Category: Political Action

  • Policing in Schools- A Mandated Professional Activity?

    Close-up of the sirens on a cop car.
    Photo by Pixabay on Pexels.com

    On August 13, 2025, Kristin Rushowy wrote in the Toronto Star:

    The controversial police-in-schools initiative is not offered at every board — Toronto’s police chief has said there are no plans to reinstate it in the city — but the memo, sent out Tuesday by Education Minister Paul Calandra and Deputy Minister Denise Cole, says in those that do, a “summary of the program’s structure and objectives” should be included. School resource officers must be covered in all boards, even if they don’t run the program.


    Activities, they wrote, should contain “information about the role of police in providing high-quality, age-appropriate educational public safety presentations to students on subjects such as cyber-crime, human trafficking, road safety and other areas of local importance. Information should also be provided about the role of police in the school community, to support trust building between educators, policing services, students and parents/guardians.”

    […]

    It also says schools need to work “co-operatively with police partners” on the two yearly lockdown drills, keeping staff up to date on procedures — and “consider adding a bomb threat drill as part of their emergency evacuation drills and that school personnel should work co-operatively with police partners on these drills.”

    It isn’t surprising that such news would “break” a few weeks out from the new school year. I have become accustomed to changes in policy being revealed at less than opportune times by this Ontario government.

    The public English school board in Ottawa (the OCDSB)had SROs in schools when I first started teaching here but within a few years they were taken out after exhaustive consulting. Ottawa’s police force (the OPS) has had a storied past of negative interactions and incidents while the SRO programme was in place. The Asilu Collective did a lot of work compiling a report on this matter (which can be helpfully read here).

    If teachers are going to be mandated to learn about the roles of police in our communities I believe it’s important we understand the scope of what that means. To that end I’m writing this post to educate the average educator on why this is a bad idea.

    I will throw in a caveat: if you bring this up in staff meetings or during the PA day itself you will probably receive push back one way or another. Teaching in Ontario is an overwhelmingly white profession. Despite lip service teachers pay to equity and progressive politics very few are willing to upset the status quo, rock the boat, or hold disruptive conversations. A majority-white staff will often have no problems with bringing police into a school serving a racialized community, no matter what books they say they’ve read. The intention of this paragraph isn’t to scare you into silence but to hopefully make you more aware of the potential dynamics should you broach this topic.

    Furthermore, this post will be written from an Ottawa-heavy lens as that is where I currently teach. I am confident you will find similar articles and arguments in local news sources. I encourage you to find these stories in the communities you’re employed in.

    History

    My background, such as it is, is in history and I like to tackle problems in the present with a historical understanding. If you were to examine the history of policing in Canada what would be the broad strokes?

    • In the early 19th century, the eastern colonies followed policing examples in England. Confederation in 1867 helped nudge the creation of provincial police forces.
    • What people now call the RCMP got its start in the 1870s as the North West Mounted Police. The organization got its genesis from Macdonald’s desire to crush Indigenous resistance (and his ongoing genocide) in the west. It was a heavily militarized police force, straying away from England’s Metropolitan Police Act, designed to enforce Canada’s “sovereignty” on its western “frontier”.
    • The NWMP (and later the RCMP) contributed to the ongoing genocide of Indigenous Peoples from the 1870s onward. They were often tasked with capturing First Nations children and placing them within the Indian Residential School System, a role ghoulishly immortalized on paraphernalia at the time. If you think the RCMP has seriously strayed from its militarized approach to Indigenous resistance in the 2020s, the documentary ‘Yintah’ is mandatory viewing (you can watch it for free, in Canada, on CBC Gem; Netflix also carries it).
    • National and provincial police forces are not the only examples of extreme police behaviours towards Indigenous Peoples. Municipal police forces are just as culpable. One notable example are the so-called “Starlight Tours”. The Saskatoon Police Service apprehended First Nations men on winter nights, drove outside the city limits and then left them to freeze to death. These murders were happening throughout the 90s and 00s.
    • Birth Alerts continue to cause trauma in many First Nations communities. Essentially, police and/or social workers are called when someone is deemed “at-risk” and their baby is taken soon after birth. First Nations women are disproportionately targeted by these actions.

    I’m of the belief that policing in Canada hasn’t strayed too far from its roots just after Confederation. There is ample evidence of the harm these forces have caused for generations. Bringing US-style tactics and training has only led to further targeting of BIPOC communities. Canada’s police forces have repeatedly trained with, and have been trained by, Israel’s security forces (a country with a similar history of subjugation, oppression, and genocide). The end result is an increasingly militant force capable of more disproportionate responses when confronted with resistance.

    Painting police forces as some kind of benevolent actor in Canadian history does a disservice. There is definitely a lot of baggage to unpack when you think of the inter-generational trauma from police actions when you consider putting them into schools.

    Role of the Police in the Local Community

    It will be difficult to be concise and focused in this section. When I moved to Ottawa from Gangeung, South Korea, I was aghast at the frequent stories of police abuse in the news. If the Ministry of Education wishes for teachers to learn about the police’s role in our schools’ communities then it’s hard to avoid the negative press.

    It can be overwhelming going through this list of incidents. It should be remembered that this list is curated; there is a multitude of news stories I could link to make my point clear. The fact the force continues to employ many of the above individuals while the province is trying to get police back into schools should be clearly problematic. This cannot be dismissed as a few bad apples when the misconduct is provided cover by continued employment and six-figure paycheques.

    Montsion easily making more than 3x the amount of the highest paid teacher after beating a Black man senseless leading to his death should make people uncomfortable. If the purpose of a system is what it does then what does this say about our police force? Elevating these individuals after such misconduct is nearly impossible to justify (although I am sure some will try).

    What About the Past Role of SROs & Police in Schools?

    As I wrote above, the OCDSB had SROs actively in schools when I first started working in Ottawa. I never got to know any personally but I would sometimes see them here and there at different sites. They would often be on school grounds with a firearm on their hip.

    The incident in Peel where a six year old Black girl was handcuffed at school was often on my mind when I heard of students interacting with police when I was a student teacher. I was waiting for city transit to take me to a school to work when Ottawa police tased and shot Greg Ritchie to death a few metres away(one of the officers involved was involved in a separate incident but was acquitted as well), so I have a particularly dim view of their role to make others safe.

    The OCDSB voted to end its relationship with the SRO programme in 2021. The trustees motioned that the Board issue a public apology for the harm done by the SRO programme. However, I can’t remember if the apology was ever produced. References are no longer easily accessible on the OCDSB’s website and only the intention of an apology can be found in archived versions of a page on the Board’s website.

    This motion came out of consultations within the OCDSB’s community. Students, parents and staff members came forward as part of the process. The firsthand accounts collected by the Asilu Collective go into detail how students felt interacting with SROs in their schools. You owe it to yourself to read it.

    The argument that assigning SROs to schools allows officers to better know the school community doesn’t hold much water when we see the evidence of their actions. Students feeling profiled by police is not how you build a caring and inclusive environment for a healthy school. Why should students be taught to feel safe around police when the police’s actions indicate otherwise?

    Saying police play a role in preventing crime doesn’t seem to hold much water in numerous studies from the USA or Canada. Arguing the presence of the police in schools will keep crime down is dubious at best as police most often react to crime after the fact (and as the linked studies suggest, they don’t exactly solve it after the fact either).

    In Conclusion

    The question we need to be asking as this PA rolls out is: who benefits from this? We are seeing the intentional underfunding of the education system in Ontario while police budgets continue to grow. You can see how stagnant the OCDSB’s budget is between the 2024-2025 school year and the 2025-2026 school year. You can then judge how the OPS’s budgets stack up in comparison. The OPS has around 2400 employees. The OCDSB is projecting around 77,000 students and over 12,000 staff according to its 2025 budget.

    Of course, since the Ministry of Education has actively taken over boards across the province, including the OCDSB, many do not have trustees to vote on this issue. I am hoping that unions start providing their members with tips on how to effectively counter yet another infringement.

    In the meantime, you are fully capable of arming yourself with knowledge. If Ottawa isn’t your locale, then look for police misconduct reports in your area. Look for firsthand accounts from populations historically oppressed by the police in Canada. Examine which groups actively call for more policing and who benefits from that expansion. Check out ‘Policing Black Lives‘ by Robyn Maynard and ‘The Skin We’re In‘ by Desmond Cole. Don’t be afraid to give dissenting opinions at staff meetings or when contact with the police is suggested. Get involved with political groups within your union to find like-minded individuals. Demand your local representative justify why this Professional Activity is necessary (and let me know their response).

  • Anti-Trans and Queerphobic Rhetoric on the Rise in Ottawa

    In recent months those of us in Ottawa have seen emboldened far-right groups converge on anti-2SLGBTQ+ hatred. I’ve tracked these movements since I moved here and I’ve seen them shift from disparate anti-immigrant, antisemitic, and Islamophobic talking points and focus on trans and queer bashing. These groups would organize rallies around Parliament and pull in the various guest speakers like Kevin J. Johnston or Faith Goldy. These grifters would come to Ottawa chasing clout whenever these rallies would amass downtown.

    There was a noticeable shift when the Ford PCs made anti-transgender rhetoric central to their original campaign. I saw it seep into local fascist rallies when these groups would book Parliament Hill. Then the occupation of downtown Ottawa happened with the “Freedom Convoy” and homophobic and transphobic hate got kicked up a notch. Ever since, things rapidly accelerated, often in lockstep to dangerous gains in the United States by Republicans.

    When the 2022 Ontario provincial election rolled around, Ottawa had its share of far-right endorsed candidates nominated to run for the Ottawa-Carleton School Board trustee positions. Ashley McCallum (then running as Ashley Darling) was endorsed by the Campaign Life Coalition and appeared to be quite chummy around blatantly transphobic trustees and trustee candidates from around the country. The 2022 election also had Chanel Pfahl and Shannon Boschy run, with all three ultimately losing their races. Boschy and Pfahl have since pivoted in attempts to keep themselves relevant and will often appear on podcasts or streams with far-right influencers.

    Boschy and Pfahl have both been involved in action around matters involving inclusive representation at the OCDSB. They’ve been at protests at the school board’s office and Boschy has spoken as a delegate. They are both active on Twitter and are followed by cruel and hateful bigots, all too happy to descend upon anyone signal boosted. Dog piles and swarming generally happen to anyone caught in the crosshairs.

    At the protest in March 2023, outside the OCDSB’s main office, there was a teenager in tow. This teen has made a name for himself for touring the province, and country, getting arrested but then having a crowd-funding link conveniently available online. In his entourage were many of Ottawa’s regular shouting-into-their-cameras live streamers (Chris Dacey is often at these events) who were able to use the protest to generate content to monetize.

    GiveSendGo fundraiser set up to cover “costs”.

    These kinds of stunts aren’t uncommon when you document the trajectory of these movements. One moment they’re calling on unrestricted hate speech as freedom warriors and the next they’re banning books from schools. It’s incredibly important people see these agitators for what they are and ultimately reject the grift.

    Of course, these teens aren’t operating in a vacuum and are part of the same network of far-right actors who frequent Canada’s blockade protest scene. Knowing that these Save Canada bigots are at the same events as documented Neo-Nazis should not come as any surprise, as rampant white supremacy and white nationalism are key tenets to many of these ideologies. It is particularly worrisome that this kind of violence is being normalized in 2023. Queer and trans students should not have to worry for their wellbeing when these groups choose to bring their violence to public schools.

    Which brings me to June 9th. June 9th is slated to be a gathering for many of these actors in Ottawa. It’s aiming to be a rejection of so-called “wokeism” these bigots believe is infecting schools and “indoctrinating” kids. Of course, this means a rejection of 2SLGBTQ+ equity initiatives. Unfortunately, this means schools will be made a target. Trans and queer students and staff will be at the epicentre of this violence and at the time of writing this there are zero safeguards being put into action by those who have the ability to do so.

    Shannon Boschy appears to have created a website for the event. Chanel Pfahl claims to be going. The Save Canada teens will be there according to graphics they are distributing. Chris Elston (an individual who often comes to Ottawa with his sandwich boards) seems to be planning on attending too. Elston was at the Freedom Convoy occupation with Boschy and Pfahl and has protested at children’s hospitals who get bomb threats from transphobic hate mobs. If it seems like a heavy coalescence of hatred descending on Ottawa schools on June 9th, you’re not far off.

    In the absence of institutional leadership, what can the community do? Thankfully, community members are not waiting for systems, which are supposedly in place to protect us, to leap into action. Different community groups are putting together plans to combat this rally of hatred. I wrote a brief Twitter thread on what individuals can do but will expand upon it here.

    • Bring flags and signs. A sea of signs and flags in support of the 2SLGBTQ+ community will mean the world to those of us who are expected to deal with this hatred on a daily basis. They are also very effective in blocking the cameras of the far-right agitators always show up in force with video gear.
    • If you want to prevent yourself from getting doxed and receiving death threats (or simply want to be safe) consider wearing a mask. These people like to identify their “adversaries” so they can harass them online and in person. You are likely going to have your picture taken by them.
    • Bring loud Bluetooth speakers. Have a playlist you can bop along to. This can help maintain morale. It can also drown out the hateful rhetoric from the ones who bring their megaphones (someone always does). As an added bonus, if you fill it with highly copyrighted music from litigious studios, you can mess with their videos and livestreams. They won’t be able to host their streams or later upload videos if their audio is full of copyrighted music.
    • Be on the lookout for fake progressives who are seeking to increase their clout by being confrontational. There will be plenty of people looking to cash in with their own followings and filming things. Be wary of these supposed “allies”.
    • There is safety in numbers. Go with your friends. Try not to get separated or surrounded by the bigots.
    • Be careful with the pushing and pulling that inevitably happen at these things. The far-right agitators will be looking for any excuse to grift off physicality. They can use it to call for donations. They can use it to threaten you with a court case if they pretend to get hurt and have you captured on camera.
    • Don’t get into shouting matches with them. Don’t give them content to monetize. They aren’t there to have their minds change or engage in good faith discussions. It’s a recruitment opportunity for them.
    • This kind of activism can take its toll on your mental health. Standing around unleashed hatred for hours on end isn’t ideal. There is zero shame in ducking out to protect your wellbeing.

    I am hoping bigger players show up as well. City councillors, MPs, and MPPs, should be all over this if they truly believed in basic human rights. Labour unions should be at the forefront at this kind of action, and the fact that they currently have nothing in place belies a lack of historical knowledge or a complete lack of 2SLGBTQ+ representation.

    The rhetoric that is already over social media and on their websites can only be classified as hate speech which should, in theory, fast-track action on this. With it happening in Pride Month, politicians who usually march in Ottawa’s Capital Pride parade should be collaborating to prevent this violence at Ottawa’s schools. An awful lot of people are completely dropping the ball here.


    I created quick “Protect Trans Youth” template in Photoshop, converted it to a PDF, with a transparent background. The word “youth” appears invisible in the below preview as it is white. Feel free to download it and use it on shirts, buttons, or anywhere else, should you be so inclined.

  • Notwithstanding Clause

    Notwithstanding Clause

    The Ford PCs won their second mandate in Ontario in 2022. Did they get any better at governing since 2018 when they first came to power?

    *shakes magic 8 ball*

    Hmm, don’t count on it.

    The Ford PCs have long had a prickly relationship with educators and education workers. In the run-up to the 2018 provincial election, they promised to get rid of the updated Health and Physical Education curriculum document, because it dared to talk about gender identity and consent. If teachers chose to ignore this openly transphobic and queerphobic move, the PCs were ready with a teacher snitch line. When they won, they scrapped a TRC-mandated summer curriculum writing session that was to focus on Indigenous education.

    A pattern emerges.

    Cuts to education started in 2018 and haven’t abated in 2022.

    The author on the streets of Ottawa (February 2021). I drew a different sign for each day of picketing.

    Education unions went on strike with votes taking place in 2019 and picketing happening over much of the province in 2020, up until the COVID pandemic shuttered the province. Ford, and his education minister, Stephen Lecce, were in full combat mode. Cuts were felt across the entire education system, with the system straining to keep up with the needs of its students. The status quo was maintained when the strike was over.

    However, conservatives and Conservatives alike were not happy. They wanted to take away teachers’ right to strike, a right enshrined in the Charter of Rights and Freedoms. The result? Well, let’s fast forward to November 2022.

    CUPE’s education workers staged a protest on Friday, November 4. Stephen Lecce was more than slightly displeased by this turn of events. The PCs took the highly contentious decision of using the Notwithstanding Clause and legislate CUPE’s workers (Ford, however, was somewhere else for the vote).

    Section 33 was first invoked in the 1980s. Ontario, under Doug Ford, first flirted with using the Notwithstanding Clause in 2018 after it came into power. Ford wanted to settle some old scores and tamper with Toronto’s city council. Ultimately it wasn’t use. In 2019, Quebec used it (they were the first to invoke it in the 80s) to prevent religious symbols from being worn in public by public servants. This change in Quebec’s laws directly impacted hijabi teachers, and jobs were lost as a result. Boldened by Quebec’s success, the Ford government used it to increase individual political campaign donations in 2021.

    Coming off another majority, but failing to get most Ontarians to vote, Ford is once more facing the ire of education workers and educators. Inflation has caused housing, food, and everything else to skyrocket in price. Guess what didn’t move up with inflation? Salaries in education. Workers are facing less support in schools, thanks to endless austerity cuts, despite the province posting a surplus. They are increasingly expected to live in poverty and make use of foodbanks.

    Do all these links paint a vivid enough picture yet? They should and it is bleak.

    Ontario is dealing with an orchestrated campaign to destabilize social safety nets and public services while aiming for a transition to privatized options. It has started in earnest in healthcare. Journalists in relationships with Ford staffers are pushing the same for education.

    What can you do? Pressure your PC MPPs. Join a picketing location near you. Donate grocery gift cards to those protesting. Push your unions and non-PC MPPs to aim for a general strike. We can stop these attacks by working together.

    May the Force be with us all.