GSA ban lifted by Halton Catholic school board
Fears that policy replaced with quiet ban on 'gay'
Andrea Houston / Toronto / Wednesday, January 19, 2011
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The Halton Catholic District School Board (HCDSB) struck down its controversial ban on gay-straight alliances (GSAs) Jan 18, but the board’s new equity policy may still discriminate against gays.

One battle has been won, but the fight is far from over, says former HCDSB student James Hopkins, 19, who bravely gave trustees in Burlington a picture of what it’s like to grow up gay in small-town Ontario. He says he plans to take the fight to Queen’s Park to pressure the Ministry of Education to push for one equity and inclusive education policy for all school boards.

“Day in, day out, I suffered,” he said in his address (video) to the trustees and the gallery full of students and activists. “What I, and so many other gay youth, experience is not an act of hatred, but one of fear. Without exposure [to gay people], how do we fight ignorance?”

Loud cheers echoed through the gallery at HCDSB offices as hundreds of students, activists, Halton community members and teachers celebrated the repeal of the ban.
James Hopkins, Lauren Bugliarisi and Sarah Kelly.
(Photo Andrea Houston)

In a 6-2 vote, trustees decided to rescind the ban and shelve their equity and inclusive education policy. While a new policy is drafted, the board will use the Catholic “template." The template is a version of Ontario’s equity policy that’s written specifically for English Catholic boards by the Ontario Education Services Corporation.

Originally, Halton wasn't satisfied with the Catholic template, so they made a few edits when they quietly passed the policy in November, such as removing the terms "sexual orientation" and "gender." That's also when they added the ban on GSAs.

When asked by Xtra whether the board will allow groups to be called gay-straight alliance clubs, board chair Alice Anne LeMay refused to answer the question.

“I can’t answer that tonight. The policy will go to senior administration and will be implemented in the schools,” she said.

The HCDSB came under fire after an Xtra story Jan 6 uncovered the board’s ban on GSAs. LeMay justified the ban by saying the schools “don’t have Nazi groups either. They are not within the teachings of the Catholic Church.”

Although the ban is now lifted, the HCDSB may follow other Catholic school boards in Ontario and adopt a broad “diversity group” policy, creating space for more general anti-discrimination clubs, which allow students to discuss a number of social justice issues, such as racism, sexism, poverty and homophobia.

But many students and activists say that’s not enough. Allowing students to call the groups what they are —  “gay-straight alliances” — is crucial, Hopkins says.

“Having a broad group is a bad move,” says Sheridan College student Brian Best, who spoke at the meeting. He says it waters down the message. “This is a fight worth fighting for. No student’s rights should be violated.”

Despite calls for LeMay to step down as chair for her comments, the board reaffirmed her as chair in a unanimous vote. Gay trustee Paul Marai originally wanted to abstain, but LeMay wouldn’t allow him. She refuses to answer questions about whether she should resign as chair for her comments.
Gay Halton Catholic trustee Paul Marai.
(Photo Andrea Houston)

“I was disturbed [the board] wouldn’t take a position about whether they would allow gay-straight alliances in schools,” says Noa Mendelsohn Aviv, director of the equality program at the Canadian Civil Liberties Association (CCLA), who was at the meeting.

“The board is being deliberately vague. [Gay kids] are entitled to those groups. The operative question isn’t why should they have these groups, it’s why shouldn’t they be allowed to have them.”

Mendelsohn Aviv wonders what other schools in Ontario, Catholic or public, have anti-gay policies. The CCLA plans to get involved if students that want to start GSAs are blocked by school officials, she says.

"And being banned from using the use of the word 'gay' is extremely problematic," she says.


Sarah Kelly, a master's of teaching student at the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education (OISE), who started the Facebook page “Fight the Halton Catholic Board’s ban on Gay Straight Alliances,” led a group of students and activists in making emotional pleas to the board.

“The fact remains, one in three gay and lesbians will attempt suicide due to the damaging attitudes and policies such as this very ban,” she told the board.

Kelly says she plans to be vigilant to ensure the board's new policy is in line with Ministry of Education directives and the students' Canadian Charter rights. That's why she is joining Queer Ontario’s Casey Oraa to return to the HCDSB to review the document during the policy's consultation process.

"This board took the template policy and removed sexual orientation," she says. "There should be one Ministry of Education-directed policy that all boards follow."

Before the meeting, security guards drew people's attention to a red sheet of paper outlining the "Rules of Conduct for Board Meetings." Attendees were told to write any questions on a form, which would be read aloud by LeMay during the "Open Question Period." LeMay read only two questions and answered neither.

Trustees remained in camera for more than an hour before the public was allowed in. Meanwhile, in the front foyer, people continued to pour in. Most were students. A couple wore rainbow sweaters and many carried signs and banners. Another group wore shirts that read "Straight. Not Narrow." Those waiting in the lobby laughed at the surreal events in Halton over the past two weeks and shook their heads at the alarming rhetoric that has come from trustees.

In stark contrast to the jubilant and smiling students was Adriana Bassi, 75 and a mother of three, who scowled by the entrance to the boardroom. She said the ban should not have been lifted.

“[Students] should not be able to start a GSA,” she told Xtra prior to the vote. “Keep sex in the bedroom. Sex shouldn’t be an education matter.”

Bassi was one of about seven in a group of vocal pro-ban protesters sitting at the back. One held up a large sign that read “The HCDSB already fosters equity and inclusion. No need for GSA clubs.”

“Kids don’t go to school to learn about sex lives,” she said.

It wasn’t just students who came to protest the ban. Queer Ontario, the CCLA and Heterosexuals for Same-Sex Equality (HSSE) also attended.

When the doors finally opened to the public, the guards battled students who raced for one of the 95 available seats. Dozens were shut out.
Activists celebrate the vote that repealed the ban.
(Photo Andrea Houston)

“I’m only hearing intolerance from this board,” says Liz Morgan from HSSE. “If students that died from suicide had GSAs in their boards, perhaps they would still be with us.”

Applauding the board’s move to lift the ban was Chris Hurley, a former HCDSB student and current University of Toronto student who came to lend support. He says it’s very important that the clubs be called gay-straight alliances.

“In some cases these clubs can be a life-or-death issue,” he says. “I know I could have used a GSA when I was growing up. Embrace humanity over religion.”

But some trustees still aren’t convinced. Trustees Anthony Danko and Jane Michael voted against the motion. Danko, who ran away from Xtra’s microphone, says he collected the names of 128 people who support the ban from a local church.

Michael, the trustee who earlier told Xtra, “I don’t think sex clubs should be in school,” says she wasn’t affected by the heartfelt words of the students. Her position on GSAs stands.

“[The Catholic Church] takes exception to the homosexual lifestyle,” she says. “We help all students live a chaste life. We must create a policy that upholds the Catholic teachings.”

The ban and policy changes were made as a result of a letter sent by Bishop Paul-André Durocher, chair of the education commission of the Assembly of Catholic Bishops of Ontario. He wrote that gay-straight alliance clubs imply a self-identification with sexual orientation that is often "premature" among high school students.

Queer Ontario recently sent a scathing letter to HCDSB trustees slamming the board for its anti-gay policies. Oraa says the advocacy group plans to go to the Ministry of Education to find out how many GSAs are actually working in schools across Ontario.
Board chair Alice Anne LeMay.
(Photo Andrea Houston)

“It’s clear it’s not just the Halton Catholic District School Board that patterns this way,” he says. “So we will now be approaching the ministry. We need to let boards know that they are on the hook for explicit language in the ministry's equity policy.”

Also at the meeting was Richard Brock, the local president of the Halton Ontario English Catholic Teachers Association, who says recent events have focused attention on the issue of Catholic funding in Ontario.

“You’ve created a shit storm for Catholic education in this province,” Brock told Xtra.

Trevor Copp, artistic director of the Tottering Biped Theatre, a Halton community member who hame out to show support, says that if Catholic boards are unable to reconcile religious beliefs with Ministry of Education directives, their public funds should be cut off. Taxpayers should not be funding a school system that is discriminatory.

“The Halton board, and the Catholic system in general, is just a relic. It has no place in our current society; it has no space here anymore,” he says. “It’s a done deal. This, what has happened here in Halton this week, proves it is time we come to terms with that. We only need a public school system.”





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Reader Comments


 
CHARTER CHALLENGE FL01-1127
I know better than most the challenges here. I know the way being vague or selective in verbage can sway a court or group. Perception is EVERYTHING. The school must by law INCLUDE not exclude. This issue transcends this group and this school. This is a NATIONAL and GLOBAL issue. Google the issues and frustrations of the GLBT community in being accepted from hostels, hotels, family law etc and you will see the need for inclusion. WHY does this group need to go through such a lengthy, costly legal process? Why is it being contested at all? As a Hamiltonian by birth I understand the inequality in Ontario. The grounds of human gay rights WILL supercede that of RELIGION. They will ultimately lose as did the marriage councillor whose job was to marry everyone. His choice of careers. The fight over whose Rights are more important will be the religious board vs. gays. The precedence has been set here so use this to your advantage. The schools' primary function is to educate not discriminate. The school is being taught by its own students, what a lucky school it is to instill such free liberal thinking individuals. Their own ingnorance and prejudice has ENABLED your position.You would not even be here if not for their position. Consider this a unique opportunity to teach the teachers. Reach for the Sky dude! I hope you see the far reaching potential. Keep track of your efforts, contact everyone you can. If it is a Charter Challenge that they choose to push it to then even better for they will lose. Keep track of your time in a journal, keep every email of request for assistance and support. Look into what you need to satisfy a Charter Challenge and start now. Ask media for help in finding supporters, esp financial ones. Contact your MP, PM, GG, culture minister, education minister, Egale, BASS, get other students in Canada and USA to support by using FB, You tube etc. Stage a flash protest in your cafeteria, post it on You tube and its viral.
Dakota Hart, Calgary Alberta
01/19/11 10:36 AM EST
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Strange statistics
Great news!!! But ... regarding the quote: “The fact remains one in three gay and lesbians will attempt suicide due to the damaging attitudes and policies such as this very ban,” The real statistic, as I understand it, is that one in three attempted teen aged suicides involved gays and lesbians (according to a US study over ten years ago). I don't believe any study has ever found that one in three gay and lesbians attempt suicide (which would mean around 10 million attempted suicides in North America!) I'm really hoping this was a misquote, as proclaiming rather dated statistics, and then quoting them incorrectly, isn't exactly the best way to promote credibility when campaigning on any LGBT issue. More recent Canadian statistics, such as those from the Egale Safe Schools campaign, are far more plausible.
Dave Williams, Newmarket ON
01/19/11 10:45 AM EST
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Hooray, but...
The larger problem remains: There is not a single GSA in any publicly funded Catholic school in the entire province. The only reason the Halton Catholic Board got centered out is because its trustees made a decision that would normally have been made behind closed doors, and with more politically correct-sounding language. Plus, LeMay compared gays to Nazis. No other Catholic Board has made those mistakes. Yet no other Catholic Board has a single school with a GSA. The problem remains.
Rob Youngg, Hamilton Ontario
01/19/11 11:05 AM EST
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Who's the Nazi?
Wonder how the former nazi youth member AKA Pope will react to this?
Bryan Charlebois, Toronto Ontario
01/19/11 12:40 PM EST
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Making it Better..
I'm so glad to see youth making a difference right now, rather than suffering, and waiting until they are out of the system. They have a right to be treated with respect and dignity today and everyday. "making it better" rather than waiting till "It gets better"
Jay Rottiers, Toronto Ontario
01/19/11 1:15 PM EST
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Outdated Rhetoric
I wish the Catholic School Board would acknowledge the difference between a GSA and a "sex club". Perhaps she never learned the difference between "sex" and "sexuality". Starting a gay-straight alliance does not entail students getting together and having sex. No one is advocating high school sex clubs. And do we need to explain that sexuality is not a "lifestyle"? Eating well and exercising is a lifestyle. Working lots of overtime and commuting for 2 hours a day is a lifestyle. Having a same-sex partner is not a lifestyle choice any more than having an opposite-sex partner is. Having spouses and children isn't a lifestyle choice, it's a life. Maybe if the board members had a GSA in their high-school, they'd understand the difference.
Kathryn, Victoria BC
01/19/11 2:18 PM EST
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No comments from the provincial politicians
The core of the problem is that the Assembly of Ontario Bishops, which the Catholic school boards turns to, promotes bigotry. It's a heavy accusation, but one not without merit: they state that homosexual attraction is disordered and against natural law. That under no circumstances can they be approved. That relationships of homosexual students should be forbidden, and to allow those of heterosexual students. They can get away with it because they justify their bigotry as religious teachings. Therefore, any move to stop their abuse of Ontarian children is seen as discrimination against the Church. But claiming a defence of discrimination when perpetuating discrimination is a rather flawed stance. Let's not allow Catholic school boards to abuse children further. Get the provincial politicians, who have conveniently been silent during this debate, to confront and stop this bigotry once and for all. They wouldn't be silent if this was racial discrimination going on. Just because it's inconvenient to tackle this topic makes it no less necessary.
Julien McArdle, Ottawa Ontario
01/19/11 4:59 PM EST
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Grinning
I'm gleaming and grinning and beaming! Look at Alice's face in that photograph. Priceless! I understand there's still a little fight left in this, but damn it's great to see some changes being made for the youth in our community!
Katlyn Halcrow, Sault Ste. Marie Ontario
01/19/11 10:23 PM EST
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What is real?
With two children committing suicide per week we have a problem. With 397 children die in the care of the government we have a problem. With more bullying abuse found in Ontario schools then most of the rest of the world, we have a problem . When we allow repeat sex offenders teaching in our schools, we have a problem. So who the hell is going to speak for the victims in our schools? The teacher Unions refuse to allow teacher to speak up for students. The Government does nothing accept spend $50,000,000 on an anti-bullying policy that does nothing to stop it.
Charlie, Toronto Ontario
01/19/11 10:38 PM EST
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GSA AKA SEX
@Katheryn, The reason the board called GSA's sex clubs was not that they thought the members would have sex. That's another falsity which was invented by activists. Show us where a board member actually stated this. The actual reason the board called this a sex club was because GSA's aim to create a false, crotch-centric anthropology where the core of one's identity is the genitals. That low view of the human person is rightly rejected as too constraining and too limiting by Jesus Christ and the Catholic Church which he founded through St. Peter. You say you want true freedom? You wont find it in Pride Day placards and GSAs. The Catholic Church invites all people to larger, more beautiful vision of humanity than the LGBTTIQQ2SA myopia between the legs.
Jolene Cassa, Toronto ON
01/20/11 9:35 AM EST
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Trevor Copp Wrong
Public schools are built using public funds, on public lands or private lands acquired with public funds. The Catholic schools were built using private funds, on land purchased with private funds. Both receive operating funds from the public purse, howevver Catholics form roughly 40% of the Ontario population so 40% of public funds come from Catholic taxpayers. Yet,the Catholic schools only receive 30% of the funds. They bought their own land, built their own schools and only get 75 cents on the dollar they flow throught the public purse to operate. I say they have every right to mandate how the schools they built and fund are operated. They had to buy assets and build their own system, so if homosexuals want to teach their view of life in the school environment, then it's only fair to start a homosexual school board, to buy land and build schools (with their own money), and then receive a dis-proportionate amount of public funds to run them. The Catholics get a raw deal from the gov't but they are so committed to their mission, that they take it in stride. They don't go to homosexual group meetings en masse to intimidate and proselytize. They don't blame homosexual policies for the deaths of Catholics. The Catholics live and let live. They are misunderstood because no one bothers to look at what they actually teach. People are too quick to assume victimhood based on misinformation. Check out the real teachings. Use internet search terms like homosexual catechism vatican for the real scoop.
Ted, Vancouver BC
01/20/11 11:55 AM EST
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One secular public school system only please
You’ve created a shit storm for Catholic education in this province,” Brock told Xtra. And I for one congratulate Xtra for creating this shit storm. End the Catholic Separate School system - Ontario needs only one public school system - a secular one.
Mike Jan, Ottawa Ontario
01/22/11 12:35 AM EST
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time to end funding
The teachings of the Catholic Church will never be aligned with those of our secular values. It is time to stop funding this relic. If Catholics want their kids to go to a faith based school - they should pay for it themselves. It is only a matter of time.
KLS, Toronto Ontario
01/22/11 1:02 AM EST
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been around
a long time and I'm seeing a huge increase in fierce homo hatred (not homophobia but hatred) everywhere in this city. It's in the air.
sean, toronto on
01/23/11 10:49 PM EST
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Where is the love
and you;ll know they are christians by their love by their love... I was raised catholic and love the teachings of the bible..... But I'm gay... Unless I abstain from my life/love relationships the church won't accept me... That has to be a sin... Where is the love Ya'll... I don't know how but please ...Let your own kids be who they are....
Beth, Seattle Washington
01/24/11 7:07 AM EST
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What!
In QC Canada, Gay are more scolarized and have a better financial condition. Most gay told me that they did not party as much as other kids when young because they fear rejection so they decide to invest themselves in school. Sometimes oppression & discrimanation makes you stronger and may sensitize an individual to what's important in life. Wow that is a fresh new view on this issue! Always a good side to any bad side.
Christian, Montreal Quebec
01/25/11 2:09 PM EST
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Support GSAs
I'm glad that the majority here don't appear to support the notion that students are too naive to engage and have input. (I read that comment on the Burnaby School Board article and found it insulting) As an active GSA member it appeared that the author was unaware that the LGBTQ community by and large supports and promotes GSAs.
Jonathan l, Burnaby B.C.
01/27/11 5:56 AM EST
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@Ted in Vancouver
"The Catholic schools were built using private funds, on land purchased with private funds." "I say they have every right to mandate how the schools they built and fund are operated." This exact reasoning was employed by the Supreme Court of Canada in the 1940s when they ruled a business owner has every right to ban black people from his drinking establishment. You are essentially saying that that is ok, that property rights should trump human rights. That's why we established a Human Rights Code & (supposedly) a Charter of Rights. Also, I find it extremely offensive that public money is being given to an institution that openly flaunts its discriminatory policies, that essentially teaches the next generation to hold malice in their hearts toward folks who don't conform to their rigid mold. And they wonder why they can't get anyone in the pews...
hookedonsonics, Thorold Ontario
01/27/11 11:38 AM EST
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Naive student
Jonathan I share your opinions. Here we are fighting to have GSAs in our schools, yet we have those within who critize School Districts who support them at our request. Perhaps he should visit mygsa.ca hosted on the egale website. Perhaps he missed the studies concluding that the reason youth in general, and LGBTQ youth in particular felt disengaged was due to being dictated to by adults who know better. Just the opinion of one naive student that ought to be discounted.
Chris G, Vancouver B.C.
01/27/11 12:48 PM EST
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Jeremy mission statement
I wanted to add that the "naive" student comment contradicts Jeremy Dias. (who is cited in support of that view) Here is part of Jeremy's mission statement, "Supporting Youth Ideas: giving support to youth who have ideas to make their schools and commmunities better places; help through funding and organizationally." Jeremy's advisory committee also includes youth. Jeremey's speech that I heard in Vancouver as quoted in xtrawest "I want each and every one of you to get involved." Yes, Jeremy was an exceptional student, he is not alone.
Chris G, Vancouver B.C.
01/27/11 7:02 PM EST
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Catholics will provide for their students.
The debate surrounding Homosexual/Straight Alliances (GSAs) in Catholic high schools is being complicated by the fact that people are not distinguishing between an objective and a strategy. GSAs are a strategy that some people propose to achieve an objective with which the Bishops of Ontario are in agreement: that all students in schools feel safe and respected. The Catholic objective is that each student be treated with dignity, for each is a child of God. It is not right or fair to suggest that one particular strategy is the only way to achieve a given goal. Catholics seek to achieve the goal of a safe and loving environment for all students in a way that is in harmony with their Christian faith.
Vox Populi Z, Sydney Nova Scotia
03/10/11 2:21 PM EST
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