Students Care Deeply about their Education – Adults in Charge Should Too!

Walk out posterStudents are saying NO to how Doug Ford’s government is approaching publicly funded education. After announcements on everything from class sizes to the sex-ed curriculum, students from across Ontario will be walking out of class on Thursday, April 4th in an act of solidarity and protest – demanding that the adults in charge of the publicly funded education system prioritize students and their learning and address issues such as:

  • Increased class sizes
  • Mandatory e-learning in high school
  • Cuts to autism program
  • Disrepair in schools

Currently, student organizers are estimating over 100,000 students will participate. For more details, click here.

One of the organizers wrote an op-ed in the Toronto Star on March 29, 2019 entitled, “White Hot Angry Youth Ready to Protest Education Cuts”

 

Deteriorating Schools: Why So Many?

In the first of a two-part investigative series in Toronto.com entitled, Deteriorating Schools reporters Cynthia Reason and Tamara Shephard explore why so many TDSB schools are in need of extensive repairs.

In this first part of the series, Etobicoke’s John English Junior Middle School is profiled because of its dubious honour of having the highest Facilities Condition Index (FCI) amongst all Etobicoke schools.

Pamela Gough, a 17-year Trustee veteran commented, “(School maintenance funding) is an issue that’s been there latent in the background since amalgamation 20 years ago, and has not been properly addressed for two decades. Meanwhile, the schools just keep getting worse and worse and worse. But because it’s so difficult an issue to address, because there are no easy fixes, and because it’s not a program issue, it tends to slide into the background.”

Steve Shaw, TDSB’s executive officer of facility services and planning, had the following to say about how inadequate provincial funding for school repairs plays out for school boards: “There are enough John English buildings out there, that we’re taking Band-Aid solutions versus building an entire new building or installing new components, because we don’t have the money.”

Fix Our Schools was quoted as saying, “Schools were so chronically and grossly underfunded for so long that every school board now is generally in a situation where the majority of their repairs are done reactively, not proactively. We know from industry research that can cost up to three times more — that is throwing money out the window. To expect boards to be efficient and effective, they really do need to be fully resourced in a stable manner.”

Heather Vickers, who recently spearheaded the relaunch of the Etobicoke Parent Network,  had this to say about disrepair such as holes in school ceilings and walls, aging boiler rooms, and lack of air circulation within old school buildings, “If repairs like those in some of our schools were happening in our own homes — whatever the problem, we’d look at them right away, because no one would want to live like that. Yet here we have students spending eight hours of their day in these same kinds of conditions? That’s not acceptable.”

 

 

 

Carlisle Elementary School “Looks like a nightmare”

Parents at Balaclava Elementary School in Carlisle, Ontario have declared the school “looks like a nightmare” and “is in a desperate state of repair”.

https://twitter.com/geri_hall/status/1110314178932338688

In a March 22, 2019 article in the Flamborough Review entitled, “It looks like a nightmare: Leaks soak Carlisle school as parents beg for upgrades”, parents cited the following issues at their children’s school, where extreme winter weather has led to numerous leaks in the school roof:

  • Buckets lining the hallways to collect drips, posing a fire hazard
  • Water pooling in fluorescent lights and running into electrical wiring
  • Fire alarms being triggered by moisture, and subsequently being turned off to prevent false alarms
  • Mould forming in ceiling tiles
  • Lack of potable water 
  • Library books being covered in tarps to prevent water damage
  • Washrooms reeking of urine

“It looks like an episode of The Walking Dead when you go in there,” said Brian Orlowski, whose five- and seven-year-old children attend the school. “It looks like a nightmare. It’s horrendous.”

Balaclava Elementary School was built in 1989, making it only 30 years old. According to Ministry data, Balaclava School has approximately $791,000 of disrepair as of Fall 2017 (the last time Ministry data was updated and released). The Facilities Condition Index at Balaclava is noted at only 10% –  a figure that generally indicates a building in fairly good condition.

Two-thirds of publicly funded schools in this province are greater than 30 years old and a total of $15.9-billion of disrepair plagues Ontario’s schools. Many, many schools across the province have over $1-million of disrepair and, according to Ministry data, over 60 schools in Ontario have in excess of $20-million of disrepair. This absolutely begs the question that if a school with $791,000 of disrepair is a “nightmare” (and it certainly sounds like it is!), what must a school with over $20-million of disrepair feel like to students, teachers and education staff?

“Over the past three-plus years, Balaclava Public School has become a dangerous place for our children and the staff,” say parents.

One parent noted that “all of us have been looking the other way because we like the school – my kids like going there. But lately, it’s been really bad, where you have to ask yourself, ‘Ultimately, is it safe?’”

Balaclava is part of the Hamilton-Wentworth District School Board, which has over $450-million of disrepair in its schools due to decades of chronic and gross provincial underfunding.

Lots going on in the education sector in Ontario! How to keep up with it all??

Our focus will remain on ensuring all publicly funded schools in this province are safe, healthy, well-maintained buildings and that the $15.9-billion of disrepair in Ontario’s schools is quickly eliminated. However, we are very mindful that there are many other issues in Ontario’s publicly funded education system that may interest you.

Education Minister Thompson announced many funding cuts to public education on Friday, March 15. Doug Ford’s government is scheduled to release the provincial budget on April 11, 2019. To help you stay apprised of what is going on in publicly funded education in Ontario, we wanted to share the following resource with you:

Ontario Families for Public Education (OFPE)

This is a group of parents in Ontario who got together in online discussions earlier this year after hearing that our provincial government may lift kindergarten classroom caps. They formed this group on Facebook as a place for all Ontario parents to get plain language updates of how government cuts will affect their children’s educations. Their Facebook page also provides opportunities for dialogue and organizing. Fix Our Schools encourages you to engage with OFPE and follow their work. 

 

Tories to Spend $1-B to benefit 3,600 citizens when they could benefit more than 85,000 with same investment

On March 15, 2019 our provincial government announced several funding cuts to public education in Ontario. Therefore, we were surprised to hear from CityNews on March 20, 2019 that Doug Ford’s government plans to move forward with spending $1-billion to renew Macdonald Block, one of its government office buildings.

When 2-million Ontario students spend their days in school buildings that require $15.9-billion of repairs, we have a hard time understanding how this government is prioritizing spending $1-billion to benefit 3,600 employees.

In fact, using government-issued data on school disrepair, we found that Doug Ford’s government could actually completely repair all publicly funded schools in all six Scarborough ridings with this same $1-billion investment. The key difference? Investing in fixing all Scarborough schools would benefit over 85,000 students, teachers and education workers. 

We chose Scarborough ridings because the disrepair in these schools coincidentally added up to approximately $1-billion. However, this same “greater good” argument could be applied across the Province. Gives one pause for thought, doesn’t it? How many Ontario students could benefit from an additional $1-billion investment in school infrastructure?

The Fix Our Schools campaign certainly supports investment in infrastructure. We also most certainly agree that all citizens should work in safe, healthy, well-maintained buildings. However, given Doug Ford’s government focus on balancing its books and having to “prioritize” how it spends money, we question our provincial government’s priorities if they are willing to move ahead with an investment of $1-billion that will only benefit 3,600 people when it could use that same money to benefit more than 85,000 people. Twenty-four times more people could be positively impacted by investing in Ontario’s school infrastructure than in moving ahead with investments to Mcdonald Block.

As Liberal Deputy Leader John Fraser says in the CityNews interview above, “I think if we’re going to invest money, and you need it in hospitals and schools, that’s what comes first.”

However, Minister of Government and Consumer Services Bill Walker says his staff, “deserve to be in a safe environment”. We wonder if Bill Walker would agree that Ontario’s children also deserve to be in a safe environment when they are at school?

MPP Yurek: $176.9-M of Disrepair in Elgin-Middlesex-London Schools

Dear MPP Yurek,

Did you know there is $176.9-million of disrepair in the publicly funded schools in your riding of Elgin-Middlesex-London? We wanted to share the following details of disrepair in each school in your riding in the hope that this detailed information would underscore the importance of developing standards of good repair for Ontario schools and also the importance of providing the adequate, stable provincial funding to school boards required for them to meet those new standards and eliminate the $15.9-billion repair backlog that plagues Ontario’s schools:

Total disrepair in each publicly funded school in Elgin-Middlesex-London:

Assumption Catholic School $                 1,686,182
Monsignor Morrison Catholic School $                 2,354,888
Regina Mundi Catholic College $                 8,217,328
St. Anne’s Catholic School, St. Thomas $                      52,000
St. Joseph’s Catholic High School $                    553,702
St. Mary’s Catholic School, West Lorne $                    737,299
Aldborough PS $                 2,506,786
Arthur Voaden SS $              26,320,348
Central Elgin CI $              10,071,367
Davenport PS $                 4,687,950
DunwichDutton PS $                 2,185,852
East Elgin SS $              19,202,943
Elgin Court PS $                 4,527,190
Forest Park PS $                 4,015,433
John Wise PS $                      88,816
June Rose Callwood PS $                    690,254
Lambeth PS $                    436,500
Locke’s PS $                    787,280
Lord Dorchester SS $                 3,937,582
McGregor PS $                 5,230,360
Mitchell Hepburn PS $                    127,088
New Sarum PS $                 4,558,043
Northdale Central PS $                 2,955,986
P. E. Trudeau FI PS $                    492,018
Parkside CI $              17,443,978
Port Stanley PS $                 5,651,801
River Heights PS $                 3,912,060
South Dorchester PS $                 5,907,680
Southwold PS $                 6,433,550
Sparta PS $                 4,126,830
Springfield PS $                 4,514,680
Summers’ Corners PS $                 4,779,954
West Elgin SS $              10,818,460
Westminster Central PS $                 6,878,811

School conditions matter. They impact student learning, attendance, and health.

We ask that you please take steps to ensure that the disrepair in all of Ontario’s publicly funded schools is eliminated and that schools are safe, healthy, well-maintained buildings that provide environments conducive to learning and working. We look forward to hearing back from you with details on your plan to Fix Ontario’s Schools.

PLEASE NOTE: Fix Our Schools is relying on the most recent disrepair data provided by the Ministry of Education in Fall 2017 and has mapped postal codes provided by the Ministry for each school to riding postal code information from a third party. Therefore, it is possible that there may be small errors in the data provided here and we would be grateful if community members would contact us with any errors. 

MPP McNaughton: $131.4-M of Disrepair in Lambton-Kent-Middlesex Schools

Dear MPP McNaughton,

Did you know there is $131.4-million of disrepair in the publicly funded schools in your riding of Lambton-Kent-Middlesex? We wanted to share the following details of disrepair in each school in your riding in the hope that this detailed information would underscore the importance of developing standards of good repair for Ontario schools and also the importance of providing the adequate, stable provincial funding to school boards required for them to meet those new standards and eliminate the $15.9-billion repair backlog that plagues Ontario’s schools:

Total disrepair in each publicly funded school in Lambton-Kent-Middlesex:

Huron Centennial Public School $                 4,081,249
Stephen Central Public School $                 2,752,736
EEC SainteCatherine $                 1,950,433
EEC SaintPhilippe $                 1,583,109
ESC de Pain Court $                 2,501,741
A A Wright PS $                 3,731,874
Bosanquet Central PS $                 1,421,268
Brooke Central PS $                 1,869,203
Dawn Township Central S $                 1,356,075
Dresden Area Central S $                 5,947,909
East Lambton ES (Formerly Secondary) $                 5,502,146
Grand Bend PS $                    240,136
H W Burgess PS $                 1,523,912
Lambton Kent Comp S $              11,457,230
Thamesville Area Central PS $                 1,548,451
Wallaceburg DSS $                 8,470,437
Zone Township Central PS $                 2,403,045
Holy Cross Catholic Secondary School $                 1,098,909
Our Lady Immaculate Catholic School $                 2,788,789
Sacred Heart Catholic School $                    982,604
St. Charles Catholic School $                    210,828
St. Patrick Catholic School, Lucan $                 2,339,452
St. Vincent de Paul Catholic School $                    212,147
Christ The King Catholic School $                 2,362,119
Good Shepherd Catholic School $                 1,012,440
Holy Family Catholic School $                 1,824,056
St. Elizabeth Catholic School $                 2,364,888
St. Peter Canisius Catholic School $                    870,345
St. Vincent Catholic School $                 2,841,265
Adelaide  W.G. MacDonald PS $                 4,735,422
Caradoc North PS $                 3,591,648
Caradoc PS $                    140,490
Centennial Central PS $                 5,076,874
Delaware Central PS $                 4,020,085
East Williams Memorial PS $                 2,157,612
Ekcoe Central PS $                 3,450,671
Glencoe DHS $                 8,992,709
J.S. Buchanan FI PS $                    773,955
McGillivray Central PS $                 1,772,125
Medway HS $                 2,451,564
Mosa Central PS $                 2,890,838
North Meadows PS $                 1,838,231
North Middlesex DHS $                 4,392,161
Oxbow PS $                 1,080,575
ParkhillWest Williams PS $                    750,229
Parkview PS $                    784,544
Strathroy DCI $                 1,098,909
Valleyview Central PS $                 3,900,216
West Nissouri PS $                      78,334
Wilberforce PS $                      21,624
Our Lady of Mt Carmel Sep S $                    192,813

School conditions matter. They impact student learning, attendance, and health.

We ask that you please take steps to ensure that the disrepair in all of Ontario’s publicly funded schools is eliminated and that schools are safe, healthy, well-maintained buildings that provide environments conducive to learning and working. We look forward to hearing back from you with details on your plan to Fix Ontario’s Schools.

PLEASE NOTE: Fix Our Schools is relying on the most recent disrepair data provided by the Ministry of Education in Fall 2017 and has mapped postal codes provided by the Ministry for each school to riding postal code information from a third party. Therefore, it is possible that there may be small errors in the data provided here and we would be grateful if community members would contact us with any errors. 

MPP Armstrong: $208-M of Disrepair in London-Fanshawe Schools

Dear MPP Armstrong,

In 2018 MPP Armstrong signed the Fix Our Schools Pledge to create a Standard of Good Repair for Ontario schools

Did you know there is $208-million of disrepair in the publicly funded schools in your riding of London-Fanshawe? We wanted to share the following details of disrepair in each school in your riding in the hope that this detailed information would underscore the importance of developing standards of good repair for Ontario schools and also the importance of providing the adequate, stable provincial funding to school boards required for them to meet those new standards and eliminate the $15.9-billion repair backlog that plagues Ontario’s schools:

 

Total disrepair in each publicly funded school in London-Fanshawe

EEC SainteJeanned’Arc  $                                           1,549,392
ÉÉP Academie de la Tamise  $                                           3,852,780
Holy Cross Catholic School  $                                           1,799,080
Holy Family Catholic School  $                                           1,863,683
John Paul II Catholic Secondary School  $                                           3,547,334
Sir Arthur Carty Catholic School  $                                              536,359
St. Anne Catholic School, London  $                                           1,780,209
St. Anthony Catholic French Immersion School  $                                              469,250
St. Bernadette Catholic School  $                                              803,180
St. Francis Catholic School  $                                              887,720
St. Pius X Catholic School  $                                           4,660,737
St. Robert Catholic School  $                                           3,844,482
St. Sebastian Catholic School  $                                           1,339,932
Aberdeen PS  $                                           3,984,063
Arthur Stringer PS  $                                           1,667,582
Ashley Oaks PS  $                                           2,020,491
B. Davison SS  $                                         14,182,694
Bonaventure Meadows PS  $                                           2,526,759
C. C. Carrothers PS  $                                           4,786,283
Chippewa PS  $                                           2,892,401
Clarke Road SS  $                                         13,759,067
Cleardale PS  $                                              400,556
Ealing PS  $                                           2,359,010
Evelyn Harrison PS  $                                           2,397,105
F. D. Roosevelt PS  $                                           2,424,065
Fairmont PS  $                                           5,411,238
Glen Cairn PS  $                                           5,795,422
John P. Robarts PS  $                                           4,624,034
Lester B Pearson School for the Arts  $                                           5,143,312
Lord Nelson PS  $                                           5,839,853
Montcalm SS  $                                         18,850,324
Nicholas Wilson PS  $                                           1,055,755
Prince Charles PS  $                                           4,542,993
Princess Anne FI PS  $                                           4,457,645
Princess Elizabeth PS  $                                           7,300,450
Rick Hansen PS  $                                           2,558,075
Sir Georges Etienne Cartier PS  $                                           3,462,571
Sir Wilfrid Laurier SS  $                                           4,575,264
Thames Valley Alternative SS  $                                         14,197,900
Trafalgar PS  $                                           2,461,568
Tweedsmuir PS  $                                           5,539,738
White Oaks PS  $                                           7,213,201
Wilton Grove PS  $                                           1,245,519

School conditions matter. They impact student learning, attendance, and health.

We thank you for signing the Fix Our Schools Pledge leading up to the June 2018 provincial election and we appreciate you organizing an Education Town Hall for your community. We ask that you please take steps to ensure that the disrepair in all of Ontario’s publicly funded schools is eliminated and that schools are safe, healthy, well-maintained buildings that provide environments conducive to learning and working. We look forward to hearing back from you with details on your plan to Fix Ontario’s Schools.

PLEASE NOTE: Fix Our Schools is relying on the most recent disrepair data provided by the Ministry of Education in Fall 2017 and has mapped postal codes provided by the Ministry for each school to riding postal code information from a third party. Therefore, it is possible that there may be small errors in the data provided here and we would be grateful if community members would contact us with any errors. 

Principals are not to blame for disrepair in schools

As of Fall 2017, the last time the Ministry of Education publicly updated its disrepair data, there was $15.9-billion of disrepair in Ontario’s publicly funded schools. This sad fact means that Principals and Vice Principals spend time and energy on repair issues that ought to be spent leading their schools. Principals and Vice Principals end up spending many hours each week managing repairs at their schools and fielding complaints from parents about the disrepair or construction projects underway. These are hours that could be much better spent. Principals ought to be curriculum leaders – not boiler specialists!

man in dress shirt fixng taps

Unfortunately, many parents blame Principals and Trustees for disrepair in their child’s school. However, the Province is responsible for providing funding for school repairs and maintenance and, for almost twenty years, the funding provided by the Province was grossly inadequate.

Industry standards suggest that $1.4-billion/year is the absolute minimum amount required by Ontario’s school boards to have been able to conduct the necessary routine repairs and maintenance in their schools. When the Fix Our Schools campaign began in 2014, provincial funding for school repairs was ONE-TENTH this amount. Our work has helped increase provincial funding for school repairs to $1.4-billion/year today – the amount it always ought to have been. However, this $1.4-billion/year in provincial funding for school repairs is insufficient to address the $15.9-billion of disrepair that accumulated over the 20 years when provincial funding was grossly inadequate.

So, by all means, let your Principal and Trustee know about disrepair in your child’s school. However, please also contact your local MPP, Premier Ford, and Education Minister Thompson. Let them know that:

  1. You know the Province is responsible for providing all education funding, including funding to maintain and repair schools.
  2. You expect all publicly funded schools in Ontario to be safe, healthy, well-maintained buildings that provide environments conducive to learning.
  3. You expect the Province to develop funding solutions that will eliminate the $15.9-billion of disrepair in the coming 5-7 years.
  4. You expect the Province to develop a standard of good repair for publicly funded schools in Ontario.

“School Board needs five-fold increase in funding for school repairs”

The London Free Press article entitled, “School Boards see no end in sight for backlog of repairs” from February 14, 2019, cites the London District Catholic School Board (LDCSB) as needing a five-fold increase in provincial funding for school repairs just to keep pace. For the 2018-19 school year, LCDSB received only $7.4-million in provincial funding for school repairs.

However, according to its four-year strategic plan, LDCSB would need $35-million annually in order to actually meet the maintenance and repair needs of its current school buildings. As per Ministry Disrepair Data last released in Fall 2017, LDCSB has a school repair backlog of $81.6-million dollars. However, based on LDCSB projections outlined in its capital plan, this number will likely double to over $160-million of disrepair in LDCSB schools by the 2021/22 school year if provincial funding does not increase.

The London District Catholic School Board is not alone in this issue. Based on the most recent Ministry disrepair data, the Thames Valley District School Board (TVDSB), Southwestern Ontario’s largest school board, has a repair backlog of over $750-million in its schools. And yet, for the 2018-2019 school year, TVDSB received less than $55 million from the Province for school repairs.

Terence Kernaghan, MPP for London North Centre is quoted as saying, “We have a situation right now where we have schools that are quite literally crumbling. I’m really frightened about our future.”

To citizens in London, Woodstock, Ingersoll, Dorchester, Aylmer, Glencoe, St. Thomas, Strathroy, Tillsonburg and all other communities in Southwestern Ontario – please contact your local MPPs to voice your concerns about the state of your local schools. Our provincial government holds the power over the money and needs to hear your concerns! We’ve made it easy for you – just click HERE.