Quebec schools anxious to use new government cash on repairs - Action News
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Quebec schools anxious to use new government cash on repairs

If youve got children in the public school system, theres a good chance they spend their days in a building badly in need of repair. With new money from Quebec, school board officials are now hoping to make tangible improvements.

After years of belt-tightening, Liberal government boosts funding for infrastructure in latest budget

Quebec Premier Philippe Couillard, seen here chatting with young students in 2017, has put cash into education in his most recent budget. (Jacques Boissinot/Canadian Press)

If you've gotchildren in Quebec's public school system, there's a good chance they spend their days in a building badly in need of repair.

With new money from Quebec, school board officials are now hoping to make tangible improvements.

The Liberal government has set aside just over $1 billion in its latest budget for education infrastructure, along with a five per cent increase in overall spending on education.

Upgrades are badly needed.

More than half of Quebec's 2,700 preschools, elementary and high schoolsare in poor or very poor condition, according to the latest assessment by the provincial government.

The total cost of repairing Quebec'sentire network of public school buildings from preschool to vocational schools is now pegged at $3.3 billion, compared to $1.8 billion estimated in last year's budget.

That dramatic jumpis, at least in part, due to more detailed inspections carried out over the past year,which gave the province a more accurate assessment of the repairs required, the governmentsaid.

On a scale from A to E, preschools and elementary schools, as well as high schools, got an average rating of D, meaning they're in poorcondition.

In total, 55 per cent of preschools and primary schools failed to get a passing grade of C. As for high schools, 47 per cent didn't get a passing grade.

Long road from budget to repairs

Jennifer Maccarone, president of the Quebec English School Boards Association, said the extra money is welcome.

"We have buildings that are sorely in need of repair," said Maccarone, who is also head of the Sir Wilfrid Laurier School Board.

It can take several years, she noted, from the time provincial funding is granted to getting the repair work done. Maccarone saidthat's further complicated by how little time there is to undertake the work while the schools are vacated over the summer.

"The reality is that in the education sector, we have a short period of time to accomplish major changes, especially with the two-week construction holiday," she said.

The principal of Laval Senior Academy, Nathalie Rollin, says her school's hallways are in need of paint and new lockers, but the $1.9 million the school's getting next year will go towards more pressing issues, including a new roof. (Verity Stevenson/CBC)

Laval Senior Academy, in the Laval district of Chomedey, is among the schools awaitingan upgrade. It is receiving$1.9 million fromlast year's budget, for renovations to becarried out in the summer of 2019.

"It's a school that needs a lot of love right now," said principal Nathalie Rollin. "In the hallways, the lockers are getting old. The paint needs to be done. You'll see some cracks in the walls."

The money, however, isn't going towardssuchesthetic improvements. It will used to repair the windows androof,and to remove pyrite from the walls.

'We've been waiting years for this'

The funding boost from the province isalso being welcomed by teachersunions, although they argue the extra cash in an election year doesn't make up for the belt-tightening earlier in the Couillard government's mandate.

Sebastien Joly, head of the Quebec Provincial Teachers Association, said teachers and students have had to put up with rundown classrooms and worse.

"The more you let [the buildings] go, the more expensive it becomes," Joly said.

"We've been waiting so many years for this."

The pocked hallways of Laval Senior Academy need repairs, but the $1.9 million allocated for renovations in 2019 will go toward fixing the building's structural problems. (CBC)

Quebec Education Minister Sbastien Proulx acknowledged last week, after the budget was released,that many schools are in poor shape. He said the latest budget, which saw the government boost overall spending, will help rectify that.

"I've always said, there are schools that are lacking love in Quebec," he told reporters.

"We need to be able to reverse the trend, to put an end to these dilapidated schools."

With files from Verity Stevenson