Working for the City We Want

School Closures:
A Joint Response from OSSTF District 12,
Local 4400 CUPE, and Elementary Teachers of Toronto

The recent Review of the TDSB by Margaret Wilson and the consequent directions from Education Minister Liz Sandals are troubling to say the least. There is no doubt that the intervention by the Ontario Government  into the affairs of the TDSB is as much about closing schools and reducing the democratic role of Trustees, as it is about fixing the dysfunctional relationships  between Trustees and senior staff.

The review was set up to study current operational issues and has resulted in recommendations to curtail the ability of Trustees to represent their constituents. While the behaviour of a small group of Trustees (mostly now departed) and Board staff was rightly called into question, the review places all the blame for the dysfunctional relationships in the Board on the Trustees to justify closing their offices, curtailing their ability to connect with constituents, and removing them from the advocacy role they have traditionally held at the Board. Toronto schools would be very different if past generations of Trustees had not fought for the quality of education for everyone in this city.  Parents will also lose a vital voice as to how the education system is run and what goes on in their local school.

Closing schools is a central part of the Ministry directive, which has nothing to do with the purposes of the review. The report shifts the debate away from the problems created by the government's inadequate funding formula by focusing on closing and selling off schools to solve the TDSB's financial difficulties. Kathleen Wynne herself has said on many occasions that we need to develop schools as community hubs, and yet these recommendations reject that model by calling for closures. Once schools are sold off they are gone forever and the public education system cannot respond to changing local demographics and the diverse and growing needs of the community.

This report and its recommendations will affect all who work in or with the public education system, parents whose children attend public schools, and the vitality of communities that surround schools. We all need to be concerned and be vigilant to oppose closing of local schools and support Trustees in their role as advocates for the local education system.

As we move forward, OSSTF, Local  4400  CUPE, ETT, Campaign for Public Education, Labour Council, and others will be working together to address these issues.                                  

John Smith, President 
Andy Lomnicki, Vice President
Elementary Teachers of Toronto
416-659-6153

John Weatherup, President
Toronto Education Workers, Local 4400 CUPE
416-902-9266

Katie McGovern, Secretary
416-885-5075
Leslie Wolfe, Vice-President
OSSTF Toronto Teachers’ Bargaining Unit
416-393-8900 x239  

              

 

WHY THE MINISTER’S “SOLUTIONS” 
CANNOT SOLVE THE "PROBLEMS”
AT THE TORONTO DISTRICT SCHOOL BOARD

Last Friday, after a quick read through the report on the TDSB, produced by Margaret Wilson and the January 15th, 2015 letter with the 13 point response by Minister of Education Liz Sandals, a number of serious issues crystalized. 

The first is that decades of democratic control of our public education system has been spiked in the heart with no consultation whatsoever with three major stakeholders or, to put it another way, everyone in Toronto with the exception of the Ministry of Education and the Trustees / Senior Staff.  Missing are:

  • parents of students in the system and / or adult learners;
  • community members who bought and paid for Toronto’s lands and buildings and who support ongoing education through our tax dollars; and
  • the representatives of the almost 40,000 unionized staff (including teachers and         education workers).

This critical gap says everything.  The people who directly depend on public education, those who foot the bill and those who work in the system (lower ranks, of course) are just not important. 

The Wilson Report is produced by still another consultant to the Minister of Education by a person whose expertise is not governance, democratic procedures nor how democratically elected bodies function.  The Report and the Minister’s 13 Points contain relatively few suggestions that will “solve” relationship issues and imposes unreasonably tight timelines.  This makes it very difficult for the newly-elected Board to find out the background on many of the issues, particularly what is going on with the so-called “empty classrooms and schools” or to gather a sense of why the neighbours and local city representatives are concerned about the loss of local assets and what can be done to preserve these “hubs of the communities”.

It is not an accident that this little surprise is sprung within weeks of the installation of the newly elected Board, fully 50% of whom are new and, generally, progressive. 

The most important goal of these “reforms” is to strip the last vestiges of power from the Trustees, make meaningful consultation impossible and get Trustees out of the way so that the Board’s valuable real estate can get in the hands of the developers faster.  This goes well with the Provinces recently released policy to fast-track (by more than 50%) the process of getting lands and buildings up for sale. The “13 Points” also reverse some democratic reforms that have taken parents decades to achieve.

Here is one thing that all previous supervisors came to understand:  the Toronto District School Board has a major sector of workers and community members – with or without children in the system – who value the good work which is done and who will struggle for a good quality, well-funded, democratically controlled educational system.  They reject the model of depending almost solely on implementing changes originating elsewhere which, in the estimation of people who are closest to the system, neither assist the achievement of school age learners nor that of the adults, seniors and young children who also are a part of our “life-long learning” educational system.

Many of the changes imposed to the system in the last 17 years have or will actively harm it.  Fighting to protect an institution that is so valuable to our society as a whole is not inappropriate, a privilege, nor fool’s quest. Having Trustees who support a similar vision of education is the logical outcome of years of struggle.

It is called democracy.

The first form of governance in Canada were the local trustees, elected from the communities to ensure the hiring of teachers and the provision of materials (building, heat, etc.) in which the students would learn.  They pre-dated municipal governments.

As the education system grew, and the requirement for educating young members of society moved from grade 6 to full secondary school and then post-secondary, curriculum became more complex.  The impact of economics (including the great depression of 1929 and the 1930s on through the financial melt-down of 2008) added challenges, as did the education of children who arrived from all over the world and often settled in cities, particularly following the Second World War.  These challenges, and the creative, democratic responses to them, peaked in the late 1960s, 1970s and into the 1980s.  The research on how to improve education to create fully rounded educated young people brought forward many interesting and useful changes to the classrooms, some of which is still in place today.

The Metro model of financing, which had both strengths and weaknesses, did have some very important successes:  using the taxes gained from all 6 municipalities, including corporations, businesses and commercial interests as well as individuals, the pot was divided so that each child was supported ‘equally’. Poor neighbourhoods received as much or more per capita than richer areas.  There was enough funding to pay for school trips, basic materials and pilot special programs.  School boards had the right to tax and raise funds if they were able to convince the community of its necessity.  If the people of the municipality did not like the choices, the trustees would be voted out of office.

The amalgamation of the school boards in Ontario were a product of the slash and burn politics of the Mike Harris Progressive Conservatives and his successors. It had nothing to do with education.  It had everything to do with defunding.  Frills like music, pools, green spaces, outdoor education centres, staffing sufficient to keep schools clean, support special needs children and helping parents to understand and participate in their child/ren’s education were to be eliminated (as just a few examples).

The fight to “Give Students What They Need to Succeed” was a direct response on the way and amount money was allocated.  The fight united communities with parents and with teachers and education workers.  When the Trustees stood up to the Harris provincial government and refused to cut any more classes, programs and staff, they were put under Supervision for the first time.

Significantly, even with the power of the majority provincial Tory government, Supervisor Paul Christie could not bring the budget in as was desired.  Only one small group, the Community Liaison / School Community Advisors, were actually eliminated, and they were brought back just a few years later with different job titles but much the same mandate. 

That experience of Supervision was probably the best evidence that the drive to shrink the system was not only wildly unpopular, but actually unachievable.  The subsequent enforcement of Supervision on a number of larger public and Catholic Boards of Education reinforced that conclusion.  Unfortunately, the targeted boards did not choose to stand together and support one another, much to the detriment of all.

Individual Liberals, including now-Premier Kathleen Wynne who headed up an influential parent organization, prior to being elected Trustee and then MPP, were either a part of the Need to Succeed” Fightback in Toronto or worked independently but in tandem.  The provincial Tories were damaged, and, in the next election, the McGuinty Liberals promised to make several key reforms, not the least of which was to dump the funding formula that was designed to strip out assets from the Boards.  Needless to say, we are still waiting. .  .

Our education system belongs to the people of Toronto and governance is entrusted to their elected representatives on the school board.  As large as the TDSB is, it is still far smaller and easier to access than the mega-“Board” created by the province which is micro-managing budgets, curriculum and negotiations with the employees at every single Catholic and public school Board and each and every school in the province.  That, by definition, is not only undemocratic but is dysfunctional.

The chaos brought about by amalgamation, downsizing and the loss of valued employees and programs, 5 directors, several Supervisors and 17 years of financially starving the system will not be solved by this most recent attempt because root causes are neither examined nor are the basis for much needed, genuine reform.

Those of us who  have been trying to protect the world-renown Toronto public education system for (at least) the last 17 years, and those who recognize the necessity of fighting for financial stability, utilizing our resources to better the life of our various communities (including the creation of “hubs”) and who support real curriculum reform (well beyond “The Test”) have developed a short but very comprehensive list that would go a long way to protect, renew and restore … plus give all students what they need to succeed.  Go to www.campaignforpubliceducation.ca and click on “Education Matters” for your copy.

Toronto Education Workers – Local 4400 CUPE
1482 Bathurst St., Suite 200
Toronto, ON  M5P 3H1
416-393-0440 x 230

Wow! Lisa Raitt has endorsed Toronto mayoralty candidate John Tory.

The current Federal Minister of Transport was in town on the long weekend for the endorsement.

She may be best known as the federal Transport minister following the Lac-Megantic rail disaster and she insists self-regulation in the rail industry is the way to go, but Raitt was the federal Labour Minister from 2010 to 2013.

Video from the September 30 Activist Assembly

  • Linda McQuaig
  • Hassan Yussuff
  • John Cartwright
  • Ausma Malik