HWDSB director hopes trustees will reach outcome on equity scandal review in 2 weeks - Action News
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Hamilton

HWDSB director hopes trustees will reach outcome on equity scandal review in 2 weeks

The director of Hamilton's public school board said he hopes by the next two weeks there will be an outcome ofthe expedited reviewinto reportsof racism and oppression involvingfour trustees.

HWDSB's expedited review comes after an independent report into the board's treatment of a student trustee

A man speaking into a microphone.
Manny Figueiredo, director of eduction for the Hamilton-Wentworth District School Board. (Dan Taekema/CBC)

The director of Hamilton's public school board said he hopes, that by the next two weeks, trustees will reach a decision onif four of them violated their code of conduct and will face sanctions after a recent equity probe.

"I believe in the next two weeks, as [the chair] has indicated, we should have a decision,"Manny Figueiredo, Hamilton-Wentworth District School Board (HWDSB) director of education and secretary of the board, said in an interview on Thursday.

Figueiredo's comments comeafter an independent investigation named four trustees aslackinganunderstanding of equity and inclusion. In some cases, investigatorssaid, trustees singled out Ahona Mehdi, who was a 17-year-oldstudent trustee at the time.

Trustees criticized for speed and transparency

Initially, trustees voted not to sanction themselves, and to remove their names from apublic report about the findings.The reportreferred to Alex Johnstone, Becky Buck, Kathy Archer and Carole Paikin Miller, but only Johnstone declared a conflict of interest.

Johnstonehas since apologized for "the absence of an equity-informed understanding of board policy and governance that created biases and systemic barriers."Through a paralegal, Archer saidthis month that she respects the findings of the report and believes "there is no further discussion necessary going forward."

Buck and Paikin Miller haven't publicly responded.

HWDSB trustees Alex Johnstone, Becky Buck, Kathy Archer and Carole Paikin Miller were named in a third-party investigation after complaints of racism and exclusion from a student trustee. (HWDSB)

After heavy public criticism, trustees decided to reconsider, and are nowundergoingtheirown expeditedreview to determine if there werecode of conduct violations and if sanctions are in order but even thatprocess has been heavily criticized for its lack of transparency and speed.

HWDSB chair Dawn Dankosaid in a statement the board is working to report on the results as soon as possible.

"We have heard loud and clear from the community that they are frustrated with the process to date," she said.

"This process is the next step following the original investigation."

Shawn McKillop, HWDSB spokesperson, said while thefindings and conclusions from the originalreport are being used as part of the expedited process, trustees are still required to follow through with parts of our code of conduct to ensure a fair procedural process.

Even if trustees are issued sanctions, they cannot be removed from their positions.

Danko said she hopes to regain the public's confidence.

"The process for rebuilding trust with the community starts with accountability. Not just for the individual trustees, but the board as a whole. That is why completing the final steps in our code of conduct is our top priority."

Dawn Danko, chair of the Hamilton-Wentworth District School Board. (Samantha Craggs/CBC)

The original report also came with 12 recommendations, which trustees voted to adopt.

Figueiredo said HWDSB's governance committee will receive a draft with input from the board includingshort-term goals, long-term goals and timelinesto implement the 12 recommendations.

He added he wants those recommendationsposted online and updated "so people know how we move forward on the investigator's overall 12 recommendations."

Figueiredo also said he thinks the processwill havetrustees review governance practices around what they discuss in public and what they discuss in camera.

In a message to families on Thursday, Danko acknowledged "the challenges and harm caused to members of our community" and said HWDSB trustees have "a lot of work to do."

"In addition to our focus on the recommendations to improve our governance procedures, we will work to set a budget that reflects the diverse needs of our students, while monitoring COVID-19 related costs," she said.


Read the full report here:

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