No school closures in Vancouver for now, says B.C. education minister - Action News
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British Columbia

No school closures in Vancouver for now, says B.C. education minister

A day after firing Vancouver's school board, Mike Bernier tries to allay fears about school closures, while the NDP is declares victory for parents who fought to keep schools open.

A day after firing Vancouver's school board, Mike Bernier is trying to allay fears about school closures

B.C. Education Minister Mike Bernier announcing the dismissal of all of the Vancouver School Board's trustees on Oct. 17, 2016. (CBC)

Parents and students in Vancouver worried that schools will be closed after the mass firing of the school board yesterday need not fear for now, said B.C. Education Minister Mike Bernier Tuesday.

"There is no school closure process taking place right now in Vancouver for schools with students in them."

Vancouver, a district with declining enrolment, had been considering the potential closure of 11 schools many of them on the city's East Side but the now-fired board stopped that process earlier this month.

'Were outraged that our school is now again at risk potentially of being closed,' said parent Melanie Chang of Graham Bruce Elementary before the minister's comments. (Tristan Le Rudulier/CBC)

Its dismissal has raised the question of what happens now to school closures in the cityand whether the government-appointed trustee would be tasked with shutting doors.

Before the minister's comments today, parents from several affected schools, along with B.C. NDP MLAs Adrian Dix, Shane Simpson and Melanie Mark, delivered petitions with 18,324 signatures asking to keep their schools open.

"We worked hard all summer ... to get to this point where the trustees were listening to us and our schools were stable," said Melanie Chang, a parent at Graham Bruce Elementary, which was on the list for potential closures.

"We're outraged that our school is now again at risk potentially of being closed."

Judy Choi, a parent from Gladstone Secondary School, leads a procession of parents and B.C. NDP MLAs delivering petitions to the B.C. Liberal cabinet office in Vancouver, asking for their schools to remain open and for more money for public education. (Tristan Le Rudulier/CBC)

'Great victory'

The minister specifically noted that Gladstone Secondary, the only high school left on the VSB's possible closure list, is not currently being considered for closure.

"Gladstone is no longer on any closure list," said Bernier.

Vancouver-Kingsway MLA Adrian Dix, who led the protest this morning, called the minister's comments a clear sign that East Vancouver parents were heard.

"This is a great victory for parents and for students, especially Gladstone students who have worked their heart out on this issue," said Dix.

"Obviously we were worried, since the provincial government was the cause of the schoolclosure process, that it might be back on."

Looming school closures in Vancouver and Richmond earlier this fall ignited debate about funding levels. (CBC)

Not 'in the near future'

The minister dismissed the NDP-organized event as political grandstandingbut did try to allay fears of school closures in the short term.

"If you're a student, if you're a parent in Vancouver, you do not need to be worrying about school closures right now," the minister said.

B.C. Ministry of Education appointed Dianne Turner as official trustee of the Vancouver School District, following the firing of the board. She is the Chief Educator of B.C., a ministry position, and former superintendent of the Delta School District. (Greater Vancouver Food Bank)

Bernier said the newly-appointed official trustee for the district, Dianne Turner, will now be responsible for all the board's duties including long-range facilities planning.

So, it's up to her whether schools will close to save money in the face of declining enrolment, and declining dollars-per-pupil that come with that.

Bernier said Turner told him, "it's nothing she's considering any time in the near future."

It's not clear how long "right now" or the "near future" is.

Bernier also wouldn't say what he would do if Turner decided, for whatever reason, to close schools in Vancouver.

"I don't want to speculate on that," he told reporters.

Turner will do the job of the entire board, including holding public meetings, for a period of at least one year, the ministry said.

She had been working for the B.C. Ministry of Education as chief educator, under secondment from her job as superintendent of the Delta School District.

But she is not currently an employee of the ministry, and Bernier said he will deal her in the same way he does any other school board in the province.