The theme for this yearƵapp week, May 1-6, borrows from St. PaulƵapp letter to the Romans: “All who are led by the Spirit of God are children of God.”
New bill brings code of conduct for Ontario trustees
By Sheila Dabu Nonato, The Catholic RegisterRather than leave it to school boards to always act in the best interest of students, as has been the case historically, Bill 177 legislates boards to “promote student achievement and well-being” and “ensure the effectiveness of the boardƵapp resources.” Trustees are also legally bound to “entrust the day-to-day management of the board to its staff through the boardƵapp director of education.”
Brother André school name changes on hold
By Vanessa Santilli-Raimondo, The Catholic Register“ItƵapp the communityƵapp prerogative,” said Jim Nicoletti, principal at Brother André Catholic High School in Markham, Ont.
“The superintendent was waiting for direction from the trustees to come out and meet with our parent council to get the ball rolling,” said Nicoletti, adding that because itƵapp an election year, “itƵapp not happening too quickly.”
Catholic school boards need anti-homophobia policies
By Sheila Dabu Nonato, The Catholic RegisterKevin Welbes Godin told a symposium that “silence is no longer acceptable” when it comes to the absence of anti-homophobia policies in some Ontario Catholic boards.
But other comments during the workshop upset some teachers who said Welbes Godin and co-presenter David Szollosy were misinterpreting the position of the Ontario bishops and that their views on gay support groups were not in keeping with Church teaching.
School board trustee acclamations down across Ontario
By Sheila Dabu Nonato, The Catholic RegisterBut the says this represents a drop in acclamations — down from 45 per cent in 2006 to 37 per cent this year — and is a potential silver lining to whatƵapp happened at the Toronto Catholic District School Board.
Nancy Kirby, the associationƵapp president, told The Catholic Register that the drop in acclamations is encouraging and may have been sparked by the events at the Toronto Catholic board.
Toronto school board candidates explain their platforms
By Catholic Register StaffOn Oct. 25, Catholic ratepayers will be electing trustees for the .
Toronto trustees stand on their records, react to 'unfair' smear from parents' group
By Sheila Dabu Nonato, The Catholic Registermade the call Oct. 12 for voters to oust the trustees who sat on the board for the last four years. The board has been under provincial supervision for more than two years after their refusal to balance the board budget as provincial legislation demands and trustee spending scandals came to light.
Censorship claims mar Toronto candidate meetings
By Sheila Dabu Nonato, The Catholic RegisterPenny Boyce-Chester of the attended the Oct. 6 meeting for Ward 8 at Cardinal Leger High School in Scarborough.
“This is a very censored meeting,” she charged. “The moderator decided which two questions he was going to ask from the box and his interpretation of how he was going to word these questions. That really bothered me.
A litany of Toronto trustee indiscretions
By Sheila Dabu Nonato, The Catholic RegisterTORONTO - Two Toronto Catholic trustees have been removed from the board, another could soon follow and many others have been embroiled in a spending scandal that has engulfed the Toronto board for almost three years. Below is a timeline of the major events.
Dec. 2007: Catherine LeBlanc-Miller is acclaimed board chair and, following several media reports about trustee misspending, she asks the provincial government to examine trustee expenses.
Anyone but incumbents, Toronto voters urged
By Sheila Dabu Nonato, The Catholic RegisterAt an Oct. 12 press conference following noon Mass at St. MichaelƵapp Cathedral, Bob Dixon, chair of , called for a clean sweep of the scandal-plagued board.
Toronto School Board scandal questions not welcome
By Sheila Dabu Nonato, The Catholic RegisterTORONTO - For the 50 people attending Ward 11Ƶapp first all-candidates Catholic school trustee meeting, it should have been an opportunity to hear ouseted former trustee Angela Kennedy explain why a judge removed her from office, why trustees were forced to repay almost $30,000 after audits revealed spending irregularities and why the Toronto board is operating under provincial supervision.
But Kennedy, who was found guilty of conflict-of-interest two months ago and removed from her seat as trustee and board chair of the Toronto Catholic District School Board, sidestepped discussion about her removal and the events which contributed to it. Particularly frustrating for many in attendance, the format of the event made it easy for her to do so.