Trustee apologizes for comments about gay students
School board member said 'it would be helpful' for gay students to be less overt
CBC News
Posted: Nov 22, 2012 8:03 AM MT
Last Updated: Nov 22, 2012 10:22 PM MT
An Alberta school trustee has apologized for suggesting during a debate at the Alberta School Boards Association that gay students should be less open about their sexual identity.
"I want to apologize for my remarks at the ASBA fall general meeting," Pembina Hills Regional School Division trustee Dale Schaffrick said in a written statement on Thursday.
"They were inappropriate and offensive and I apologize for that. I was speaking as an individual trustee and not on behalf of my board."
Schaffrick made the remarks during a debate Monday at the fall meeting of the ASBA, in which trustees discussed and rejected a proposal from Edmonton Public Schools that would protect gay students from bullying and discrimination.
Schaffrick repeated his remarks when asked about them on Wednesday.
Human rights activist Murray Billett says rejection of a proposed anti-bullying policy could end up hurting gay students in Alberta's schools. (CBC)"If children with a gay tendency appear a certain way, we know that we have to be vigilant to make sure they are not discriminated against," Schaffrick told CBC News.
When asked if those students should try to be less identifiable, he said, "I think for their own benefit... it would be helpful."
Schaffrick said that he is not homophobic and wants all students to be protected.
Decision hurts gay students, advocate says
Edmonton human rights advocate Murray Billett is furious with the ASBA's rejection of the anti-bullying policy, enacted by Edmonton Public Schools last year.
"These are the decisions that force a kid to go to the barn and hang himself," Billett said. "Those are the decisions that tell that kid to shut up, be quiet, don't be yourself.
"What does that do to a child in a school? It's their responsibility to look after our kids."
Billett wants the province to order school boards to protect gay students.
"This is about doing the right thing," Billett said. "This is about courage."
Billett said he can't believe almost two-thirds of the province's trustees voted against a motion that would protect gay students and staff in Alberta schools.
"It shouldn't have been an option," he said. "It should have been an automatic. This is important. It's time."
No policy needed, education minister says
Danielle Parker, a first-year student at MacEwan University in Edmonton, fought for Edmonton Public Schools to pass its anti-bullying policy when she was in her final year of high school.
Parker, who is gay, said that Schaffrick's comments hurt.
"That's the least helpful piece of advice that you could give a student," she said on Thursday.
"Students deserve to be protected in their environment. They deserve to be able to look the way they want; they deserve to be able to act the way they want."
Alberta Education Minister Jeff Johnson said he believes Schaffrick's comments from Monday are wrong.
"I'm offended by the insinuation that my kids would ever hide who they are under any circumstances and that we'd have the impression out there with any parents or any Albertans that any one of our trustees is not devoted to the protection of all of Alberta's children, and that's what I expect as the minister," he said.
However, Johnson said that Alberta doesn't need a specific anti-bullying policy because he believes that provincial legislation offers adequate protection for gay students.
Share Tools
Latest Edmonton News Headlines
- Smudge, the Hotel Macdonald's friendliest greeter
- Edmonton's Hotel Macdonald has taken an unusual step to help stressed-out travelers feel at home -- a 'canine ambassador' who welcomes guests with a wag of her tail. more »
- Hostage taking at Edmonton courthouse sends prisoner to hospital
- A female inmate allegedly used the lens of her eyeglasses to take another female prisoner hostage in the cells area of the Edmonton courthouse on Wednesday. more »
- Liam, Emma, most popular names for Alberta babies
- Liam and Emma were the top names given to Alberta babies in 2012, a record-breaking year for the number of births in the province. more »
- Postal workers strike in Fort McMurray
- Postal workers in Fort McMurray held a wildcat strike on Wednesday after learning Canada Post plans to hire contractors to handle parcel deliveries. more »
Must Watch
Top News Headlines
- Court freezes assets in widening SNC-Lavalin probe
- The RCMP are moving to freeze millions of dollars in bank accounts and real estate holdings in Montreal and Florida in their expanding probe into Canadian engineering firm SNC-Lavalin. more »
- Neil Macdonald: Harper no Obama when it comes to dealing with scandals
- Beset by three so-called scandals at the moment, Barack Obama has been meeting his accusers and the press head on, Neil Macdonald writes. The same cannot be said for how Stephen Harper operates. more »
- U.K. emergency committee to meet after London attack
- WARNING: This story contains graphic content. The British government's emergency committee is going to meet after two attackers butchered a man in a brutal daylight attack in London that officials say had signs of being motivated by radical Islam. more »
- Needed: New approaches to defuse 'suicide contagion' among teens
- Mental health experts say we need to find new ways to refer to and discuss suicide, particularly now that a large medical study has confirmed that teens are more susceptible to the idea if they know a schoolmate who died that way. more »
- Smudge, the Hotel Macdonald's friendliest greeter
- Hostage taking at Edmonton courthouse sends prisoner to hospital
- Lindale fire doubles in size within hours
- Photocopier bill could topple Edmonton charity
- Edmonton driver, 62, charged in boy's patio death
- Postal workers strike in Fort McMurray
- Liam, Emma, most popular names for Alberta babies
- Driver too drunk to stand, says mom of toddler killed on patio
- Edmonton Remand Centre lawsuit angers family of stomping victim

