Manitoba appoints teacher-turned-union exec to oversee educators registry - Action News
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Manitoba

Manitoba appoints teacher-turned-union exec to oversee educators registry

The province has appointed Bobbi Taillefer, an education union executive and former Winnipeg school principal, to lead a new provincial body that will oversee conduct, discipline and a registry of teachers.

Bobbi Taillefer, a former Winnipeg school teacher, named commissioner in charge of public registry

Woman with a red blazer stares at the camera smiling
Bobbi Taillefer has been selected by the province as the new education commissioner. (Submitted by Bobbi Taillefer)

The province has appointed an education union executive and former Winnipeg school principal to lead a new provincial discipline process for teachers.

Bobbi Taillefer has been selected as Manitoba's independent education commissioner, the provincial government confirmed Thursday.

The role, created as part of a 2023 bill amending the province's Education Administration Act, empowers Taillefer to investigatecomplaints from the public and reports from school boards or employers about teachermisconduct and incompetence, take disciplinary action and post discipline records ona publicregistry of teachers.

"It's about protecting kids,"Taillefer told CBC News in an interview.

"[It's] making sure teachers have fair systems, and that the public has confidence in the education system they are sending their children to."

Under the province's new legislation, passed unanimously last spring, the commissioner can decide what actions are appropriateto address a complaint, as well as investigate reports of misconduct or "close the matter by not taking further action."

Taillefer can also either consent to a resolution agreement with the teacher after a complaint of misconduct or appoint a hearing panel to decide on the appropriate consequences, which can go as far as cancelling an educator's teaching certificate.

Disciplinary decisions about the conductof teachers that have held an education certificate in Manitoba since 1960 would be archived in a provincial teachersregistry.

That system, Taillefer said, will launchearly next year after more than 20 years in the making.

Decades-long career in education

A spokesperson for the minister of education said in a statement thatTaillefer'sappointment is "an important stepforward" to enact thelegislation, adding shebrings vast expertise to the job,after having worked both in classrooms and in administration.

The commissioner designate started her education careerteaching in the Winnipeg School division at Churchill High School, before working her way up through several other schools and ultimately becoming principal at Brock Corydon School.

She then went to work as a staff officer at the ManitobaTeachers' Society and rose to the position of general secretary. She left thatunion in 2021 to head the Saskatchewan Teachers' Federation.

Taillefer said she has dedicated her decades-long career to upholding the standards of public education, and ensuring teachers work in a fair and understandable system that also sets a high bar for qualifications and training.

a classroom with chairs flipped over the desks
Taillefer's new role empowers her to review complaints from the public and reports from school boards or employers regarding incidents of misconduct and incompetence involving teachers. (Jonathan Hayward/The Canadian Press)

Grant Jackson, the Progressive Conservatives' education critic,said the Opposition partysupported the creation ofan onlineregistry for Manitoba's teachers.

But in a statement, he accused theNDP governmentof trying to "manipulate the process" by "handpicking"Taillefer a union executive saying that puts "the union ahead of students."

Taillefer, a former teacher, rejected concerns raised about her ability to be impartial and independent when investigating complaints of teacher misconduct.

"The work that I've done, people know my values and ethics and my commitment to public education," she said."I will die for it."

Saskatchewanhas an independent board that oversees a teacherregistry system similar to the one that will be implemented in Manitoba next year, and the system works "exceptionally well" in that province, Taillefer said.

She said she hopes to bring some of the successes of that system to Manitoba to build a similar level of confidence among educators and parents in the disciplinary process.

The board also needs to ensure accountability, predictability and consistent application of the province's legislation, she said.

The Canadian Centre for Child Protection, an organization that lobbied to be part of theconsultation process behindthe bill, said in a statement it is "anxiously waiting"for the launch of thenewframework, which the organization hopeswill ultimatelyincrease safety withinschools.

"The previous system lacked transparency and accountability and contained some inherent conflicts of interest," the CCCP'sstatement said. "We hope it will encourage parents and students to come forward with concerns over problematic behaviours ... rather than stay silent."

Teachers'union pleased

Sandy Nemeth, president of the Manitoba School Boards Association, told CBC News that the commissioner's role is a significant duty with animportant mandate.

Taillefer's knowledge and expertise in public education will have to be met with the "hallmarks of fairness, impartiality and objectivity" the new position requires, she said.

Manitoba Teachers' Society president Nathan Martindale said in a news release that the organization is pleasedwith Taillefer's appointment.

However, the union will continue advocating forhearing panels responsible for hearing complaints of misconduct as ordered by the commissioner to be composed mainly of teachers. The law says hearing panels will be made up from a roster of 12 people appointed by the education minister four teachers, four people nominated by the Manitoba School Boards Association and four public representatives who have neverbeen teachers.

Heading into her new role next year, Taillefer said teachers and parents in Manitoba have shown some apprehension about the discipline process.

But she said at its core, the province's registry and her new role are just an amelioration of anexisting system.

"It is about upholding a standard of a profession that is for the most part working just well."

With files from Meaghan Ketcheson