OCDSB trustees close debate on police in schools indefinitely - Action News
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Ottawa

OCDSB trustees close debate on police in schools indefinitely

Long-serving trustee Donna Blackburn wants to bring a police presence back to schools within Ottawa's largest school board, but her fellow trustees have voted to kick that conversation down the road indefinitely.

Trustee Donna Blackburn wanted to bring police back to schools, but board voted against

A school board sign in front of its headquarters.
The Ottawa-Carleton District School Board won't see a debate over police in schools reopened, trustees voted on Tuesday night. (Danny Globerman/CBC)

Long-serving trustee Donna Blackburn wants to bring a police presence back to schools within Ottawa's largest school board, but her fellow trustees have voted to kick that conversation down the road indefinitely.

The Ottawa-Carleton District School Board (OCDSB) got rid of the Student Resource Officer program (SRO) last year aftercommunity members complained the program had been harmful to BIPOC and gender-oppressed students.

Blackburn, who wanted to keep the SRO program, moved a motion at the meeting of the board of trustees on Tuesday night that sought for the OCDSB to"engage in discussions with the Ottawa Police Service to establish standard of practice that allow for police support to schools."

The motion did not specifically seek a return of student resource officers, but Blackburn said the board needed to help school administrators who, as she claims,can only "call 911" if they need police support.

"This is not working for our students, this is not working for our staff, this is not working for our communities," Blackburn told her colleagues at the meeting.

OCDSB trustee Donna Blackburn.
Trustee Donna Blackburn says she put this new motion forward because she has heard from principals struggling to get help from police. (Facebook)

Conversations already happening, says director

OCDSB Director of Education Camille Williams-Taylor responded to Blackburn by saying conversations are happening regarding police and serving schools, and she understands the frustration principals may be feeling.

Some trustees, meanwhile, argued the motion was pointless because thedecision around the SRO program was only recently made. Trustee Christine Boothbyputforward a motion to defer Blackburn'smotion indefinitely.

"This motion is not needed and it is doing nothing but causing hurt again to this community that we did issue an apology for," she said.

Boothbyalso pointed outthe original motion to dissolve the SRO program asked the board to work with police and community groups"that experience discrimination and oppression to work collectively through a process that's guided by the human rights based approach on improving services and response and supports for youth and in crisis."

Boothby's motion passed easily.

Delegates speak down new motion

Delegate Sam Hersh, a lawyer and advocate, told the board of trustees "there's no reason tovote differently" on this new motion.

"Rememberthe stories you heard from racialized students who shared their trauma with you, remember those experiences and letthose again guide your decision today," he said.

The school resource officer program had been in place for 20 years before being scrapped by the OCDSB in 2021. (CBC)

Hailey Dash from the Asilu Collective, a group created to end the school resource officer program in Ottawa, took issue with the motion's wording that linked "the safety of our students and staff" and police.

"What trustee Blackburn means is that this is an illusion of safety for students who aren't being targeted and criminalized by cops in your schools," Dash said.

She said schools can address safety by focusing on issues like poverty and mental health, whichdo not require police.

"School safety cannot be enhanced by policing. This is a racist lie that cannot be perpetuated," Dash said.