Close X
Wednesday, January 15, 2025
ADVT 
National

The B.C. ombudsperson investigates complaints that some students are being sent home

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 14 Jan, 2025 01:08 PM
  • The B.C. ombudsperson investigates complaints that some students are being sent home

The office of the B.C. ombudsperson says it is investigating complaints that some public schools are excluding students who are disruptive or who have disabilities. 

Ombudsperson Jay Chalke says his office will examine the complaints that those children from kindergarten to Grade 12 have received little to no instruction. 

Chalke says the roles of the Ministry of Education and the school districts will also be assessed.

While some complaints allege that school districts are excluding students due to unsafe behaviour, others point to inadequate resources needed to support a student's learning in school.

Chalke says he's concerned about the outcomes for those children who are left without instruction and aims to make recommendations to support inclusive education. 

Students and their families can contribute to the investigation by filling out a confidential questionnaire or speaking directly to an ombudsperson investigator by April 1.

MORE National ARTICLES

WestJet flight attendants launch lawsuit

WestJet flight attendants launch lawsuit
The B-C Supreme Court says WestJet must turn over harassment complaint files spanning years covered by a long-running class-action lawsuit launched by flight attendants over alleged sexual harassment by company pilots. The court ruling says WestJet has been slow to hand over documents in the case, which was filed in 2016 by lead plaintiff Mandalena Lewis.

WestJet flight attendants launch lawsuit

Men convicted in death of family crossing Manitoba border seek acquittal, new trial

Men convicted in death of family crossing Manitoba border seek acquittal, new trial
The two men found guilty of human smuggling in the case of a family from India who froze to death while trying to walk across the Canada-U.S. border in Manitoba in 2022 are seeking acquittal, or new trials. The two men, Steve Shand of Florida and Harshkumar Patel, an Indian national arrested in Chicago, were convicted by a Minnesota jury in November on all four counts each were facing.

Men convicted in death of family crossing Manitoba border seek acquittal, new trial

Edmonton police charge man in partner's homicide after woman found dead on riverbank

Edmonton police charge man in partner's homicide after woman found dead on riverbank
Edmonton Police have laid charges after a woman was found dead on a bank of the North Saskatchewan River last week. In a news release, police say a 31-year-old man has been arrested and charged with second degree murder.

Edmonton police charge man in partner's homicide after woman found dead on riverbank

Number of Albertans receiving income support reaches highest total since 2019

Number of Albertans receiving income support reaches highest total since 2019
Government data shows the number of Albertans receiving provincial income support has reached a five-year high. As of October, almost 57,500 residents were getting income support.

Number of Albertans receiving income support reaches highest total since 2019

Suspect arrested who hid in dumpster

Suspect arrested who hid in dumpster
Vancouver Police say they arrested an armed man in Kitsilano who tried to hide from officers in a dumpster.  The Vancouver Police Department says officers used a police dog and a beanbag shotgun in the arrest of the man who had reportedly been in people's backyards in the area of the Arbutus greenway. 

Suspect arrested who hid in dumpster

More cases of Avian flu in BC

More cases of Avian flu in BC
The Canadian Food Inspection Agency says more cases of Avian flu have been detected in B-C. The agency says the virus was detected over the weekend at a commercial poultry property in Abbotsford.

More cases of Avian flu in BC