Minister Fullerton: $77.5-M of Disrepair in Kanata-Carleton Schools

Dear Minister Fullerton,

Did you know there is $77.5-million of disrepair in the publicly funded schools in your riding of Kanata-Carleton? We know that you did not sign the Fix Our Schools Pledge during the election, but we also recognize that your government has committed to governing for the People. We trust that safe, healthy, well-maintained school buildings will be a part of this commitment?

We wanted to share the following details of disrepair 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 Kanata-Carleton:

ÉÉP Kanata $319,580
ÉÉP MauriceLapointe $20,888
All Saints 912 $306,903
Georges Vanier CES $2,242,558
Holy Redeemer CES $2,082,527
Holy Trinity 912 $4,721,897
St Anne CES $1,316,438
St Isidore CES $910,734
St James CES $729,318
St Martin de Porres CES $3,249,051
St Michael Fitzroy CES $792,401
ÉÉC ÉlisabethBruyère $145,012
ÉÉC RogerSaintDenis $3,414,797
A Y Jackson SS $11,217,099
Bridlewood Community ES $1,745,852
Castlefrank ES $1,836,442
Earl of March SS $14,929,133
Glen Cairn PS $2,910,013
Jack Donohue Public School $365,098
John Young ES $2,296,648
Katimavik PS $2,369,857
Roch Carrier PS $408,361
Roland Michener PS $3,216,628
South March Public School $37,574
Stephen Leacock PS $5,132,688
Stonecrest ES $278,629
W. Erskine Johnston PS $2,691,957
W. O. Mitchell PS $702,889
West Carleton SS $7,093,157

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

We ask that you and your government please prioritize schools as critical infrastructure and take the steps necessary to ensure that the $15.9-billion of 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 Piccini: $76.3-M of disrepair in Northumberland-Peterborough South Schools

Dear MPP Piccini,

Did you know there is $76.3-million of disrepair in the publicly funded schools in your riding of Northumberland-Peterborough South? We know that you did not sign the Fix Our Schools Pledge during the election, but we also recognize that your government has committed to governing for the People. We trust that safe, healthy, well-maintained school buildings wil be a part of this commitment?

We wanted to share the following details of disrepair 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 Northumberland-Peterborough South:

Frankford Public School $1,989,685
Baltimore PS $1,239,090
Beatrice Strong PS $1,543,789
Brighton PS $123,600
Burnham PS $1,480,258
Camborne PS $802,177
Campbellford DHS $8,055,468
Clarke HS $8,126,756
Cobourg Collegiate Institute $3,173,430
Colborne PS $1,454,846
Dale Road Sr S $742,583
East Northumberland SS $2,581,388
Ganaraska Trail PS $246,788
Grafton PS $1,185,417
Hastings PS $760,140
Hillcrest PS $952,750
Kent PS $1,948,166
Kirby Centennial PS $923,910
Merwin Greer PS $634,172
Millbrook/South Cavan PS $1,299,860
Newcastle PS $1,309,772
North Hope Central PS $839,660
North Shore PS $2,748,818
Northumberland C.I.S. at Grant Sine $920,865
Northumberland Hills PS
Orono PS $860,602
Percy Centennial PS $2,117,340
Plainville PS $811,640
Port Hope HS $11,425,125
Roseneath Centennial PS $474,167
Smithfield PS $1,597,260
Spring Valley PS $1,500,414
Stockdale PS $936,015
Terry Fox PS $897,336
The Pines Sr PS $1,650,879
Vincent Massey PS $1,464,799
Notre Dame $637,422
St. Anthony $535,996
St. Francis of Assisi $381,213
St. Joseph, Cobourg $784,600
St. Mary CSS, Cobourg $808,035
St. Mary, Campbellford $1,352,668
St. Mary, Grafton $678,187
St. Michael $1,388,139
St. Stephen CSS $927,929

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

We ask that you and your government please prioritize schools as critical infrastructure and take the steps necessary to ensure that the $15.9-billion of 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. 

 

Minister Thompson: $113.8-M of disrepair in Huron-Bruce Schools

Dear Education Minister Thompson,

Did you know there is $113.8-million of disrepair in the publicly funded schools in your riding of Huron-Bruce? We commend you for signing the Fix Our Schools Pledge during the election, and making the personal commitment to ensure all Ontario’s schools are safe, healthy, well-maintained buildings that provide environments conducive to learning and working.

We wanted to share the following details of disrepair 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 Huron-Bruce Riding:

Brookside Public School $3,893,646
Central Huron Secondary School $15,131,082
Clinton Public School $718,933
Exeter Elementary School $1,789,462
FE Madill Secondary School $10,360,340
Goderich District Collegiate Institute $7,639,913
Goderich Public School $1,647,917
Hullett Central Public School $2,677,729
North Woods Elementary School $1,063,781
Seaforth Public School $3,709,306
South Huron District High School $9,909,928
Chesley District Community School (Elem) $6,026,540
Elgin Market PS $348,312
G C Huston P S $4,303,698
Hillcrest Central S $1,051,362
Huron Heights PS $197,760
Kincardine DSS $4,155,259
Kincardine TownshipTiverton PS $2,151,363
Lucknow Central PS $426,990
MildmayCarrick Central S $2,018,849
Northport E S $1,665,985
Paisley Central School $1,959,798
Port ElginSaugeen Central S $4,187,997
Ripley Huron Community School $551,517
Saugeen DSS $16,534,268
St. David Catholic School $618,178
Ecole ImmaculeeConception $994,431
Mary Immaculate Community S $273,160
Sacred Heart HS $1,529,975
Sacred Heart S $827,874
Sacred Heart Sep S $385,642
St Anthony’s Sep S $858,546
St Joseph’s S $684,721
St. Teresa of Calcutta $642,096
Precious Blood Sep S $236,204
Sacred Heart Sep S $399,953
St Anne’s Catholic S $458,925
St Boniface Sep S $634,597
St James Sep S $361,082
St Marys Sep S $759,893

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

We ask that you and your government please prioritize schools as critical infrastructure and take the steps necessary to ensure that the $15.9-billion of 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, especially given that you signed the Fix Our Schools Pledge during the election.

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. 

 

 

Take a minute to contact your MPP and oppose the $100-M cut to provincial funding for school repairs

Please take a minute today to send an email to your newly elected MPP expressing your outrage at the $100-million cut to provincial funding for school repairs.

With no fanfare or public announcement, the Ministry of Education sent out memos to school boards across the province letting them know that, as a result of the cancellation of the provincial Cap and Trade program, the 2018 Greenhouse Gas Reduction Funding (GGRF) had been cancelled effective July 3, 2018. The GGRF funding represented $100-million out of the $1.4-billion total provincial funding promised to school boards for school repairs this year.

Industry standards suggest that $1.4-billion/year for school repairs is the absolute minimum amount required for school boards to be able to conduct the routine repairs and maintenance on Ontario’s schools. A reduction of $100-million brings this down to $1.3-billion/year – a 7% cut to provincial funding for school repairs in the blink of an eye. Appalling, really. Especially when we know that $1.4-billion/year was not even sufficient to start to decrease the $15.9-billion repair backlog that has been allowed to accumulate over the past 20 years in Ontario’s schools – when provincial funding for school repairs in many years was only a mere fraction of what it ought to have been. In fact, when Fix Our Schools started 4 years ago, provincial funding for school repairs was only $150-million/year – ONE-TENTH of what industry standards suggest was needed. No wonder so much disrepair has accrued in Ontario’s schools!

The Elementary Teachers Federation of Ontario has launched this excellent letter-writing campaign as part of its “Building Better Schools Initiative” and we encourage you to participate.

Doug Ford’s provincial government cuts $100-million in capital funding for Ontario’s schools

With no fanfare or public announcement the newly minted Ministry of Education sent out memos to school boards across the province letting them know that, as a result of the cancellation of the Provincial Cap and Trade program, the 2018 Greenhouse Gas Reduction Funding (GGRF) has been cancelled effective July 3, 2018. This funding represents $100-million out of the $1.4-billion total amount provided to school boards. It is distributed via School Renewal Allocation and School Condition Improvement funding. 

Industry standards suggest that $1.4-billion/year for school repairs is the absolute minimum required for routine maintenance and repairs in Ontario’s schools and the Auditor-General agrees. A reduction of $100-million per year brings this down to $1.3-billion per year. 

The Ministry did outline that any GGRF work that was under contract prior to this date will be honoured, but that future work will have to be funded out of existing funding sources (such as renewal (SRA) or Improvement (SCI) funding). Each school board will be at a different stage of spending their portion of the $100-million so the exact impact for this budget year has yet to be determined.

Industry standards suggest that $1.4-billion/year for school repairs is the absolute minimum required for routine maintenance and repairs in Ontario’s schools and the Auditor-General agrees. A reduction of $100-million per year brings this down to $1.3-billion per year. 

Unless Doug Ford’s government allocates an additional $100-million in SRA or SCI funding in the next budget cycle, this new government will have effectively cut annual provincial funding for school repairs by over 7% in the blink of an eye. 

Schools are critical infrastructure in this province and Ontario’s 2-million students deserve safe, healthy, well-maintained schools in which to learn each day. We must hold our new provincial government accountable to providing exactly that.

Premier Ford: $178.4-M of disrepair in Etobicoke North Schools

Dear Premier Ford,

Did you know there is $178.4-million of disrepair in the publicly funded schools in your riding of Etobicoke North? 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 Etobicoke North Riding:

Father Henry Carr $1,604,297
Holy Child CS (Joint Owner w/ TDSB) $1,053,174
Msgr John Corrigan CS $882,241
Msgr Percy Johnson CSS $418,200
St Andrew CS $2,289,006
St Angela CS $3,172,137
St Benedict CS $5,176,333
St Dorothy CS $2,403,667
St John Vianney $3,781,107
St Maurice CS $1,928,325
St Stephen CS $3,654,660
Albion Heights JMS $6,490,789
Beaumonde Heights JMS $4,880,753
Braeburn JS $4,083,468
Caring and Safe School LC1 / Rexdale LC $6,082,056
Claireville JS $6,023,931
Elmbank JMA $9,377,860
Elmlea JS $4,963,820
Greenholme JMS $7,034,379
Highfield JS $6,699,070
Humberwood Downs JMA $1,053,174
John D Parker JS $1,568,646
Kingsview Village JS $6,054,982
Melody Village JS $6,041,140
North Albion CI $14,324,998
North Kipling JMS $1,899,856
Parkfield JS $5,643,259
Rivercrest JS $3,553,542
SEE $1,874,960
Smithfield MS $6,880,022
The Elms JMS $8,225,217
Thistletown CI $20,645,331
West Humber CI $13,930,235
West Humber JMS $4,661,269

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

We ask that you and your government please prioritize schools as critical infrastructure and take the steps necessary 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. 

 

Outdated school regulation makes traffic worse in our big cities

As Ontario cities grapple with terrible traffic on our roads, our politicians examine how to improve moving people around our city. One way is to walk more. But many children in our urban centres can’t walk to school because they are barred from their local school. Why? 

Growth areas in Ontario cities are not given access to the same funds from developers as other regions of the Province are. These funds are aptly named Education Development Charges (EDC’s). They are outdated. As a consequence: school boards cannot put additions on schools in order to house new students, cannot build new schools as they are needed and are maxed-out in portables littering their fields. 

Buying a condo? Better check if the local school takes kids from that condo!

Thousands of children who could walk to school in Toronto are driven to school, clogging roads in school zones.

Other results of old-fashioned EDC regulations?

• over 100,000 students in #Ontario are in substandard building conditions: portables

• only students in suburban school boards (that have available land) benefit from EDC’s

• our cities loses local schools & local playgrounds as school boards are forced to sell buildings by Prov. Gov’t, even if there is a temporary drop in enrolment, and even if they know that the building will be needed in a few years

• children in new developments are barred from their local school & must be driven to a school some distance from their home

• public assets are being sold by Provincial Gov’t, but not to the highest bidder

What can you do to reduce traffic on your city? Write to your local MPP to change the EDC regulations so that all students in Ontario are provided “adequate accommodation” as the Education Act requires. If developers are choosing to build in a certain area, in large part it’s because of good schools their buyers can go to, so surely to goodness if a developer is benefitting . . . then they should contribute back.

Will Doug Ford’s PC government protect the $1.4-billion per year funding for school repairs?

The PC education platform was scant, at best.

It made no mention of addressing the $15.9-billion of disrepair that plagues Ontario’s publicly funded schools nor did it mention fixing the flawed provincial education funding formula that has allowed our schools to accumulate such a gobsmacking level of disrepair. They would have been well served to dig back in the PC archives to read the 2002 Rozanski report, commissioned by the last PC Minister of Education, and still an incredibly relevant document today in terms of pointing the way forward for public education funding in this province.

As per the PC “Plan for the People“, here is what the PC party has committed to do over the coming four years:

  • Get back to basics: Scrap discovery math and inquiry-based learning in our classrooms and restore proven methods of teaching.
  • Get back to basics: Ban cell phones in all primary and secondary school classrooms, in order to maximize learning time.
  • Focus on the fundamentals: Make mathematics mandatory in teachers’ college programs.
  • Fix the current EQAO testing regime that is failing our kids and implement a standardized testing program that works.
  • Respect parents: Restore Ontario’s previous sex-ed curriculum until we can install a new one that is age appropriate and based on real consultation with parents.
  • Uphold moratorium on school closures until the closure review process is reformed.
  • Mandate universities to uphold free speech on campuses and in classrooms.
  • Provide an additional $38 million in funding for all children with autism, above and beyond the funding already in the government’s plan.

Our new provincial government has not promised to ensure that Ontario’s schools are safe, healthy, well-maintained buildings that provide environments conducive to learning and working. In fact, they do not mention protecting the $1.4-billion/year provincial funding for school repairs that we fought so hard to obtain and that is really the absolutely minimum acceptable amount.

When the Fix Our Schools campaign began in 2014, annual provincial funding for school repairs was a mere $150-million/year for all 72 school boards in the province. Our work between 2014-2016 highlighted the need for increased provincial funding for school repairs. Industry standards suggested that a minimum of $1.4-billion/year was needed simply for routine maintenance and repairs on Ontario’s schools and, in December 2015, Ontario’s Auditor-General confirmed this figure, also citing $1.4-billion/year as the minimum provincial funding required for school repairs.

In June 2016, Kathleen Wynne’s Liberal government finally did what ought to have been done years earlier, and announced that it would increase annual funding for school repairs to just shy of $1.4-billion. With constant pressure from Fix Our Schools, this new annual level of funding for school repairs was protected by two successive Liberal budgets.

Will Doug Ford’s PC government protect this annual level of funding for school repairs and ensure that a minimum of $1.4-billion per year goes to Ontario’s school boards for school repairs? At this point, we have no idea.

What we do know is that 30% of elected PC MPPs signed the Fix Our Schools Pledge, personally committing to eliminating the $15.9-billion of disrepair in Ontario’s schools and to developing a standard of good repair for Ontario’s schools. In fact, 47% of all elected MPPs signed the Fix Our Schools Pledge. What we also know is that school conditions matter and that the 2-million children who spend their days in Ontario’s schools deserve to learn in buildings that are safe, healthy and well-maintained.

58 Newly Elected MPPs Pledged to Fix Our Schools

Doug Ford’s Progressive Conservative party won a resounding majority in Thursday’s election. They promised to restore ‘respect for the taxpayer’. Too bad for the 2-million children in this province who attend publicly funded schools that no respect was promised to them.

In fact, no mention was made in the PC education platform at all about the state of Ontario’s schools and the $15.9-billion of disrepair in these buildings. And yet, 58 of the newly elected MPPs did make a personal commitment to ensuring that a standard of good repair is developed for Ontario’s schools, that funding will be provided to ensure that these new standards can be met and that the $15.9-billion of disrepair that currently plagues Ontario’s schools will be eliminated. Interested in seeing if your MPP-elect made this personal commitment by signing the Fix Our Schools Pledge? CLICK HERE

Notably, 30% of elected PC MPPs signed the Fix Our Schools Pledge, 80% of elected NDP MPPs and 43% of elected Liberal MPPs. Overall, 47% of the MPPs who will be working for Ontarians at Queen’s Park in the coming four years did commit to ensuring Ontario’s schools are safe, healthy, well-maintained buildings that provide environments conducive to learning and working. So here’s hoping that despite a focus on taxpayers during the election, that when the real work begins – the new PC government will also respect Ontario’s children and Fix Ontario’s Schools.

Before you vote – STOP! Did your local candidates sign the Pledge?

Did your local MPP candidates sign the Pledge? CLICK HERE  to find out! All the candidates that are “lit up” in their party’s colour signed the pledge!

As you head to vote tomorrow, please think about the 2-million children in Ontario who spend their days in schools. At the moment, $15.9-billion of disrepair exists in these buildings because of gross and chronic underfunding by successive provincial governments over the past 20 years. There are no measurable standards in place to even specify what constitutes “acceptable school conditions”. We believe this situation needs to change – and so do the candidates who signed the Fix Our Schools Pledge.

As of this morning, 221 candidates from across Ontario had pledged to Fix Our Schools: 85 NDP Candidates, 49 Liberal Candidates, 34 PC Candidates, 40 Green Candidates and 13 Other Candidates have all pledged to Fix Our Schools. This is what we view as the final list of supporters for the Fix Our Schools Pledge.