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Montreal

English school boards hire lawyer to preserve board elections

The association of English school boards says it will never give up its elections or its minority rights, despite education minister's plans to scrap electoral system.

Education Minister Franois Blais's plan to axe school board elections faces legal challenge from QESBA

The Quebec English School Boards Association says plans to scrap the schol board electoral system will in no way benefit the classroom experience.

The Quebec English School Boards Association (QESBA) is preparing for a legal battle in the fightto preserve the province's school board electoral system.

Earlier this month, Education Minister Franois Blais said he will abolish school board elections.

The decision to axe the electoral system hits English school boards especially hard, because of their status as a minority in the province.

QESBArepresentatives met with Blais following that announcement and saidthe meeting was "very difficult."

"We have held lengthy discussions with our members, andthe answer is simple: we will never give up our elections or our minority rights," association president DavidD'Aoust said in a statement.

"Abolishing our elected system hasabsolutely no benefit to the classroom or our community," D'Aoust said.

QESBAsaid it will be represented byMichael Bergman, a lawyer specializing in the constitutional rights of minority groups.

"The Supreme Court has said time and again that the linguistic minority must manage and control their own institutions not only to preserve the language of education, but their identity and culture," Bergman said, adding that the minister's arguments won't stand up in court.

"This is not about money, it's not about practicalities. It's about children, it's about education, it's about constitutional rights."

Quebec Premier Philippe Couillard said the government wants to open a dialogue, and realizes the importance of school boards to the English-speaking community.

"We also know that school elections are quite expensive roughly $20 million. Participation rates are very low although higher in the English-speaking community, but still very low. There might be other ways to be assured that people from the community sit at influential positions in the school system," Couillard said.

In last year's school board election, the average participation rate for the nine anglophone boards in the province was almost 17 per cent.

For the French boards, voter turnout was less than five per cent.