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Local reaction mixed to firings in Cowichan
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Katie Bartel The Progress Last weekend’s firing of the Cowichan school board fetched mixed reactions in Chilliwack. Some called it bullying and undemocratic, while others said it was justified. B.C. Education Minister George Abbott fired all nine trustees on the Cowichan school board on Sunday after the board elected to submit a $3.8 million deficit budget. As per the School Act, legislated by the Ministry of Education, all school districts are required to submit balanced budgets. The board was replaced by an unelected official – Mike McKay, superintendent of the Surrey School District – who could hold the position until end of term in 2014. For Chilliwack school trustee Heather Maahs, the decision was black and white. “Rules are rules,” Maahs said in an email to The Progress. “That’s what we teach students in school and that’s what needs to be adhered to by example. If one board chooses not to follow those rules, there are consequences that must take place regardless of whether or not a board believes it is taking a moral stand.” However, Chilliwack District Parents’ Advisory Council president Gord Byers equated the firing to bullying. “Basically they were told they had to make cuts or get fired,” said Byers. “But how many cuts were they going to have to make to balance that budget? And how was that going to affect student learning? “These trustees were elected officials. They were trying to do the best for their school district.” Chilliwack parent and former school trustee John Henry Harter said the dismissal should be concerning to all B.C. school boards. “It’s completely undemocratic,” said Harter. “The fact they were not passing a balanced budget is a slim justification,” to fire them. “Yes, it was provocative. Yes, they were trying to make point. But I think that’s their job to make a point if they feel education is suffering. “What it says is you do as you’re told by the provincial government, or you get fired.” Further proof, Harter said, that trustees, despite being elected, are “government lackies.” kbartel@theprogress.com twitter.com/schoolscribe33
People board the Rotary Train on Canada Day outside the Chilliwack Curling Club. Chilliwack celebrated Canada’s 145th birthday on Sunday with sports-themed festivities at the Chilliwack Landing site, in the downtown area. For more photos, go to www.theprogress.com/community. JENNA HAUCK/ PROGRESS
‘Major’ change for Chilliwack seen with redrawn electoral map: Strahl Robert Freeman The Progress Chilliwack-Fraser Canyon MP Mark Strahl doesn’t think a city the size of Chilliwack should be split up as proposed by the federal electoral boundaries commission. Greendale, Yarrow, Cultus Lake and about half of Sardis would move to the Abbotsford-Sumas federal riding, and a sparsely populated area around 100-Mile House would be added to ChilliwackFraser Canyon, if B.C.’s electoral map is redrawn as proposed.
“It’s a major change,” Strahl said Wednesday, making the riding one of the largest in B.C. Every 10 years the map is redrawn based on a formula that divides the province’s population by an “electoral quotient” to determine the number of seats allocated in the House of Commons. B.C. will get an additional six seats as a result of the redistribution. But in Chilliwack, Strahl thinks the commission needs to focus less on meeting that population criteria, and more on holding communities of interest together. “I think ideally where a city the size
of Chilliwack is under that (population) mark, if it’s possible, I think it should stay together. You shouldn’t be dividing a city of this size,” he said. The average riding population in B.C. is 104,763. But Strahl pointed out that he proposed boundary changes are “not set in stone.” “I don’t think what you see today will be the final result,” he said. According to the commission’s website, its main goal is to divide the province into electoral districts within 25 per cent of the Continued: ELECTORAL MAP/ p8
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