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Calgary Catholic School Board keeping tight-lipped about recent discipline of trustee

A Calgary Catholic school trustee has been formally disciplined and removed from two committees or appointments after she was found to be in contravention of the board of trustees' code of conduct.

Wards 4 and 7 representative Pamela Rath was formally censured by the board of trustees in September

A board that reads,
The board of trustees found trustee Pamela Rath had violated the code of conduct and formally censured her at the end of September, 2022, but they won't say exactly why she was disciplined. (CCSD)

A Calgary Catholic school trustee has been formally disciplined and removed from some of her duties after she was found to be in contravention of the board of trustees' code of conduct.

The censure of Pamela Rath, trustee for wards 4 and 7,was noted in a highlight posted on Calgary Catholic School District's website following a special board meeting on Sept. 26.

In the post, it wasreported thatthe board of trustees had "duly considered" the complaint againstRath.

"And having found her to be in violationof the board's code of conduct, formally censured Trustee Pamela Rath, and also removed Trustee Pamela Rath from the following committees and appointments of the board, effective immediately: The Alberta School Boards Association (ASBA), and St. Mary's University Community Advisory Council," it reads.

Neither the board of trustees or Rath will say what led to the disciplinary action.

A woman poses for a head and shoulders photo.
A lawyer for wards 4 and 7 trustee Pamela Rath said that they feel the board's rules around public communication are very strict, and prevent her from sharing what happened. (Twitter)

"The Calgary Catholic School District (CCSD) Board of Trustees takes all board matters very seriously. As this is a confidential, internal matter of the board, we are unable to provide any further comment," board of trustees vice-chairLinda Wellman saidin an email.

Asked for a response to the board's decision, Rath declined to comment. Instead, she directed CBC News to talk to her lawyer, Grant Stapon,to speak on her behalf.

Staponsaid the Calgary Catholic School Board has "very strict" rules and policies around communication when not authorized by the board.

"I personally view those rules to be overly restrictive, but unless or until the Board changes them or they are set aside by Court, Trustee Rath is bound by them and faces potential discipline for breach of those policies," he said in a written statement.

"Trustee Rath would prefer to be able to address media[,]staff and the public to a greater extent than she does but has been directed not to do so, and she will abide by that direction."

Stapon said Rath wants her constituents to know that she is committed to her job.

"To serving her stakeholders with open communication and dialogue to the extent she is permitted to do so by the Board, both to ensure that resources to classrooms are preserved and to permit the Board to best fulfil its mandate under the Alberta Education Act."

A woman with brown hair in front of a row of books.
Lori Williams, associate professor at Mount Royal University in Calgary, says voters will want to know why Rath was censured. (Scott Dippel/CBC)

Mount Royal University political scientist Lori Williams saidtrustees are publicly elected officials, and voters should be made aware of what's happened.

"She's been stripped ofthose positions and ... obviously the voters are wondering what's going on. They want to know and it sounds like she wants to let them know," she said.

When it comes to past discipline of school trustees inAlberta, Williams saidshe can't think of an example when it was this secretive.

"Every other circumstance I can think of where there was a problem with a trustee, it was either publicized by the trustee themselves or by members of the community. In other words, it was public knowledge," she said.

Williams saidvoters will want democratic accountability and transparency in this situation.

"And they're not getting it," she said.