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Saskatchewan

Opposition says Sask. education minister 'downloaded' vaccination mandate responsibilities onto school boards

Saskatchewan's Official Opposition says the province's education minister is piling too much responsibility onto school boards when it comes to vaccine mandates for extra-curricular activities.

NDP says Minister Dustin Duncan at odds with local health policies

Education Minister Dustin Duncan said the province is working with rural Saskatchewan communities to expand child care.
Education Minister Dustin Duncan suggested on Wednesday that schooldivisions can ask third party facilities like city rinks to waive their vaccine policy so high school kids who are unvaccinated can play. (Matt Duguid/CBC)

The Official Opposition says Saskatchewan's Education Minister is piling too much responsibility onto school boards when it comes to vaccine mandates for extra-curricular activities.

Minister Dustin Duncan suggested on Wednesday that schooldivisions can ask third party facilities like city rinks to waive their vaccine policy so high school kids who are unvaccinated can play.

On Nov. 17, Education Minister Dustin Duncan wrote a letter to all school boards in the provincestating that all children should be allowed to attend extracurricular functions, regardless of their vaccine status.

However, in an interview with CBC Radio host Stefani LangeneggeronThe Morning Edition, Duncan said a public health order would trump any directive his office put out.

"If a public health officer orders some sort of mandate, then I would expect the school division would comply with an order," Duncan toldThe Morning Edition.

"My view is that if it's a recommendation, that we would look to preserve the ability for students, regardless of their vaccination status, to take part in in-class learning and other activities that have been provided by the school."

The NDP saidDuncan is shirking the province's responsibility to ensure the safety of Saskatchewan schools.

Duncan sent anadditionalmemo to school division board chairs on Nov. 30. He directed them not to exclude any students from extracurricular activities, regardless whether thatschool is currently listed as an outbreakor the student is coming from a school in outbreak.

The NDP say this new directive contradicts the Minister's own statementshours earlier on CBCRadio.

"I think the very last thing that this minister has created is clarity with that letter. I think frustration, confusion ... but not clarity," said NDP Education Critic Carla Beck.

"This minister who ... has downloaded these responsibilities onto school boards, has told them that they need to work this out with their local medical health officer, that they need to make the decisions at the local level.

"Frankly, I believe that was to keep the anger about some of those decisions away from his office and direct it to thoseschool board trustees."

The NDP saidDuncan's statements on students in schools with outbreaks interfere with local COVID-19 health orders.

"To see him disrespect both the decisions made by school boards, but by local medical health officers as well when they are tasked with keeping kids safe, when we have sports coming online, such as wrestling [and] basketball ..."

Carla Beck criticizedDuncan's refusal to implement a vaccination requirement or proof of negative testing for kids in extra-curricular school activities. (Matt Howard/CBC)

Beck said she has heard from manycoaches directly who signed up to lead extra-curricular activitiesbelieving that there would be some vaccineprotections in place.

Last month, 21 medical health officers from across the province sent a letter to Health Minister Paul Merriman. They asked that any facility hosting youth sports or extracurricular activities be required to get proof of vaccination from participants.

Duncan responded to this during question period at the legislature in Regina on Wednesday.

"The board doesn't, in my view, need to even be talking about that because it's getting into the area of mandating vaccines for participating in sports, and it's not a theoretical issue," said Duncan.

"We have had local medical health officers that have recommended to government that both for extracurricular and in-class learning, that access should be limited for only vaccinated students. And this is just, I think, a way for me to to remove that conversation from the board table at local school boards because I think it's a bigger question than just a local issue."

Beck criticizedDuncan's refusal to implement a vaccination requirement or proof of negative testing.

"I can only imagine how frustrating this is for boards. We've heard publicly, privately. It's been a long 22 months foreveryone. This is a heck of a time for the minister to step in and start throwing his weight around."