Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
National

Students From La Loche High School Out At Least A Month After Shooting

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 04 Feb, 2016 11:30 AM
    LA LOCHE, Sask. — An official says there's no firm date for when students will return to a northern Saskatchewan high school where two people were shot to death.
     
    Ken Ladouceur, director of education with the Northern Lights School Division, says Feb. 22 is the earliest the La Loche school could reopen.
     
    That would make it more than a month since a teacher and an aide were killed at the school and two brothers were shot to death at a home in the remote community.
     
    It would also be the same day that a 17-year-old boy charged with first-degree murder and attempted murder is to appear again in court in Meadow Lake, Sask.
     
    Ladouceur says decisions still need to be made as to how "learning will resume in La Loche."
     
    A parent says safety at the school is the main concern for him and other parents as they prepare their children to return to a building with such horrible memories. 
     
    "That's our biggest fear. We just want to go there with our child and make sure everything is good," Leonard Montgrand said Wednesday. 
     
    "It's not drop them off at the door and say, 'OK, nothing ever happened.' We have to ensure that transition."
     
    Montgrand said security must be in place before students and staff walk through the doors again. The Ministry of Education has committed to beefed-up protection, but has said specifics will be left to the community.
     
    "We're not asking for armed security or anything. Just to have security (so) that ... our children are safe and we have one more thing to ease the transition part," Montgrand said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    'It Lit My Kid's Face On Fire:' Calls For Ban On Selling E-Cigarettes To Minors

    'It Lit My Kid's Face On Fire:' Calls For Ban On Selling E-Cigarettes To Minors
    Perry Greer says his son Ty, 16, was using the device in a car last week in Lethbridge when the e-cigarette exploded.

    'It Lit My Kid's Face On Fire:' Calls For Ban On Selling E-Cigarettes To Minors

    All B.C. Paramedics, Some Firefighters, Approved To Administer Life Saving Drug

    All B.C. Paramedics, Some Firefighters, Approved To Administer Life Saving Drug
    Firefighters in Vancouver and Surrey, B.C., have been moved to the frontlines in the battle against the soaring number of overdoses and drug deaths.

    All B.C. Paramedics, Some Firefighters, Approved To Administer Life Saving Drug

    Ottawa Won't Overturn CRTC Ruling Allowing Oprah Network To Broadcast In Canada

    The order in council, issued Tuesday, comes as the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission holds hearings on the future of local TV.

    Ottawa Won't Overturn CRTC Ruling Allowing Oprah Network To Broadcast In Canada

    NHL's Clayton Stoner Admits To Hunting Without Licence In B.C. Grizzly Hunt

    NHL's Clayton Stoner Admits To Hunting Without Licence In B.C. Grizzly Hunt
    National Hockey League player Clayton Stoner is banned from hunting for three years and must pay $10,000 for killing a grizzly bear on British Columbia's central coast.

    NHL's Clayton Stoner Admits To Hunting Without Licence In B.C. Grizzly Hunt

    CSIS Must Do More To Prevent Insiders From Stealing Secrets: Watchdog

    CSIS Must Do More To Prevent Insiders From Stealing Secrets: Watchdog
    The watchdog that monitors the Canadian Security Intelligence Service says CSIS must do more to ensure insiders don't lose, steal or leak secret material.

    CSIS Must Do More To Prevent Insiders From Stealing Secrets: Watchdog

    Canadian Volunteers Fighting With Kurds In Iraq Might Violate Anti-Terror Law

    Canadian Volunteers Fighting With Kurds In Iraq Might Violate Anti-Terror Law
    A secret "Canadian Eyes Only" analysis of the Kurdish peshmerga, prepared by Transport Canada's intelligence branch, warns there are some factions of the militia group that are designated as terrorist entities under federal law.

    Canadian Volunteers Fighting With Kurds In Iraq Might Violate Anti-Terror Law