Friday, February 6, 2015

We INSIST on FULL PUBLIC FUNDING for Toronto’s schools, child cares & adult programs

A message from Educators for Peace and Justice:

Hello All,

We hope you're all well.

Things are heating up in the fight back against the Minister of Educations Directives to sell off schools and undermine local control of the TDSB .

There are 2 actions that you can take, including an important demo outside the next TDSB board meeting this coming Tuesday Feb 10: 
 Action 1:  Demo 
Join the Campaign for Public Education (CPE) at the front steps of 5050 Yonge Street to tell trustees keep schools open & fight for better funding 

Tuesday 10th February 2015
TDSB Board Office(5050 Yonge St) @ 4:45 pm
A special meeting of the Board begins at 5:30 pm where  trustees will meet to finalise the Board’s response to the Minister’s directives arising from the Wilson Report.

We know what needs to be fixed is the flawed funding formula

Campaign for Public Education (since 2002)

We INSIST on FULL PUBLIC FUNDING for Toronto’s schools, child cares & adult programs
Action 2: Petition

Please read and sign the petition below: 


See you all on Tuesday !

Sunday, February 1, 2015

The campaign to push back against the Province's attempt to sell off schools and undermine local school board democracy is heating up!


An update from Educators for Peace and Justice: 

Hello All, 

We hope you're all well. 


The campaign to push back against the Province's attempt to sell off schools and undermine local school board democracy is heating up and various parent, trustee, and education worker groups are trying to coordinate a push back campaign. 

Several trustees seem prepared to reject the Minister's Directives: they are asking us to push them to do what they know is right.

They need to hear from us and fast ! They will be voting on how to respond to the province in the next 10 days.


Here's what you can do:

1) Write to your Trustee to tell them that you want them to reject the Minsiter's Directives
  • Here's a link to a list of Trustees and their contact information: http://www.tdsb.on.ca/Leadership/Trustees.aspx
  • We will post a draft of the letter EPJ is going to send this week to all Trustees if you're looking for ideas about what you might want to say. 
2) Attend the community consultation meetings this week and tell Trustees we need them to stand up to the Province
  • At the bottom of this email is a list of all the Trustee community consultations happening this week.

3) Fill out this survery set up my Trustee Ausma Malik:


4) Forward this email to any and all parents and supporters of the board you know and encourage them to do all of the above. 

Well be sending out more news and updates when we get them. 

Community Consultation Dates and Times: 



Monday, February 2, 2015



Drop-in from 5:30-6:30 p.m.

Consultation from 6:30-8:30 p.m.



Dewson Street JPS

65 Concord Ave. (near College and Ossington)



Ausma Malik, Ward 10

Marit Stiles, Ward 9

Jennifer Story, Ward 15



Child care provided. Refreshments served.

Translation upon request. Please email ausma.malik@tdsb.on.ca.  



Tuesday, February 3, 2015



7-9 p.m: Norseman JMS, 105 Norseman St.



Pamela Gough, Ward 3



Joint session on Budget and the Wilson report. Child minding provided. Light refreshments served. 



Tuesday, February 3, 2015



7 p.m: East Education Office, 140 Borough Drive



Parthi Kandavel, Ward 18 

Manna Wong, Ward 20

Shaun Chen, Ward 21  

Jerry Chadwick,  Ward 22



Tuesday, February 3, 2015



7 p.m: Earl Haig Junior and Senior PS, 15 Earl Haig Ave



Jennifer Story, Ward 15

Sheila Cary-Meagher, Ward 16



Translation available upon request. Please email maxeen.paabo@tdsb.on.ca (Ward 15) or cathy.mackenzie@tdsb.on.ca (Ward 16).







Thursday, February 5, 2015



7 p.m: Westview Centennial SS, 755 Oakdale Road



Michael Ford,  Ward 1

Tiffany Ford,  Ward 4



Thursday, February 5, 2015



7-9 p.m: Earl Haig SS, 100 Princess Ave.



Alexander Brown, Ward 12



Child care available, please contact marjolein.winterink@tdsb.on.ca. Light refreshments served.

EPJ Letter to Kathleen Wynne:


A Response to the Review of the TDSB by Margaret Wilson- Deputation to the #TDSB Board of Trustees

Below please find the deputation I made to the TDSB Board of Trustees 
-Monday, January 26th, 2015

To the Committee of the Whole,
Toronto District School Board
Monday, January 26, 2015


I want to touch on three major issues raised by Margaret Wilson’s recent review of the Toronto District School Board. 

The first issue is the subject of trustee-bureaucratic relationships or “the climate of fear” we have been told pervades the board. 

This is perhaps the silliest dimension of Margaret Wilson’s report, and we should dismiss it out of hand, were it not for all the media hysteria it promotes. 

In personal terms what goes on between trustees and board bureaucrats is simply par for the course in any large political institution. Anyone who has spent a moment at City Hall or Queen’s Park or close to our Parliament in Ottawa knows that the kind of complaints we hear from Board individuals about bullying and confrontation come up every day. If the Board’s power had not been so seriously diminished by our most recent Conservative and Liberal governments – had the Board much more substantial issues to deal with – we’d have heard a lot less about people getting their noses out of joint because someone was rude or pushy. There would be other, more important, things to talk about. 

Frankly, when I hear such timid complaints from Board officials, it seems to me like one more bureaucratic manoeuvre to keep trustees away from any real decision-making and to increase the government-media pile-up on local boards. We should keep in mind that these senior officials are seasoned political animals, with thick hides. They didn’t get to their positions by playing nice. The TDSB is a tough decision-making arena. As much as anyone, Margaret Wilson should remember this. 

We should not only expect confrontation from our trustees, we should also encourage it; that’s how genuine policy questions get public attention. 

The second issue is that of trustee irresponsibility on financial matters. 

This issue isn’t, perhaps, as silly as the first. But it’s a close second. 

The financial issues Wilson and the Toronto media have been raising are peanuts, when you think of the size of the Board budget. Of course, whatever irregularities there are should be cleared up. But are we really comparing this situation with the billions of dollars wasted by our provincial government on Private-Public Partnerships, gas plan closures, ORNGE, e-heath and welfare payment screw-ups. 

Surely, not.

The third issue I want to raise is of genuine importance. This is the issue of trustee power. 

The main conclusion of Margaret Wilson’s review is that TDSB trustees should have even less power than they currently have, which Ms. Wilson manages, ironically, to categorize as a present-day “privilege.” 

For Margaret Wilson, the Harris government’s centralization of educational power in the province (and particularly in the amalgamation of Metro Toronto’s school boards) sets up the basis for her recommendations for the structure of educational decision-making in the city. She’s pleased to support a situation where “curriculum, funding and negotiations now rest primarily with the province.”

She pays no attention to the enormously valuable role trustees have played in Ontario education for two hundred years. 

Let me say this as clearly as I can: TDSB trustees should have a lot more power than they currently have, including the infrastructure necessary (offices, assistants, resources) to reach out effectively to their communities and which, at the same time, allow their communities to keep on top of their activities.

Most school trustees come to this board committed to being “full time” trustees as much as they can manage on their very limited salaries. Margaret Wilson may sneer at this term, but it reflects trustee seriousness about being representatives of their communities and fighting effectively for their concerns. 

And there are some very serious concerns. 

From Margaret Wilson’s report, you’d think our parent communities and our teaching staff were just delighted with what’s been happening at Queen’s Park these last couple of decades.  

I was brought up in Rexdale and I teach there, and let me tell you both our teachers and our parents are deeply disturbed by the current direction of provincial education policy: 

They don’t like the destructive financial cutbacks we’ve experienced and they don’t like the intensive micromanaging the Ministry now engages in, undercutting any serious local democracy in our schools. 

They don’t like what can only be described as the insane fragmentation of the curriculum into literally hundreds of dead expectations. Instead they want broad curriculum outlines that let teachers engage with their students and communities to make the material real. 

They don’t like the standardized tests that police these outcomes. Instead, they want assessment and future help based on what our students actually do in their work – what they do in their reading and writing, their history and social science projects, their math and their science. 

They don’t want their kids bottom-streamed, which continues apace at this board however much criticism has been raised about the practice. 

They don’t like the distance so many local administrators have from their communities and want more say in the choosing of local principals and vice-principals.

They also don’t want their local community schools sold off, because they don’t meet impossibly tight government guidelines on minimum enrolment and the Board needs money because of provincial cutbacks.  They want their schools ready for the next influx of children coming in not too many years and they want their use as community hubs to be expanded and enriched. 

So they think the trustees have a big role to play – in pushing back this destructive government and bureaucratic agenda, in bringing parent, student, and community voices to the Board and in building a much stronger and caring school system. 

Trustees aren’t supposed to mindlessly “trust” this administration, as Margaret Wilson and the government imagines they should. They’re supposed to make sure administrators are doing the job our parent communities want them to do. And they’re supposed to be tough about it. 

They are, in other words, supposed to care about our children and to act with the best interests of their communities in mind. 

Margaret Wilson and our government want them to be cyphers. I can only hope everyone in this room will stand up against that prescription. 


Thank you, 

Nigel Barriffe

 





  

Friday, January 23, 2015

Should Trustee’s powers be reduced? Should #TDSB close schools? Have your say- Monday, January 26, 2015

Message from Educators for Peace and Justice: 

We hope you’re all well and willing and able to take action on the current threat of:
  • The closings of schools;
  • Undermining local democratic control over the TDSB by weakening the role and power of local trustees.


The Situation: 

As many of you already know the government is using the Wilson Report on the current dysfunction at the board to ram through Harris-era schools closures (which will primarily affect low-income and immigrant neighbourhoods and hundreds of CUPE workers) and further centralization of control over schooling. (See links attached below to 3 recent Op-Eds for more background information.)

The Action:

The trustees of the TDSB will hold a public consultation meeting this Monday January 26th 7pm at 5050 Yonge St on the directives arising from the Wilson Review of the Toronto District School Board. We need people to flood the board with concerns about school closures and the undermining of local democratic control of the board. You have until tomorrow (Friday Jan 23rd) at 10am to submit a request to speak at the meeting. (See details below)

You may also make a written submission. CUPE, OSSTF-D.12, and ETT will all be making submissions on behalf of Education Workers. We are encouraging people to speak as concerned parents and community members.  Please alert your friends, family, and networks, especially those who have kids in the system.

The Details: 

 To speak to the Trustees email Denisse.Parra@tdsb.on.ca by Friday January 23rd, at 10AM naming:

  •  the topic that will be addressed (The Minister’s directives of Jan 15th) * the name of the speaker;
  • address of the speaker;
  • contact information for the speaker (phone, fax, e-mail) ;
  • the name of the organization (if the speaker is representing an organization such as a school council or community group);


The Context / Background: 

“The View from Inside A Reeling TDSB” Op-Ed from Trustee Chris Glover (while not perfect it does clearly identify the funding formula as the core problem) http://m.thestar.com/#/article/opinion/commentary/2015/01/20/the-view-from-inside-a-reeling-tdsb.html

 “Ontario is rolling back school board democracy‏” Op-Ed from John Cartwright, President of Toronto and York Region Labour Council http://m.thestar.com/#/article/opinion/commentary/2015/01/21/ontario-is-rolling-back-school-board-democracy.html

A Joint Response from OSSTF District 12, the Elementary Teachers of Toronto and CUPE 4400 http://osstftoronto.ca/news/2015/01/the-wilson-report-a-joint-response-from-osstf-district-12-and-elementary-teachers-of-toronto/


Wilson Report Highlights:

The part of the report that sets the stage for massive school closures is buried in recommendation #9:

9) Direct the TDSB to provide a three-year capital plan that should reflect a comprehensive, system-wide assessment of the pupil accommodation needs of the board. The plan must clearly state how the TDSB can manage its capital assets within its current school operations and renewal envelopes. The plan should include separate sections that address the following issues:

a) Board-wide priorities for the effective use and management of school space to provide effective programming.

b) A clear indication of how the board intends to reduce under-utilized spaces across its schools in each year, including the number of proposed accommodation reviews and a list of affected schools.

c) A comparative analysis of TDSB enrolment projections for all schools against capacity.

d) A list of all closed and underutilized schools that will remain as core holdings for the future, with justification for not declaring each property as surplus.

e) A prioritization of school renewal needs to be addressed in each year to support the findings of the Ministry’s Condition Assessment Program.

f) An analysis of operating costs of all schools that shows the relative cost per pupil for each open and operating school.

The board has until Feb. 13 to comply, so the timelines are very tight. The government seems intend on ramming this through quickly and early in their mandate so that memories have a chance to fade by the next election.


Saturday, January 3, 2015

STRONG TEACHERS MAKE STRONG SCHOOLS Like most teachers I know, I never imagined we would have to take our politics so seriously. We were supposed to focus on the kids getting a good education and let other people – hopefully good people – take hold of the larger world around us. Now, it’s all too clear: If we really want to focus on our kids, we also have to deal with the world around us, especially to the school system in which we teach. We have to find a way to be the teachers we know we can be. We have to stop the cutbacks the TDSB has faced over the last decade. And we have to bring our communities with us. We already know the austerity drill: lots of “caring” official rhetoric covering up more cuts on the ground. And we know that it means reducing essential resources, raising class sizes, putting the pressure on wages and pensions. We have no choice but to respond. Strong schools need strong teachers – teachers who have autonomy to work for what their students need rather than Ministry-mandated “outcomes”, test scores, administrivia and demands for empty accountability. We have to take back real power on the job – not only in doing our classroom work, but in making genuine decisions, as school staffs, on matters such as school budgeting, student distribution, school organization, and curriculum integration between classes. We also have to bring our communities on board. It’s their power and care for our students that gives real peace and order to our schools. Finally, we have to face up as a union to the pointlessness of hundreds of dissociated curriculum “outcomes” policed by irrelevant and destructive standardized tests. In survey after survey, Toronto teachers have said how bad this curriculum/testing framework is. We have to fight for real standards – standards that can only be judged in practice by classroom teachers. Promoting real standards lies at the core of our profession – in our development of an engaging and purposeful curriculum and in our response to what our students do with that curriculum: their actual reading and writing, their projects in history and social studies, how they do math, what they think about the natural world. This is dealing with the real stuff of the world; it’s what matters – to us and to our students. If we have the courage and determination to reach out to our parents and communities on these issues of funding, local power and curriculum and testing reform, I think a strong “education quality alliance” is truly possible and will make all the difference in own lives. We can’t stand alone in fighting for the kind of school system we know will make a difference. It’s the big reason I’m running for Executive Officer. I hope I have your support and your comments and critique as we move through this campaign. There is a lot of work to do standing up with teachers as individuals in a profession that has been hit hard over the past years. But it’s work that needs to be done to make our schools our students and ourselves strong. We need to look after each other as teachers and friends. Let me know what you think. Nigel