GNWT suggests school swaps to fit francophones - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 29, 2024, 06:07 PM | Calgary | -16.5°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
North

GNWT suggests school swaps to fit francophones

Instead of spending $28 million on new school additions, the Government of the Northwest Territories wants to swap schools to give francophone students more space.

'Were open to negotiations,' says head of francophone parents group in Yellowknife

GNWT suggests school swaps to fit francophones

11 years ago
Duration 2:21
GNWT suggests school swaps to fit francophones

In June of 2012, the Territorial Supreme Court ordered the Government of the Northwest Territories to build expansions on two francophone schools one in Yellowknife, the other in Hay River.

The GNWT estimated the additions would cost $28 million.

Now theyre pitching a cheaper alternative: juggling schools to accommodate the growing francophone and shrinking anglophone populations.

Several anglophone schools in the territory have low student enrolment. For example, William McDonald Middle School in Yellowknife is only 35-percent full.

The GNWT has asked the YK1 and South Slave school boards to give up one underused school each.

The YK1 school board is open to the idea.

The board has debated it, talked about it quite thoroughly over the past couple of months, says chair John Stephenson. The approach we've decided to take is to talk to people."

The YK1 school board plans to do that over the next month, involving parents, staff, students and other community stakeholders.

However, the immediate reaction is not positive.

Quite frankly we dont see the benefit of having one less school, Stephenson says. He says a transfer would likely mean no more middle school.

Jacques Lamarche is the president of APADY, the Yellowknife association of parents whose children have the right to a French education.

Were open to negotiations, Larmarche says. Were taxpayers as well and we understand that if theyre going to build an addition to the school, that would cost a lot of money.

The government hopes both boards will agree to the handover before the supreme court hears its appeal of the case in March.

In the meantime, students at high-capacity francophone schools likeAllain St-Cyr inYellowknife, will continue to be bused to the multiplex for gym class.