New OCDSB trustees vow to fight against sex-ed policy - Action News
Home WebMail Saturday, November 23, 2024, 06:52 PM | Calgary | -11.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Ottawa

New OCDSB trustees vow to fight against sex-ed policy

Three newly elected trustees for the Ottawa-Carleton District School Board are vowing to use their positions to speak out against changes made by the Progressive Conservatives to Ontario's sex-ed curriculum.

Trustee says board policy could shield teachers who go off-curriculum

From left to right, Lyra Evans, Wendy Hough and Jennifer Jennekens were all elected for the first time on Oct. 22, 2018, to sit as Ottawa Carleton District School Board trustees. (Trevor Pritchard/CBC)

Three newly elected trustees for the Ottawa-Carleton District School Board are vowing to use their positions to speak out against changes made by the Progressive Conservatives to Ontario's sex-ed curriculum.

Lyra Evans, Wendy Hough, and Jennifer Jennekensare all new faces around the English public school board's table.

Houghwas elected Monday in Zone 4, which maps onto Bay ward where outgoing trustee Theresa Kavanagh was just elected to city council.

Jennekenswas chosen by voters in theGloucester-South NepeanandOsgoodewards to represent Zone 7.

Evans was elected as OCDSB trusteein Zone 9, which covers the Rideau-Vanier and Capital wards, after an afterunsuccessfulrun for the NDPin the provincial election.

She too is replacing a trustee-turned-councillor in Shawn Menard, who was elected in Capital ward.

'Scared for their jobs'

Evans toldCBCRadio'sAll In A Daythat Premier Doug Ford's curriculum changes represented"the number one issue" she heard at people's doorsteps.

Ford has ordered that Ontario's elementary students be taught an interim curriculum mostly from 1998, which does not cover issues like gender identity and sexual orientation.

The governmenthas warned there will be consequences for teachers who use the modernized version the Liberals introduced in 2015, creating an online feedback form that's been derided by the province's teacher federation as a "snitch line."

Evans said that's left many teachers "scared for their jobs."

"Having a board policy that protects people who choose to teach the updated version would give them the security if they chose to teach it to relieve their fear," Evans said.

Hough, whose campaign material included a promise that students get the "education of tomorrow, not of yesterday," echoed those concerns.

"We do need the content from that curriculum in those classrooms," she told All In A Dayhost Alan Neal.

"Those teachers should not feel that they are in any way jeopardizing their careers by teaching that curriculum."

Hough suggested that the board was "far enough removed from the Toronto scene" that it could come up with its ownapproach to protect teachers who felt the updated curriculum was necessary.

Jennekensalso said she was in favour of the 2015 curriculum, which covers issues like consent, calling it a "hot topic" on the campaign.

Doug Ford has ordered that Ontario's elementary students be taught an interim curriculum mostly from 1998, which does not cover issues like gender identity and sexual orientation. (Liam Richards/Canadian Press)

$1B budget

OCDSB trustees will handle about $1billion of Ottawa's tax dollars, which will be spent on initiatives such as hiringteachers, funding special education programs, transporting students and both building and repairing schools.

The OCDSBcurrently has a $700 million backlog of maintenance projects that need to be funded to keep its schools in good repair.

The new trustees could also be staring down a teacher shortage.

Jennekenssaid she would be advocating for provincialfunding for a new high school in Riverside South, calling it the "fastest growing area in Ottawa."

Houghalso declared that her top priorities included making Zone 4 schools "much more inclusive," while Evans, who is transgender, saidthe mostly-white OCDSB board would need to "take particular care" to involve all of Ottawa's communities.

Corrections

  • An earlier version of this story stated the board needed $70 million in maintenance work. In fact, the backlog is about $700 million.
    Oct 24, 2018 10:05 AM ET