UPDATED: Prairie Valley SD does its part to help Climate Change along

Approximately 500 children will be bussed further than the already great distances they traveled in 2006 to get to primary school. This is because the newly amalgamated supersized school divisions in the province have provided misleading figures and information to boards with the intention of shutting small schools and small communities down. The result they feel will be stronger and better funded central schools, but they’ll ignore the needless plight they’ll inflict upon the children and the towns and farms they come from. For an industry that exists solely because children need to learn, Saskatchewan school divisions sure do a crappy job of deciding what is best for children.

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Here’s a portion from the Regina Leader-Post with some key points highlighted:

Karen Brownlee, Leader-Post
Published: Tuesday, May 08, 2007

How the Prairie Valley School Division can say it is committed to quality education is something that baffles some parents from Wilcox who were on hand to hear the board vote to close their elementary school.

Many parents from Wilcox are teachers at Athol Murray College of Notre Dame. Those community members at the school division office Monday said they don’t see anything wrong with the education their children are receiving.

These parents know education. They know the quality is there,” said Greg Metz.

“That’s why they’re supporting the school,” added Metz, who stood alongside almost 20 others in the meeting to show the board their commitment to the school.

However, the board’s concern about low student numbers and fairness to other communities prompted it to vote for its closure.

Wilcox was the final school the board voted on after deciding to also close schools in Earl Grey, Francis, Gray, Lang, Glenavon and Odessa and Kronau’s Saar School as well as discontinue the high schools grades in Kennedy and Sedley. Only McLean was spared losing its school or any grades. The decisions are effective Aug. 15.

As board chairman Rod Luhning tried to adjourn the meeting, community members voiced their anger, saying the meeting and review process were a joke.

“We’re in the land of rape and honey,” said one man. “We in rural Saskatchewan are being raped while the cities get the honey.” [in reference to the Tisdale, SK motto with rape meaning rape seed (canola)]

Private security manned the parking lot and two RCMP officers stood inside the front entrance, but following the meeting, most people spoke quietly among themselves in the parking lot or were interviewed by media.

“It’s a sad day in rural Saskatchewan,” said Erwin Beitel, the reeve of the RM of Lajord. He is frustrated his municipality is so highly assessed and is paying so much in education taxes, yet it is being told it can’t have schools in Gray or Kronau.

“I really don’t think people are going to stand for what’s happened here today … We’ll be looking at our options,” said Beitel.

When your elected officials are so concerned about public outcry and discord that they hire body guards and have the RCMP attend a school board meeting, you KNOW something is VERY WRONG. What’s wrong is the closure of those schools. It increases fuel consumption not only for buses, but for the students who will drive, the parents who will drive further to get their children or attend school functions, and teachers who are now unemployed in their home communities and will move or commute elsewhere up to 100km away.

There’s also the bogus notion that class options are too limited in a small school. Saskatchewan and much of North America was created around single room school houses, and home schooling is a valid option in many cases too. You can’t tell me that a school is “too small” to exist, that’s a load of bull.

Saskatchewan has a leading distance education program through SCN, where accredited high school teachers accessible anyplace there is email and a satellite TV system. Since even the smallest schools are on the highspeed CommunityNet Internet connected network, distance education is available from any of those closing schools. I was at a conference last week where the calculus teacher I had for a distance education class was talking about how well the program works, and how it could be utilized a lot more. There are CITY schools using the distance education program to get the teachers they want.

I came from a town where there was a senseless school closure, and I can tell you that if this provincial government wants to discontinue the farce of its “Rural revitalization” efforts and make actual improvements, then they should start by directing local boards to discontinue their plans to close local schools. I don’t know what kind of snake oil they were fed, but obviously it’s pretty damn powerful stuff. So strong in fact, it could get Bush to withdraw from Iraq, Paris Hilton to stop drinking alcohol, and convince the Riders to win the Grey Cup.

The formula is simple folks:
School = place for children
No school = no place for children
If you’re looking to grow a location (which is done by bringing families), do you:
A) close a school/don’t provide a school?
B) open a school/keep a school?

The bottom line in this case, is that there is no growth planned for rural Saskatchewan, and that shows we have incompetent leadership.


More at the Leader-Post

P.S. You’ll see a lot more school bus accidents from SK in the coming years, obviously. Hopefully none with children involved.
P.P.S. Don’t try to stop a moving bus unless you’re Superman.

UPDATE: PVSD is ignoring calls from the media it seems. There’s accountable governance for you.

A famous Saskatchewanian described what is happening here:

Don’t it always seem to go
That you don’t know what you’ve got till it’s gone?
They paved paradise and put up a parking lot.