistics Canada

    Canadian Economic Growth Inches Forward 0.3% In November: Statistics Canada
    Statistics Canada's latest reading for real gross domestic product followed zero growth in October and a contraction of 0.5 per cent in September.

    Canadian Economic Growth Inches Forward 0.3% In November: Statistics Canada

    B.C. Mom And Dad Convicted Of Assault For Spanking 14-year-old Girl For Sexting

    B.C. Mom And Dad Convicted Of Assault For Spanking 14-year-old Girl For Sexting
    Her father used a mini hockey stick two or three times on his daughter's buttocks over her pyjama pants and when her mother came home, she delivered a similar punishment with a skipping rope.

    B.C. Mom And Dad Convicted Of Assault For Spanking 14-year-old Girl For Sexting

    Inderjit Singh Reyat's Connection To B.C. Town Lingers As Residents Support Families

    Inderjit Singh Reyat's Connection To B.C. Town Lingers As Residents Support Families
     Residents of a British Columbia town are thinking of the families of 331 who died in the Air India bombings now that the only man convicted of the crimes has been released from prison.

    Inderjit Singh Reyat's Connection To B.C. Town Lingers As Residents Support Families

    Anaheim Ducks's Clayton Stoner Banned From Hunting For 3 Years

    Anaheim Ducks's Clayton Stoner Banned From Hunting For 3 Years
    Anaheim Ducks defenceman Clayton Stoner was banned from hunting for three years and fined $10,000 for killing a grizzly bear on British Columbia's central coast.

    Anaheim Ducks's Clayton Stoner Banned From Hunting For 3 Years

    Experts Applaud Toronto Court Ruling Against Man Who Posted Ex's Explicit Video Online

    Experts Applaud Toronto Court Ruling Against Man Who Posted Ex's Explicit Video Online
    Legal experts are celebrating a recent Ontario court decision that forces a man to compensate his ex-girlfriend after posting an explicit video of her online without her consent.  

    Experts Applaud Toronto Court Ruling Against Man Who Posted Ex's Explicit Video Online

    Air Canada To Give Refunds Or Allow Passengers To Change Flights Over Zika Virus

    Air Canada To Give Refunds Or Allow Passengers To Change Flights Over Zika Virus
    The company says customers will need to provide a doctor's note that says they are at risk of contracting the mosquito-borne virus in order for them to change bookings or get a refund on flights to countries where Zika has been detected.

    Air Canada To Give Refunds Or Allow Passengers To Change Flights Over Zika Virus