Sask. Catholic school boards looking to fund appeal of Theodore decision - Action News
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Saskatchewan

Sask. Catholic school boards looking to fund appeal of Theodore decision

The province's eight Catholic school boards are looking to raise $300,000 to fund an appeal to the Theodore decision, which ruled Sask. cannot fund non-Catholic students to attend Catholic schools.

All 8 Catholic school boards are committed to funding the appeal

Rows of empty desks face a blank chalk board.
Saskatchewan's Catholic school boards are looking to raise $300,000 to fund an appeal of a decision which rules the province cannot fund non-Catholic students to attend Catholic schools. (CBC)

All eight of Saskatchewan's Catholic school boards are looking to raisefunds for an appeal against a Court of Queen's Bench decisionearlier this year which ruled the province cannot fund non-Catholic students to attend Catholic schools.

Together, the province's Catholic school boards are looking to raise $300,000, according to Tom Fortosky, executive director of the Saskatchewan Catholic School Boards Association.

Fortoskysaid there had been $19,354 raised for a challenge prior to the official fundraising campaign by the school boards. The remaining $280,000 would be divided up among the eight Catholic school boards at the rate of $7 per student. There are about 40,000 students within the province's Catholic schools.

"We feel budgets are already tight and school divisions, students and teachers are in a situation where taking money to fund this [out of operating budgets] wouldhurt the classrooms," said Rob Bresciani, chair of Regina Catholic Schools.

"So, we decided we wanted to take this to the public and try to fund it through a fundraising effort."

Regina Catholic Schools currently has about 11,800 students enrolled within the city's Catholic schools. They're looking to raise about $70,000 for the fund, a spokesperson said. The Greater Saskatoon Catholic Schools said in a statement on its website thatthe school board would raise its share of $140,000.

"What we've done is basically portioned out the dollars," said Diane Boyko, chair of GSCS. "We intend to hear with the appeal that [the decision] would be overturned."

Province invokes clause

In April, Justice Donald Layhruled that funding "non-minority faith students" to attend Catholic schools was a violation of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms and the province's duty to practice religious neutrality. The decision would take affect in June 2018.

The decision was appealed by both the province and the SCSBA.

The decision stems fromthe Good Spirit School Division filinga lawsuit against theChrist the Teacher Roman Catholic Separate School Division, after a Catholic school opened in Theodore, Sask. in 2003.

The GSSD argued that theconstitutional protection of Catholic schools does not include the right for those schools to receive government funding for nonCatholic students.

Earlier this month, the provincial government invoked the Charter's notwithstanding clause with allowsthe province to create laws that will operate in spite of (or "notwithstanding") some charter rights that the laws appear to violate.

"It takes away the right of the parent to choose the education that they feel is best for their child," Bresciani said.

"The parent is the first line of education and their right to choose [the decision] would take that away."

The province estimated as many as 10,000 students would be taken out of the separate school system and placed into the public system if the decision is upheld.