Sexual abuse in schools a persistent menace, data shows - Action News
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Sexual abuse in schools a persistent menace, data shows

A national charity that tracks sexual abuse and exploitation of children has foundthe problem of teachers molesting students in Canada isn't going away.

Centre for Child Protection tracked 108 alleged or confirmed cases since Jan. 1, 2018

A woman poses for a photo on a city street.
Noni Classen is director of education with the Canadian Centre for Child Protection in Winnipeg. (Julie Ireton/CBC)

A national charity that tracks sexual abuse and exploitation of children has foundthe problem of teachers molesting students in Canada isn't going away.

According to ongoing research bythe Winnipeg-based Canadian Centre for Child Protection, there have been108 alleged or confirmed reports of sexual abuse in schools in the past 17months.

That's more than one new case every week, similar to the previous 20-year trend.

"If that's not telling that we still have a problem, I don't know what is, because that's hard-fact data," said Noni Classen, the centre's director of education.

Of the 108 most recent cases, tracked from Jan. 1, 2018, there have been 36 criminal convictions or disciplinary findings. Many of the remaining cases have yet to make their way through the courts.

Between 1997 and 2017,the centre counted nearly 1,300 alleged or confirmed cases of abuse by a school employee in Canada.Classensaid the rate of false claims by studentsis very low.

Researchers collected the data by combing through court records, media reports and the provincial organizations that regulate teachers.

Classen said some people are surprised by the recent numbers.

"People did think this was in the past," she said. "It's someone who's misusing relationships with children, which is something that we're going to see in today's day and age as well."

Camille Williams-Taylor is director of education for the Ottawa-Carleton District School Board. (Julie Ireton, CBC)

Working with schools

Classen travels across Canada to work with schools and school boards to train teachers, union leaders and school administrators about what to watch out for, how to prevent abuse and how to intervene if there are suspicions abuse ishappening.

"How do we build systems to safeguard children from sexual abuse happening by somebodywho's working with a child in the school?" she asked.

In manycases, Classen said, the abuse occurs during extracurricular activities including school outings, sports tournaments or band trips.

Transparency a 'big issue' for sexual misconduct cases in schools, advocate says

5 years ago
Duration 1:31
Noni Classen, director of education for the Canadian Centre for Child Protection, says any actions taken against teachers in misconduct cases should be made public in order to keep children safe.

"If you're extending access with kids outside work duties or work hours, it needs to be authorized, transparent and accountable," Classen said.

Often, the lines are blurred.

Classen gives the example of a principal who volunteered as a girls' varsity volleyball coachand who,during practices, would run his fingers through the girls' hair and stroke their backs.

"That's a really good example of something that's not illegal, but it is a violation of boundaries," she said. "And so if it's just inappropriate, we need to correct it, because that's how we're going to disrupt potentially someone who is more egregious."

In 2000, when she was 13, Anna Ct was sexually abused by her music teacher at an Ottawa middle school. Phillip Nolan was sentenced to two years in prison in 2016. (CBC)

'It was really horrific'

Sometimes, there's no mistaking a teacher's behaviour for what it is: sexual abuse.

When Anna Ct was 13, her music teacher at J.H. PutmanPublic School in Ottawasexually assaulted her over a period of six months.

In 2016, Phillip Nolan who played drums in former prime minister Stephen Harper's band was convicted, sent toprison and stripped of his teacher's certificate.

"It was a really horrific, challenging, confusing, isolating, traumatic experience,"said Ct,now a lawyer in Toronto who asked the court tolift the publication ban on her name after Nolan's conviction.

Ctsaid she found out years after the abuse that other students knew about it or suspected it, that some had even warned Nolan to leave her alone.

"Apparently there was even a group of boys in our year who created a fake email address and they wrote to this teacher and they said, you know, 'Stop doing what you're doing with our girls,'" Ctrecalled. "But if they felt that way, where were the adults?"

Anna Ct, left, and her mother, Shelagh MacDonald, in 2000. (Submitted)

CBC investigation shone light on abuse

A recentCBC investigation shone light onhistorical sexual abuse by three teachers who, over the course of decades, preyed onstudents at the same Ottawa high school.

Since those cases were brought to light, the school board at the centre of the investigation has started working with Classen and the Canadian Centre for Child Protection.

"I think that we recognize that a healing process is required," said Camille Williams-Taylor, director of education for the Ottawa-Carleton District School Board (OCDSB).

Classen is helping the OCDSB come up withtraining, monitoring and communication protocols for principals,teachers and union leaders.

It's helping staff figure out what to do when they're presented with subtle signs that makethem uncomfortable, Williams-Taylor said.

"It's those nuanced pieces that I think ... the centre has allowed us to engage in a conversation about in a way that allows us to do something."

Shelagh MacDonald wants to see school boards do more to protect kids from predators in the classroom. (CBC)

Shelagh MacDonald, Anna Ct's mother, is aware of the OCDSB's efforts, but she's not convinced it will be enough.

"When Anna was sexually abused, I'm quite sure there were some policies and procedures in place, but they were not effective because no adult was paying attention," MacDonald said.