Decay, contamination force elementary school students to relocate - Action News
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Decay, contamination force elementary school students to relocate

A decision to relocate 260 elementary school-aged students to a school 15 kilometres away while their aging school is decontaminated has Montreals French-language school board facing some angry parents.

cole des Nations one of 27 Montreal schools in 'excessive' state of decay

Montreal schools in disrepair

10 years ago
Duration 3:16
82 Montreal school buildings are in serious stages of decay. Dan Halton reports.

A decision to relocate 260 elementary school-aged students to a school 15 kilometres away while their aging school is decontaminatedhas Montreals French-language school board facing some angry parents.

Parents of students in grade three and up at the CSDMscole des Nations in Cte-des-Neiges say they only found out in December about their childrens impending transfer to cole Champlain, located just northeastof the Jacques-Cartier bridge.

The parents were never consulted about the decision, Munzoor Qadar told CBC News. We were just told, dictated that we were all going to go to Champlain on the other side of Montreal.

cole des Nations is one of 27 schools in the CSDM system deemed in an excessive state of decay, according to school board documents obtained through Access to Information by CBC/Radio-Canada. That means it would cost as much if not more to renovate them than it would to rebuild them.

Another 55 CSDM schools are considered to be in a very advanced state of decay.

Most of the schools in question are found in the older boroughs ofRosemont, Plateau Mont-Royal,Villeray,Ahuntsic,Ville-Marie,Mercier-Hochelaga-MaisonneuveandCte-des-Neiges. The average age ofCSDMbuildings is around 70, one of the oldest in the province.

School board officials flagged cole des Nations for $10-million in repairs after a report last April determined that chronic contamination at the 61-year-old school was posing a health risk.

Munzoor Qadar is one of a number of parents who feel the disruption in the middle of the school year and the transfer to a school 15-kilometres away will be too stressful for the young students, not to mention the parents.

Munzoor Qadar's son is one of 260 primary school students who will have to travel 15 kilometres to a new school while their aging school undergoes decontamination work. (CBC)

Its too much for us and its too much for the children. My child is actually having trouble sleeping at night. Hes saying he doesnt want to go to school anymore, Qadar said.

When Qadar complained, he says school officials told him that he would get used to it and prevented him from trying to get his son transferred to a school closer to home.

Thats completely unfair. Wheres the justice in that? It should be a personal choice, he said.

Catherine Harel-Bourdon, president of the CSDM, said thats not the case.

Were not discouraging parents from looking into other schools in the neighbourhood, but we are advising them that schools in the area are already overcrowded, she told CBC News.

If we can accommodate parents, we will but the reality is we cant relocate all 260 students [in neighbourhood schools].

Harel-Bourdon said cole Champlain was the only school that had the space to accommodate all 13 classes from cole des Nations as well as staff displaced by the repair work.

Catherine Harel-Bourdon, president of the CSDM, says cole Champlain is the only school that could accommodate all 13 classes from cole des Nations. More than 250 children will be displaced by work to decontaminate the aging Cte-des-Neiges school. (CBC)

We didnt want to have everyone in three or four different locations, she said.

No simple solutions for aging schools

Among the longlist of problems that the CSDM has identified at its schools are leaking roofs and leaking exterior masonry, plumbing and electrical systems in need of upgrading, outdated or nonexistent ventilation systems, and doors and windows that need replacing.

CSDM has no plans to demolish any buildings, which leaves it facing the massive job of trying to repair existing buildings if it can obtain the financing to do so.

The situation has the boards employees and administrators facing the difficult challenge of getting the work done while limiting school closures and the temporary transfer of students to other schools while renovationstakeplace.

We have $50-million a year for maintenance and this year weve received an additional $43-million for air quality improvements, says Harel-Bourdon.

That funding will benefit 16 schools.

The CSDM temporarily closed four schools recently for much-need decontamination and renovation work Saint-Nom-de-Jsus, Saint-Grard, Hochelaga and Baril.

Problems at Baril are so advanced, however, that the school might have to be demolished and a new school built.

The boards priority, however, is to renovate and restore its historic buildings.

"We're not the wreckers. We have an important heritage to preserve, " says Ms. Harel-Bourdon.

Faced with a maintenance deficit of $ 1.7 billion, Harel-Bourdon said CSDM is working to convince the provincial government to double its annual maintenance budget to $100-million.

CSDM owns or uses 226 schools.