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Field trip to anti-abortion rally not a 'good use of student time': Alberta minister

Multiple yellow school buses dropped off dozens of high school students at Edmonton's anti-abortion March for Life on Thursday, with many attending from as far away as Red Deer.

Red Deer Catholic Regional Schools says parents supported trip to Edmonton March for Life

A school bus from Red Deer Catholic Regional Schools picks up students from the March For Life in Edmonton on May 10, 2018. (Kathy Dawson/Alberta Pro-Choice Coalition)

Multiple yellow school buses dropped off dozens of high school students at Edmonton's anti-abortion March for Life on Thursday, with many attending from as far away as Red Deer.

At least fourbuses were seen in the vicinity of the legislature, with march organizers telling CBC News that several schools volunteered to bring their students to the event.

'They organized it, they initiated it'

Anti-abortion activists, including dozens of high school students bussed in from Red Deer, at Edmonton's March for Life on Thursday. (Lincoln Ho/Grandin Media)

"We weren't expecting that many [kids from Red Deer],"said PatDube, president of the Alberta March for Life Association, who confirmed that multiple school buses came from the central Alberta city specifically for the anti-abortion event.

"They knew ahead of time, and they were really happy to be doing it. So we didn't reach out to anybody to say,'oh send all your kids,'" said Dube. "They organized it, they initiated it."

At least one of those buses was labelled as being from Red Deer Catholic Regional Schools.

School previously compared abortion to Holocaust

Social media posts from an instructor at thedistrict'scole Secondaire Notre Dame High School said he was accompanying students to the rally. The posts included pro-life hashtags.

An instructor at cole Secondaire Notre Dame High School in Red Deer, Alta. posts on Twitter about their trip to an anti-abortion rally in Edmonton. (Screenshot/Twitter)

The sameschool faced criticism in 2017 after an anti-abortion groupscreened a video for students which drew parallels between abortion and the Auschwitzdeath camp in the Second World War.

The school board would not provide any details on how the buses were paid for, but in a statement emailed to CBC News said, "parents/guardians agreed to send their child to the March for Life."

Not a 'good use of student time,' saysEggen

The provincial government expressed concern that education tax dollars could have been usedto pay for attendance, but also saiddecisions around student field trips are made bylocal schools and boards.

"I don't believe protesting women's fundamental rights is a good use of student time. Nor do I think it's the best use of school resources which should be directed to the classroom as much as possible," saidEducation Minister David Eggenin a statement.

Archdiocese supports initiative

The Archdiocese of Edmonton told CBC News while it did not pay to bus students from Red Deer, it's in favour of the move. According to their website,"a special invitation is extended to our Catholic teachers and students."

Despite"obviously political aspects" at an event like the March for Lives,ArchdioceseChief Communications Officer LorraineTurchansky said it's appropriate for the school district to pay for high school students to get there.

"It would be natural for [Catholic taxpayers] to support such an initiative," saidTurchansky.

The 2018 event is not the first time school buses have shuttled students to an anti-abortion march, according toKathy Dawson, a board member with the Alberta Pro-Choice Coalition. However, only one of the buses appeared to be visibly labelled as belonging to a school districtthis year.

"This isn't the first year," said Dawson, who also attended the march in protest dressed as a handmaid fromThe Handmaid's TaleTV series. "But this year... [many] were just the no-name buses."

Students, many bussed in to Edmonton from Red Deer, leave the 2018 March for Life. (Kathy Dawson/Alberta Pro-Choice Coalition)

According to Dawson, several students she spoke with from the buses told her theywere from Notre Dame High School and St. Joseph High School, both in Red Deer.

March organizers hope to see students from other Alberta cities emulate Red Deer at future rallies.

"Next year I think it'll be lots of Edmonton Catholic School kids,"said Dube.