LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY OF MANITOBA

THE STANDING COMMITTEE ON SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT

Tuesday, April 25, 2023


TIME – 6 p.m.

LOCATION – Winnipeg, Manitoba

CHAIRPERSON – Mr. Andrew Micklefield (Rossmere)

VICE-CHAIRPERSON – Mr. Blaine Pedersen (Midland)

ATTENDANCE – 6     QUORUM – 4

Members of the committee present:

Hon. Messrs. Ewasko, Khan

Messrs. Altomare, Brar, Micklefield, Pedersen

Substitutions:

Mr. Bushie for Mr. Brar at 11:42 p.m.

APPEARING:

Hon. Jon Gerrard, MLA for River Heights

PUBLIC PRESENTERS:

Arianne Cloutier, private citizen

Joy Smith, The Joy Smith Foundation

Joel Swaan, Garden Valley Teachers' Association

Scott Durling, private citizen

Amy Warriner, private citizen

Gabriel Hurley, private citizen

Sam Zurzolo, private citizen

Augustine Watanabe, private citizen

Rachelle Dunlop, private citizen

Jay Ewert, Evergreen Teachers' Association

Sean Giesbrecht, private citizen

Elizabeth Bourbonniere, private citizen

Gregory Walker, private citizen

Cameron Watson, private citizen

Sonja Blank, private citizen

Nicole Bobick, Swan Valley Teachers' Association

Karla Rootsaert, private citizen

Mike Urichuk, private citizen

Jon Bettner, private citizen

Shelagh McGregor, private citizen

Kevin Rebeck, Manitoba Federation of Labour

WRITTEN SUBMISSIONS:

Beth Burrows, private citizen

David Wall, private citizen

Jennifer Engbrecht, private citizen

MATTERS UNDER CONSIDERATION:

Bill 35–The Edu­ca­tion Admin­is­tra­tion Amend­ment Act (Teacher Certification and Pro­fes­sional Conduct)

* * *

Clerk Assistant (Mr. Tim Abbott): Good evening, everybody. Will the Standing Committee on Social and Economic Dev­elop­ment please come to order.

      Before the com­mit­tee can proceed with the busi­ness before it, we do have to elect a Chairperson.

      Are there any nominations?

Hon. Wayne Ewasko (Minister of Education and Early Childhood Learning): I nominate MLA Andrew Micklefield to be Chair.

Clerk Assistant: Mr. Micklefield has been nominated. Are there any further nominations?

      Hearing none, Mr. Micklefield, please take the Chair.

Mr. Chairperson: Our next item of busi­ness is the election of a Vice-Chairperson.

      Are there any nominations?

Mr. Ewasko: I'll nominate MLA Mr. Pedersen.

Mr. Chairperson: MLA Pedersen has been nomin­ated. Are there any other nominations?

      Hearing no other nominations, MLA Pedersen is elected Vice-Chairperson.

      This meeting has been called to continue con­sid­era­tion of Bill 35, The Edu­ca­tion Admin­is­tra­tion Amend­ment Act (Teacher Certification and Pro­fes­sional Conduct).

      I would like to remind everybody that the Standing Com­mit­tee on Social and Economic Dev­elop­ment–that's this one–will meet again if required on Wednesday, April 26th, 2023, at 6 p.m. to continue con­sid­era­tion of Bill 35.

      I would also like to inform all in attendance of the provisions in our rules regarding the hour of adjourn­ment. A standing com­mit­tee meeting to consider a bill must not sit past midnight to hear public pre­sen­ta­tions or to consider clause by clause of the bill, except by unanimous consent of the com­mit­tee.

      Written submissions. Written submissions from the following people have been received and distri­buted to com­mit­tee members: Beth Burrows, private citizen; David Wall, private citizen.

      Does the committee agree to have these docu­ments appear in the Hansard transcript of this meeting? [Agreed]

      Prior to proceeding with public pre­sen­ta­tions, I would like to advise members of the public regarding the process for speaking in a com­mit­tee. In accord­ance with our rules, a time limit of 10 minutes has been allotted for pre­sen­ta­tions, with another five minutes allowed for questions from com­mit­tee members. Questions shall not exceed 30 seconds in length, with no time limit for answers. Questions can be addressed to presenters in the following rotation: first, the minister sponsoring the bill; second, a member of the official op­posi­tion; third, an in­de­pen­dent member. And that's the order.

      If a presenter is not in attendance when their name is called, they will be dropped to the bottom of the list. If the presenter is not in attendance when their name is called a second time, they will be removed from the presenters list.

      The proceedings of our meetings are recorded in order to provide a verbatim transcript. Each time someone wishes to speak, whether it be an MLA or a presenter–okay, this is the part that usually goes wrong–each time someone is–wishes to speak, be it an MLA or a presenter, I first have to say the person's name so that the people who are recording know who is speaking. This is the signal for the Hansard recorder to turn the mics on and off.

      As previously agreed, the com­mit­tee shall hear pre­sen­ta­tions from Arianne Cloutier and Nicole Lafrenière, members–as the first and second present­ers at the meeting scheduled for today.

      Is this agreed? [Agreed]

      This was–okay, yes. We did that last night. Agreed and so ordered. Okay.

      Okay. On the topic of deter­mining the order of public pre­sen­ta­tions, I do need to note we do have an out‑of‑town presenter in attendance, and I'm won­dering if there's leave of the com­mit­tee to allow that individual from out of town to go first, after the two French presenters we already agreed on.

      Is there leave for that out-of-town person to go first? [Agreed]

      Okay. Agreed, perfect. Then, Joy Smith will be speaking following the two French presenters that we agreed on earlier.

      Okay. Thank you for your patience. We are now going to proceed with public pre­sen­ta­tions.

Bill 35–The Education Administration Amendment Act
(Teacher Certification and Professional Conduct)

Mr. Chairperson: I'd like to call–I hope I'm saying this correctly–Arianne Cloutier, is that right? Forgive me if I'm mispronouncing either. Welcome, and you do have the floor.

      Ms. Cloutier, please go ahead.

Arianne Cloutier (Private Citizen): Bonjour, je me nomme Arianne Cloutier. J'enseigne depuis 2005 dans la Division scolaire franco-manitobaine. J'enseigne présentement à la maternelle, mais j'ai enseigné dans ma carrière tous les niveaux de la maternelle à la douzième année. J'ai enseigné en région, comme en ville : j'ai donc une expérience très variée et complète.

* (18:10)  

      Je suis ici aujourd'hui parce que j'ai des inquiétudes au sujet de loi–du projet de la loi 35, Loi modifiant la Loi sur l'admin­is­tra­tion scolaire. Pour être claire, je soutiens pleinement les lois qui amé­liorent la sécurité des enfants. En fait, le premier point du code de déontologie des enseignants est que notre principale responsabilité professionnelle est envers nos élèves.

      Je suis une enseignante qui s'assure que les élèves qui sont dans ma classe et dans mon école se sentent inclus et en sécurité. Mes élèves savent que c'est correct de faire des erreurs parfois, et qu'ils peuvent me poser n'importe quelle question sans aucun jugement de ma part ou des autres élèves de la classe. Ils savent aussi que je ne tolère aucune violence physique ou verbale ou quelconque forme de harcèle­ment ou de discrimination.

      Ainsi, vous n'entendrez aucun argument de ma part pour soutenir les lois visant renforcer la protec­tion de l'enfance. Si je suis ici devant vous aujourd'hui c'est pour vous parler de moi, de mon expérience personnelle, afin d'essayer de vous faire comprendre le mal que le Projet de loi 35 pourrait causer aux enseignants dans sa forme actuelle.

      J'ai débuté ma carrière dans une école de campagne à 350 kilomètres de Winnipeg. J'enseignais à 28 élèves de la 7ème et 8ème années combinées, où tout le monde était cousins, cousines, frères et sœurs. Moi et un autre élève étions les seuls à ne pas être apparentés avec personne de la classe. Même les auxiliaires étaient la tante ou la grand-mère de mes élèves.

       Cette année-là, qui était ma première vraie année d'enseignement, les parents portaient constamment plainte contre moi. Je vais vous en donner quelques exemples un peu plus tard. Je ne dis pas que certaines plaintes n'étaient pas fondées–comme que je ne parlais pas bien anglais, que je ne pouvais donc pas enseigner l'anglais, chose que j'avais partagé avec ma direction d'école lors de mon embauche, mais ils m'avaient dit que ce serait ok, que je serais capable de le faire. Et j'ai vraiment fait tout que j'ai pu.

      Il faut aussi comprendre que j'avais fait mes stages en maternelle, donc enseigner en 7ème, 8ème année était un choc et une courbe d'apprentissage énorme. Mais, encore une fois, j'ai fait ce que j'ai pu, et j'ai demandé l'aide dont j'avais besoin pour accomplir ma tâche.

      Le reste des plaintes étaient cependant frivoles et injustifiées. Ma directrice d'école m'appelait dans son bureau chaque fois qu'elle recevait une plainte. J'étais plus souvent dans son bureau que mes élèves à problème. Et quand je dis problème, je veux vraiment dire problème. J'ai dû suivre cette année-là des cours d'auto-défense pour enseignant. Certains élèves ont mis des agrafes dans mon verre d'eau, des punaises sur ma chaise–mais selon ma directrice, et les parents de la communauté, c'était ma faute.

      Après quelques mois de me sentir incompétente et rejetée de la communauté où je vivais, j'ai averti ma directrice que s'il y avait une autre plainte contre moi, je quitterais l'école. Ça a pris deux jours pour qu'elle m'appelle dans son bureau pour me partager une autre plainte. J'ai donc avisé que je quitterais pour de bon à la fin de la semaine.

      J'ai commencé par prendre deux semaines de congé de maladie pour essayer de figurer ce que je ferais, et pendant ce temps-là, ma directrice m'a suppliée de revenir et m'a offert un changement de niveau. J'allais donc à mon retour enseigner une autre semaine en 7ème, 8ème année, puis j'allais changer en 1ère, 2ème année–quand même les frères, les sœurs, les cousins, les cousines de tout le monde.

      Ça ne faisait pas deux jours que j'étais de retour que ma directrice m'appelait dans son bureau pour me parler d'autres plaintes portées contre Mme. Arianne. Et la portée de la plainte portée contre Mme. Arianne est très importante. Elle a commencé à me dire que les parents se plaignaient que je ne faisais pas la prière avec les élèves le matin. Je me suis mise à rire à ce moment-là. Et j'ai compris que les plaintes n'avaient pas été contre moi.

      Elle m'a regardée avec un air étrange, mais elle continuait en disant que les parents s'étaient plaint que je n'avais pas de contrôle sur ma classe depuis quelques semaines. J'ai ri encore plus fort. Elle a alors m'a demandé qu'elle était mon problème? Je lui ai demandé de regarder mon horaire et de me dire ce que mes élèves avaient à la première période de la journée, heure où on faisait la prière. La réponse était que c'était anglais, et que donc, ce n'était plus moi qui enseignait ce cours. Les parents avaient finalement eu gain de cause à ce sujet – à mon grand bonheur, je dois le dire. Puis, j'ai demandé à ma directrice qui était dans ma classe les dernières quelques semaines, et c'était à ce moment-là qu'elle a réalisé la folie des plaintes.

      Pendant mon séjour là, les parents s'étaient plaint que je n'allais pas à l'église, que j'avais m'enseigné à mes élèves que mon meilleur ami était gay, qu'il y avait trop de chansons en français dans mes cours de français, que les mathématiques que j'ai enseignées étaient trop difficiles–même si je suivais le pro­gramme d'études à la lettre.

      Je me suis aussi faite reprocher de ne pas pouvoir empêcher un des élèves–qui avait des rages de colère subite inattendues–de frapper les autres élèves, ou moi. Cependant, mon absence–pendant mon absence, ma remplaçante n'a pas pu faire mieux, même si c'était la tante de la majorité des élèves.

      Cette longue histoire est pour vous faire com­prendre que si la loi 35 avait existé dans mes débuts, les parents auraient porté plainte en masse contre moi, et quelqu'un qui n'est pas dans le domaine de l'éducation et qui ne connait pas la réalité des petites communautés éloignées–qui n'aiment pas quelqu'un juste parce qu'ils sont de l'extérieur–aurait proba­blement donné gain de cause à ces parents.

      Et si leurs nombreuses plaintes n'avaient pas été fondées, le fait de perdre mon brevet temporairement et d'avoir à passer devant un comité disciplinaire sans représentation, j'aurais quitté la profession et je ne serais pas l'excellente enseignante que je suis main­tenant.

      J'ai eu quelques accrochages avec des parents pendant mes années, mais même avec mon expé­rience, le processus par lequel j'aurais dû passer chaque fois m'aurait détruit–parce que je suis une enseignante. Je passe tout mon temps à penser à mes élèves et à m'inquiéter de leur sort. Et de me faire juger parce qu'un parent pense que leur enfant a subi un préjudice émotionnel importante m'aurait anéantie.

      En terminant, j'aimerais donc, au vu de ma propre expérience, vous proposer les amendements suivants :

      Supprimer la compétence du projet de loi. Quand je commençais ma carrière, je n'avais définitivement pas les compétences que j'ai présentement.

      Veiller à ce que les comités d'audience soient composés d'une majorité d'enseignants, conformé­ment à la composition des comités disciplinaires d'autres ordres professionnels au Manitoba. Si des enseignants m'avaient jugée, ils auraient rapidement compris la situation dans laquelle je me trouvais.

      Inclure le droit exprimé à la représentation quand on fait l'objet de l'enquête. Au début de ma carrière, je ne connaissais pas nécessairement mes droits, et avoir droit à une représentation m'aurait probablement beaucoup aidée.

      Limiter les signalements par les employeurs aux suspensions et le licenciements, par op­posi­tion à toute mesure disciplinaire pour faute professionnelle ou incompétence. Si ma directrice avait signalé toutes les plaintes, le comité disciplinaire aurait été surchargé par seulement les signalements à mon égard.

      Définir préjudice émotionnel im­por­tant. Juste le fait de ne pas aller à l'église et d'avoir un meilleur ami gay auraient suffi à donner un préjudice émotionnel im­por­tant à la majorité des élèves dans la classe cette année-là.

      Protéger la vie privée des enseignants qui sont déterminés comme de ne pas avoir la capacité d'assumer les responsabilités professionnelles d'un enseignant en raison d'un handicap physique ou mental.

      Je vous remercie d'avoir pris le temps de m'écouter.

Translation

Hello. My name is Arianne Cloutier. I have been teaching in the Franco-Manitoban School Division since 2005. I currently teach kindergarten, but I have taught all levels from kindergarten to grade 12 in my career. I have taught in rural areas as well as urban ones, so I have a very varied and complete experience.

I am here today because I have concerns about Bill 35, An Act to Amend the Education Adminis­tration Act. To be clear, I fully support legislation that improves the safety of children. In fact, the preamble to the teachers' code of ethics is that our primary professional responsibility is to our students.

I am a teacher who ensures that the students in my classrooms and schools feel included and safe. My students know that it is okay to occasionally make mistakes, and that they can ask me any question without any judgment from me or the other students in the class. They also know that I do not tolerate physical or verbal abuse, or any form of harassment or discrimination.

As such, you will not hear any argument from me against laws that strengthen child protection. The reason I am here today is to tell you about myself, about my personal experience, and to try and make you understand the harm that Bill 35, in its current form, could do to teachers.

I started my career in a rural school about 350 kilometers from Winnipeg. I taught 28 students in grades 7 and 8 combined, where everyone was cousins and siblings. I and one other student were the only people not related to anyone in the class. Even the teaching assistants were my students' aunt or grandmother.

That year, which was my first real year of teaching, parents were constantly complaining about me. I will give you a few examples later. I am not saying that some of these complaints did not have merit–like the complaint that I did not speak English well, so I could not teach English. However, I had shared that issue with my principal when I was hired, and they had told me it would be okay, that I would be able to do it–and I really did everything I could.

You also have to understand that I had done my internships in kindergarten, so teaching a grade 7, 8 class was a shock and a huge learning curve. Again, I did what I could, and asked for the help I needed to get the job done.

The rest of the complaints, however, were frivolous and unwarranted. My principal would call me to her office whenever she received a complaint, and I was in her office more often than my problematic students. And when I say problematic, I really mean problem­atic: I had to take teacher self-defence classes that year, some students put staples in my water glass and thumbtacks on my chair–but according to my prin­cipal, and parents in the community, it was my fault.

After a few months of feeling incompetent and rejected by the community I lived in, I warned my principal that, if there were one more complaint against me, I would leave the school. It took two days for her to call me to her office and share another complaint. Con­sequently, I advised her that I would be leaving for good at the end of the week.

I started by taking two weeks off sick leave to try and figure out what I should do. During that time my principal begged me to come back and offered me a class change. If I came back, I would teach just one more week in grade 7, 8 and then switch to a grade 1, 2 class. Meaning a class where all the students were siblings or cousins of my former students.

I had barely been back two days when my principal called me to her office to tell me about more complaints against Mme. Arianne–and the scope of the complaints against Mme. Arianne is significant. The principal started telling me that parents were complaining I was not doing morning prayers with the students. I started laughing at that point–and I realized that the complaints had not been against me.

The principal looked at me strangely, but she went on to say that the parents had complained I had had no control over my class for the previous few weeks. I laughed even harder. She then asked me what my problem was. I asked her to check my schedule and tell me what my students had in the first period of the day, which was the time were prayers were done. The answer was that it was English–and I was no longer teaching that class. The parents had finally found some vindication on that issue–much to my delight, I must say. Then I asked my principal who had taken over my class the last few weeks, and that is when she realized how crazy the complaints were.

During my time there, parents complained that I did not go to church, that I had told my students my best friend was gay, that there were too many French songs in my French classes, that the math I taught was too difficult–even though I followed the curriculum to the letter.

I was also criticized for not being able to prevent one of the students, who was prone to unexpected fits of sudden rage, from hitting other students–or me. However, in my absence, my substitute had not been able to do any better, even though she was the aunt of the majority of the students.

I am sharing this long story to make you understand that, if Bill 35 had been a law in my early years, parents would have filed a massive quantity of complaints against me, and a person not working in the field of education and ignorant of the reality of small remote communities – where outsiders are not much liked just because they are from somewhere else–would have probably sided with those parents.

Even though most of these complaints had been unfounded, temporarily losing my certificate and having to appear in front of a disciplinary committee without representation would have led me to leave the profession–and I would not have become the excellent teacher that I am today.

I have had a few run-ins with parents over my years, but even with my experience, the process this bill would have put through each time would have destroyed me–because I am a teacher. I spend all my waking hours thinking about my students and worrying about them. To be judged because a parent thinks their child has suffered significant emotional harm would have destroyed me. 

So, in closing, I would like to offer the following changes, based on my own experience:

Remove the notion of competency from the Bill. When I started my career, I definitely did not have the skills that I have now.

Ensure that review boards include a majority of teachers, as it is the case with disciplinary boards of other professional colleges in Manitoba. If it had been teachers assessing the complaints in my case, they would have quickly understood the situation I was in.

Expressly include the right to representation when under investigation. At the beginning of my career, I did not really know my rights, and having represen­tation would have probably helped me a lot.

Limit employer's disclosure to suspensions and terminations only, not every disciplinary action for misconduct or incompetence. If my principal had reported all the complaints about me, the review board would have been overwhelmed with reports about me alone.

Clearly define the notion of significant emotional harm. Not going to church or having a gay best friend would have been enough to cause significant emotional harm to the majority of the students in my class that year.

Protect the privacy of teachers who are found to be unable to fulfill a teacher's professional respon­sibilities because of a physical or mental disability.

Thank you for taking the time to listen to me.

Mr. Chairperson: Thank you for your pre­sen­ta­tion.

      Do members of the com­mit­tee have questions for the presenter?

Mr. Ewasko: Merci, Mme. Cloutier, and your pas­sionate–passion and your story.

      And I just want to assure you that some of the things that you mention in your past and, again, sorry that you had to go through some of that. But from reading through the bill, some of the things that you had gone through would not carry on to the com­mis­sioner as the bill is written today.

      So–but thank you very much for coming to com­mit­tee today and sharing your story.

Mr. Chairperson: If you would like to respond, you're welcome to, but not obligated to.

      Okay. Are there any other questions?

Mr. Nello Altomare (Transcona): Thank you, Mme. Cloutier, for your pre­sen­ta­tion this evening, and for being here to exercise your demo­cratic right to bring your thoughts forward on bills that have con­se­quence here in Manitoba.

      Every bill has con­se­quence, of course, and is im­por­tant. And it's certainly–this is why we have com­mit­tee here in Manitoba, so that we can hear from everyday Manitobans and have their voice added to this very im­por­tant process.

      So, can you tell us just a little bit about how this bill may affect your day-to-day practice as a teacher?

Mr. Chairperson: Mme. Cloutier, go ahead.

A. Cloutier: You'll see that my English has improved a lot since I started teaching.

      Being a teacher, even ex­per­ienced teacher, I always have in the back of my head the parent's voice. And that is something that I think about every day.

* (18:20)

      And I'm ex­per­ienced; I know my rights; I know what I can do; I know what I can't do, and if I may say so, I'm an excellent teacher. I'm a great teacher. But I always have, in the back of my head, what are the parents going to think about what I'm doing.

      And that is scary. That might be one reason one day that I decide not to go to work. If a parent comes to me and says well, I didn't like when you did that, that's a big reason why this bill could affect teachers in their every day live, just having–just being always scared that, oh, what are they going to think about that.

      But I just–one simple example: I teach in a French school, so mostly Catholic, but in the past month, we talked about Ramadan because it was the Ramadan month. And I have a lot of students in my classroom that does Ramadan, so we made it as a big thing in my classroom that I did for Christmas and Easter. And I was scared of doing that because I know that some parents are not going to like it and they might think that it's some­thing that have an effect on their kids.

      So, every­thing that I'm doing I always have the thought of the parents in my head.

Hon. Jon Gerrard (River Heights): Vous avez reçu beaucoup de plaintes qui sont vexatoires, qui sont difficiles à–mais il me semble, c'est très im­por­tant avec ce projet de loi que nous ayons un projet de loi qui protège ceux qui sont enseignants.

Translation

You have been the subject of many vexatious complaints, which is difficult. It seems to me that we should have a bill designed to protect teachers.

A. Cloutier: Je suis parfaitement d'accord avec ce que vous dites. On a besoin de quelque chose pour protéger nos élèves, mais pas au détriment de la pro­tec­tion des enseignants.

      Je suis parfaitement d'accord que si un enseignant fait quelque chose qu'il ne devrait pas faire, il doit y avoir des conséquences–comme il y en a présente­ment. Si un enseignant se fait accuser de harcèlement physique ou sexuel, il y a des choses qui sont déjà mises en place présentement pour faire en sorte que cet enseignant-là soit retiré de la salle de classe et perde son brevet.

      Donc, il y a déjà des choses mises en place présentement pour ça.

Translation

I completely agree with what you are saying. We need something to protect our students, but not at the expense of protections for teachers.

I completely agree that if a teacher does something they should not be doing, there must be conse­quences–as there are currently. When a teacher is accused of physical or sexual harassment, there are measures in place right now to ensure that teacher is removed from the classroom and loses their cer­tification.

So there are currently already measures in place to deal with such situations.  

Mr. Chairperson: We do have 15 seconds, or are there any other questions? Mme. Cloutier, any–oh, Mr. Brar. We have just a few seconds, literally.

Mr. Diljeet Brar (Burrows): Just wanted to say thank you for your pre­sen­ta­tion and I ap­pre­ciate your courage to share your experiences.

Mr. Chairperson: Thank you for your pre­sen­ta­tion, Mme. Cloutier.

      We are grateful to members.

      We are going to move on now to the next pre­senter–[interjection]–okay, we've been made aware that Nicole Lafrenière is not able to present this evening.

      So, I'm going to propose that if the com­mit­tee meets tomorrow–and if the com­mit­tee meets tomor­row to hear public pre­sen­ta­tions, is there leave to hear Ms. Lafrenière first? [Agreed]

      Great. Okay. Now, as previously agreed, we will hear our out-of-town presenter.

      I'd like to invite Joy Smith to the podium.

Joy Smith (The Joy Smith Foundation): Good evening.

Mr. Chairperson: Oh, Mrs. Smith, welcome, and you have 10 minutes to make your pre­sen­ta­tion.

      We welcome you to the Legislature.

J. Smith: Good evening. Thank you for this op­por­tun­ity to speak to you on this very im­por­tant bill.

      You know, I was a teacher for 23 years, at the junior high level mostly, and my husband was a teacher for 26 years. We know how hard teachers work and–most of them, how dedi­cated they are to their profession.

      We both left the profession with–we're very proud of all the years that we spent there and all the students we influenced, and we still see some of those students.

      I am so glad that Bill 35 is being presented here in Manitoba; excellent leadership. You know, right now we've worked to suppress human trafficking in Canada. We've worked over 7,000 files and that means 7,000 survivors of human trafficking; plus their families, you can add three or four or five or six to that number.

      Now, some of you I know around the table because I was an MLA and it's so nice to see you, Dr. Gerrard. You're one of my lovely favourite people.

      And so, when I went to Parliament to be an MP, I went to Parliament–I can't say I'm a very good politician; I never thought I was–but, you know, I was very moved by the plight of young people who were trafficked across this country.

      So, we talk about schools. You know, there's a lot of wonderful teachers, but there are others too. In any profession, whether it's police officers, whether it's doctors, whether it's nurses, we have seen victims of human trafficking from every walk of life: football players, hockey players, everybody.

      So, you know, it's not about as–me as a teacher–it's not about me as a teacher; it's about the kids. Protect the kids. There is evidence, great evidence and we have some cases in our office where kids were trafficked by, you know, I hate to say it, but they were pro­fes­sional teachers.

      So, you know, and this is–I would want to say it's rare. We have a lot of cases, but in this day and age, I think we have to think about one thing. And all the stories you hear from teachers, you know, we were under scrutiny, as teachers, by parents all the time. And why shouldn't we be? Parents raise their children, but also, wonderful teachers across the country impact the children immensely and really enrich their lives.

      But in every segment of society, in the year 2023, we have to protect the children. Every profession, whether it's law or medicine or anything else, all those professions are under account­ability for how they treat the children. Now, we are especially cognizant of what happens when kids are sexually exploited or human trafficked.

      There are other things that, you know, kids might complain about or parents might complain about, like mental, you know, they're being intimidated or bullied or whatever. There is nothing that intimidates or hurts a child as much as sexual ex­ploit­ation or human trafficking, where they're bought and sold like cattle. Traffickers earn in excess of $280,000 per victim per year. It happens less than a kilometre from where you're sitting right now. We've had five cases around this area: two of them came from the church and three of them came from a school.

      And teachers, per se, will not be blackballed because of this bill. They will be respected, and good teachers would support this bill because they want to protect the children. And so, sometimes it can be uncomfortable when a child will accuse someone of doing some­thing. I know my husband, as a male teacher, he always made sure there was another teacher in the room when he met with a student on his own, because that protected him.

      And I think the em­pha­sis has to be on, first of all, protecting the children and, secondly, protecting the integrity of the very good teachers that we have. You know, you've heard the expression one bad apple spoils the barrel, and that's true. We've seen police officers, pastors, heads of cor­por­ations who were traffickers. We have seen johns from all walks of life.

      So, I think–I compliment the gov­ern­ment. I compliment the minister for putting this forward with your com­mit­tees. It's a nonpartisan issue.

* (18:30)

      When I look at Dr. Gerrard and people like that, I mean, there's so–that I know personally–there's very 'integrous' people on all sides of the House.

      And I took the liberty, since I taught so much and for so long, I took the liberty of calling my colleagues before I came here tonight. Every one of them said, this is an excellent bill. This is an excellent bill.

      Now it's up to the students' union–or the teachers' union–to take care of the teachers, and they should. I represented the student–the teachers' union in my career. I love teachers. I love schools. I love books.

      But most of all, I love children, and children should never be put in any compromising position because the most of our victims of human trafficking, and most of the sexually exploited children we have talked to were always afraid to tell anybody because they weren't believed. They carried the blame and shame for years. And I have to say, this bill is an excellent first step in carefully protecting the children. That's first of all.

      It's not about me as a former teacher. It's not about my husband who is a teacher. It's about the kid in front of you because they are at your mercy in many ways, in the classroom.

      And I believe parents need to be very much a part of a child's edu­ca­tion. They should be fully informed of what's going on. And they will have their own positions. But you know the school board has policies, and they are the ones, along with the principals and the super­in­ten­dents, and the teachers in the individual schools and the admin­is­tra­tion, that formulate those policies.

      And those policies need to be around edu­ca­tion in every form. No teacher should be afraid to talk about a subject area, or afraid of parents. And no parents should be afraid of teachers. There should be open com­muni­cation. I think that is so im­por­tant.

      But sadly, we have dealt with a lot of cases, and one little girl in parti­cular that I want to tell you about. She was sexually abused by her teacher for years, and the teacher followed her up through the grades and she was never–it's like you're listening to the stories coming out of the sports world right now.

      I know I'm a personal friend of Sheldon Kennedy's, and I remember having him at a gala to talk about his ex­per­ience and he opened his book and he cried when it came to the paragraph that said, I was talking to this cop, and he believed me.

      Because Sheldon had gone to so many people about his story and no one believed him. And in a classroom, children are afraid to talk to their parents sometimes on this issue and they are afraid to talk to even their best friends.

      So, you know, having this is a great step forward. It really brings us up to 2023. All professions do it. No one should be afraid. Open com­muni­cation should be there. Being a teacher myself for 23 years, and my husband a teacher, we have a deep respect.

      But please, everybody around this table, pass this bill. It will keep the children safe. And you know what, it could be a member of your own family. You would be surprised the people we deal with in human trafficking. You think it can't happen to your children or your grandchildren? You would be mistaken.

      We should all be open and accountable, and be able to defend what we're doing and why we're doing it when we have the interests of the children in our hearts.

      So, I've come here tonight while I have sick husband at home. But I've come here to talk to you because it's so–

Mr. Chairperson: Your time has expired.

      Just to recap for members, there's a five-minute allotment for questions. Questions can be up to 30 seconds. The answer is as long as you would like.

      So, Minister Ewasko, please go ahead.

Mr. Ewasko: Thanks, Ms. Smith, for coming and presenting tonight.

      I know that with your edu­ca­tional back­ground, but then also your ex­per­ience all across this great country of ours–I mean, as the member from Transcona mentioned earlier, we are fairly fortunate in Manitoba for the public to be able to come and represent and demon­strate their demo­cratic right, here at com­mit­tee.

      So, thank you very much for coming and pre­senting. And I might have a question for you next op­por­tun­ity I have.

      Thank you.

Mr. Chairperson: If you'd like to respond, Mrs. Smith, you may.

J. Smith: Well, I feel like it's a real honour to be here.

      I feel like members around the House that are supporting this, and I don't care what party they belong to–very hon­our­able people–and they're thinking about the kids, not about everybody else. Because edu­ca­tion is about the kids when you're a school­teacher. Edu­ca­tion is about the kids.

      And I've seen the ramification of what happens when a child is exploited sexually or when they're so intimidated they're afraid to go to school. You know, I think there are a lot of very brave teachers who are just very strong and they will stand up for what they do and they will work with the parents.

      We need to improve our edu­ca­tion system. We need 'incrus'–increase the standards and increase the com­muni­cation; this should be a room that is filled with people tonight and I'm sad to say it's not. It needs to be filled with people. This is one of the most im­por­tant things.

      So, I really commend you, Minister, and I commend that your com­mit­tees and the Premier (Mrs. Stefanson)–and it's not a partisan thing; I commend anybody around this–I had friends in Parliament on all side of the House, good 'integrous' people. And I just ask you to think about one thing: and that is the pro­tec­tion of the children when you work out all the details around this parti­cular im­por­tant piece of legis­lation.

Mr. Altomare: Thank you, Mrs. Smith, for making your pre­sen­ta­tion this evening. It is im­por­tant that we hear all perspectives.

      A part of this bill is a composition of the panel and in many other professions, the composition of panels that adjudicate their members are made up of majority of their members.

      Tell us about your thoughts about how the composition of the panel here should reflect or be part majority teacher. [interjection]

Mr. Chairperson: Mrs. Smith.  

J. Smith: Sorry, Mr. Chair.

      I think it should be–there–should have a teacher repre­sen­tative on it, sure. But I think the majority should be from the public. I should think it should be parents. I think it should be law en­force­ment that bring their expertise. I think some NGOs should be part, because we all have children, right? I raised six of them.

      I think that panel should not be laced only with educators. I'm very in favour of educators but we need to take this away from the political field. We need to take this into your world, into your–what you see around you, to bring the voice there. It should not be political and this is what I'm fearing about this parti­cular bill.

      I went to Parliament for 12 years, passed two laws that made Canadian history and the politics that got into it was what messed it up. You have done some­thing here, all of you, that is real leadership in this country, real leadership.

      And I have to say, when you make up the panel, you should have repre­sen­tation from all facets of the com­mu­nity. And there should be a teacher element, of course, or a teacher repre­sen­tative but it shouldn't be only that. In my view, it should be from all walks of life, like a doctor, a lawyer, a teacher, a parent, a grandparent, because there's lots of grandparents now raising young children. And then you will get the actual idea of justice for the children, so they're not exploited.

      Thank you for the question; it was a very intel­ligent one.

Mr. Chairperson: We have 20 seconds, Mr. Gerrard.

Mr. Gerrard: Very quickly, you've got inter­national ex­per­ience.

      How does Bill 35 compare with what other juris­dic­tions have?

J. Smith: Unique and new.

      You know, Winnipeg–I mean, we're in the centre of Canada, Dr. Gerrard. And I have to say to you, we're making this country notice that here in Winnipeg, we are leaders–

* (18:40)

Mr. Chairperson: Mrs. Smith, your time is expired.

      Thank you, Mrs. Smith. We're very grateful. I really do not like cutting people off, but I have to because if I let one go for X amount, then I have to let the next person, and before the evening's over, there's–

Floor Comment: It's 5 in the morning.

Mr. Chairperson: It's 5 in the morning, yes.

      Okay, we're going to keep working our way through the list here. Mr. Adam Hildebrandt, are you here? Or online? We're just checking online. It does not look like Adam Hildebrandt is here. We will drop him to the bottom of the list.

      Ms. Gina Cerqueira. I hope I'm saying that right. Are you here? Or online?

      For any who are partici­pating online, there is a feature to raise your hand. If you could do that, then our tech people will be able to find you quickly.

      So, we're going to keep working our way down the list. We're going to put Gina Cerqueira to the bottom of the list.

      Mr. Joel Swaan. Is Joel here? Or online? I believe Joel is online.

      We'll just give a moment for that to–Joel, for you to get hooked in here, and once I get the go‑ahead, I'll recog­nize you to speak.

      You'll have 10 minutes, and then there'll be a five‑minute question period. [interjection]

      Joel–[interjection]–Joel, you know what? Before you get started, for the sake of the proceedings, I'm obliged to recog­nize you.

      We certainly welcome you virtually to the Legislature and, Mr. Joel Swaan, please go ahead. You have the floor for 10 minutes–up to 10 minutes.

Joel Swaan (Garden Valley Teachers' Association): Good evening. My name is Joel Swaan, and I've been a teacher for 20 years, 12 of them in Garden Valley School Division, most recently teaching grade 4, middle-years band and French. And I'm also the president of the Garden Valley Teachers' Association, repre­sen­ting more than 400 teachers, clinicians, prin­cipals, vice‑principals and substitute teachers.

      Sorry, I had to run up the stairs.

      I'm here tonight because like many others, I have some concerns about Bill 35, The Edu­ca­tion Admin­is­tra­tion Amend­ment Act.

      I'm proud of the many teacher–teaching col­leagues that I've seen presenting from their living rooms, kitchens and homes, teachers and parents taking the time to stay up late or take time away from their own children, from marking assignments, or planning tomorrow's lessons to come and speak on legis­lation about which they have sig­ni­fi­cant con­cerns.

      My spouse and I have three children in preschool, in grades 1 and 3. And as a parent, I am in full support of laws that improve child safety.

      In fact, the first point of the teacher code of pro­fes­sional practice is that our primary pro­fes­sional respon­si­bility is to our students. It's our duty to ensure that schools are always safe places, not just safe places for making mistakes or for asking difficult questions, but also safe places that are also free from harm and abuse for every child.

      You will get no argument from me about sup­porting laws to enhance child pro­tec­tion. However, this bill goes beyond the pro­tec­tion of children from harm, and delves into how effective teachers are at teaching the curriculum and the methods they use, with its strong focus on teacher competence.

      I've heard the minister state several times that the bill isn't about competency and that there's a commit­ment to work with MTS to define competency. But to be clear, we're presenting on the bill as it is written, and in its current form, the bill allows for people to make only two kinds of complaints: 8.9(a) pro­fes­sional misconduct; and 8.9(b) that a teacher has been or is incompetent.

      Competency is literally only one of the two things people can report on teachers about, so if this passes in its current form, it will do a disservice to educators and edu­ca­tion.

      I fail to understand how investigating and adjudicating complaints related to a teacher's know­ledge and skills or their ability to instruct and assist learning of the Manitoba curriculum addresses the safety of children, which at one time was the stated in­ten­tion of this bill.

      I've heard the minister say in these meetings that this bill is not intended to remove the division's respon­si­bilities toward teacher competency; however, it obviously isn't clear in the legis­lation as written.

      Again, to be clear, I'm not opposed to standards and regula­tion. My colleagues and I want classrooms to have the best teachers, and we work hard to be the best teachers, to ensure that we're responsive to the growing and evolving needs of our students. Our code of pro­fes­sional conduct requires us to continuously improve professionally, and we aim to improve our competency endlessly. But competency and conduct are two separate issues, and they're inappropriately linked in this bill.

      I'm hired, supervised and evaluated by my employer, Garden Valley School Division, but under Bill 35, the com­mis­sioner has the power to address issues of competence. And I've heard the minister indicate in these meetings that the Bill 35 process through the com­mis­sioner will act alongside this process.

      But what it's really doing is setting up a dual track process. And more than that, in addition to this dual track process, in 8.14(2)(b), the com­mis­sioner can in­vesti­gate on their own initiative the competency of any teacher in this province, with no require­ments or limitations on this allowance within the act.

      The hearing panel will also be made up mostly of non-teachers, which is another example of why competence should not be part of this bill on misconduct. It creates a situation where individuals without expertise in edu­ca­tion are now respon­si­ble for judging teacher competency.

      And I've heard the minister say that the–that MTS will be appointing one of the three panel members. But the bill actually states that MTS only nominates three of the four teachers on the roster. With the fourth member coming from an in­de­pen­dent school, it's possible that any public school teacher coming before the panel might be adjudicated by someone who has never worked in a public school.

      To improve fairness, the panel composition should be con­sistent with other regulated professions in Manitoba, where most of the panel is made up of members from the profession.

      The broad definition of misconduct, which in­cludes 'significal'–significant emotional harm is another red flag. Sig­ni­fi­cant emotional harm or incompetency could be associated with anything from how a student is graded to classroom manage­ment practices to resources or teaching of topics considered sensitive.

      In our school com­mu­nity, we're not immune to parent concerns around 2SLGBTQIA+; using affirm­ing language; having certain books in our libraries, if you're familiar with the South Central Regional Library controversy going on right now in southern Manitoba; using Manitoba Edu­ca­tion's own curricular materials that address family composition, com­pre­hen­sive sex edu­ca­tion or even having members of the 2SLGBTQIA+ com­mu­nity working in our buildings as teachers and support staff.

      To say that, again, simply being a member of the rainbow com­mu­nity has proven to be enough for members of the public to question teacher conduct. Under Bill 35, teachers are being put at risk not just for teaching the approved curriculum regarding gender and sexuality, but even just for simply being who they are in a building with children, these people are under attack.

      And while the minister may suggest that frivolous complaints will be dismissed, this decision is left to a partisan-appointed com­mis­sioner, who them­selves are not protected from attacks from the public if there's a perception that they're not doing their job to the fullest extent.

      To use a less extreme example, in Garden Valley, teachers, principals and even the school board were accused of inflicting sig­ni­fi­cant emotional harm on students simply by enforcing the prov­incial mask mandate during the pandemic.

      The reassurance that frivolous, vexatious or malicious complaints will be weeded out by the com­mis­sioner offers little comfort, as the impact on the accused teacher can be sig­ni­fi­cant depending on whether or how far the in­vesti­gation proceeds before it's deemed un­founded. In meeting with teachers from my association on this bill, one member referred to it as guilty until proven innocent.

      Qualifying sig­ni­fi­cant emotional harm more narrowly would help to minimize this vul­ner­ability for teachers while ensuring pro­tec­tions are in place for students.

      In addition, this bill is silent on whether teachers can have union repre­sen­tation at public hearings. Other regulated professions spe­cific­ally have wording that makes the right to repre­sen­tation clear. This essential repre­sen­tation is missing from Bill 35. And I've heard the minister say in these hearings that it was not intended that teachers be disallowed repre­sen­tation, but the ask here is for the expressed right to repre­sen­tation to be included in the final wording of the bill.

      Finally, I'm also concerned about the ability through the bill for it to be deter­mined that a teacher may not have the capacity to carry out the pro­fes­sional respon­si­bilities of a teacher because of a physical disabil­ity. This part of the legis­lation, found in section 8.29(1)(d), addresses a matter of ableism that isn't otherwise addressed or referred to in any other part of the bill, and its lone appearance in this part of the bill is very disconcerting, especially in this bill that purports to be about student safety.

* (18:50)

      I would like to propose the following amend­ments:

      (1) Remove competence from the bill.

      (2) Ensure that hearing panels are composed of a majority of teachers, in line with the composition of disciplinary panels of other pro­fes­sional bodies in Manitoba.

      (3) Include the expressed right to repre­sen­tation for a teacher being investigated.

      (4) Limit reports by employers to suspensions and terminations as opposed to any and all discipline for pro­fes­sional misconduct or incompetence.

      (5) Define sig­ni­fi­cant emotional harm; this includes specific language related to psychological harm to the pupil or child where the act is based on a characteristic protected by The Human Rights Code, repeated con­duct that could reasonably cause a pupil or child to be humiliated or intimidated, or a single occurrence that could reasonably be expected to have a lasting and harmful effect on the pupil or child; and

      (6) Protect the privacy of teachers who are deter­mined not to have the capacity to carry out the pro­fes­sional respon­si­bilities of a teacher because of a phys­ical or mental dis­abil­ity.

      Thank you for your time.

Mr. Chairperson: Mr. Swaan, thank you for your pre­sen­ta­tion.

      We will now proceed with a five-minute question period. Each question can be up to 30 seconds, and the answer, Mr. Swaan, is at your discretion, but the five-minute limit on the entire time does remain.

Mr. Ewasko: Thank you, Mr. Swaan, for taking the time out of your busy schedule to come tonight to give your pre­sen­ta­tion.

      I know that you've got some–I think you said Cub Scouts to get back to or–so thanks for your pre­sen­ta­tion again.

      So, just to clarify–not to clarify–but just to inform you, on the section of the bill that you mentioned in regards to incompetence due to a dis­abil­ity, that's misconduct, and that's because of a dis­abil­ity; that's why the teacher is being found incompetent.

      I do have another question for you, but I've run out of my 30 seconds.

Mr. Chairperson: Mr. Swaan, if you would like to respond you are free to, but not obligated.

J. Swaan: Thank you. I ap­pre­ciate that.

      Thank you, Minister. I think the fact that it's only in one place without any definition about what that might look like–there's no terms of reference on how a teacher's physical dis­abil­ity might lead to their incompetence, and so I would look for that clari­fi­ca­tion before the bill is passed as opposed to passing the bill and coming up with the back­ground later.

Mr. Altomare: Thank you, Mr. Swaan, for your pre­sen­ta­tion this evening.

      I do echo what the minister says when it comes to the extra stuff that you're doing later this evening and how im­por­tant that is as well. You did talk about how this bill may create what you described as a dual-track process.

      Can you expand on that a little bit more please?

Mr. Chairperson: Mr. Swaan, you're welcome to respond but not obligated.

J. Swaan: Thank you.

      Currently, if there is a concern about teacher misconduct, a parent may approach me or may approach my principal. They'll be directed to me. If it's not resolved there, then my principal will be involved.

      If it's not resolved there, then my super­in­ten­dent will be involved. And at some point in that process, it may be deter­mined that some sort of disciplinary action is necessary. So for that, there might be some sort of penalty.

      And then, through the com­mis­sioner system, there may be, again, another deter­min­ation of com­petency which would require, perhaps, a second penalty for the same offence.

      And for clinicians, who are also guided under the act and also report to their pro­fes­sional body, it's potential that they may even have a third track of respon­si­bility regarding the same offence, and they may be penalized even a third time.

      So, I think that we're taking some­thing away from school divisions that school divisions are doing well around teacher competency, and we're sending it to another party without removing the obligation from the first party.

      Because I've been told that both parties will work simultaneously or hand in hand or alongside each other, which creates two or three possible mechanisms for discipline for a teacher or clinician.

Mr. Gerrard: I'd like a little bit more clari­fi­ca­tion over this concern that teachers with a physical, or it could be mental, dis­abil­ity could be declared in­competent because of their dis­abil­ity.

      Which clause is that, and why are you so concerned about it?

J. Swaan: In section 8.29(1)(d), and I'm sorry that I'm working off of loose-leaf here and not a binder, so for me it is on page 21 of the bill: "deter­mine that the investigated teacher does not have the capacity to carry out the pro­fes­sional respon­si­bilities of a teacher because of a physical or mental dis­abil­ity."

      So, I know that the employer might be involved or MTS might be involved in whether a teacher has an injury or dis­abil­ity and requires short-term dis­abil­ity, requires long-term dis­abil­ity, requires access to assist­ance, aided devices to teach in the classroom, but the only part in the bill that physical dis­abil­ity is men­tioned, is where the com­mis­sioner can deter­mine that a teacher doesn't have the capacity to teach because of a physical dis­abil­ity. And there's no other reference to that in the bill.

Mr. Chairperson: We have 20-some­thing seconds. Are there any further questions, or–

      Mr. Altomare, we have 14 seconds.

Mr. Altomare: Thank you, again, Mr. Swaan.

      It's good to hear from people out of town as well, and I enjoy. It's great that we have this process where we can present virtually.

Mr. Chairperson: Mr. Swaan, we thank you for your pre­sen­ta­tion.

      The time is over. We now move to the next presenter, Mr. Scott Durling.

      Mr. Scott Durling, are you here?

      Welcome. You have the floor for 10 minutes, Mr. Durling. Please go ahead.

Scott Durling (Private Citizen): So, my name is Scott Durling. I'm a teacher, a husband of a pediatric fellow in Winnipeg. I'm a master's student at the Uni­ver­sity of Manitoba and also a former student of Kelsey McKay. And although I was not a student that was impacted by him in the ways that some of my friends and peers have, I do take this matter very seriously.

      As a student in the faculty of edu­ca­tion at the Uni­ver­sity of Manitoba, studying edu­ca­tion in my master's, my current thesis is looking at competency. When we're thinking about student safety, I have direct–directly challenge the idea of competency in this bill. I do not believe, as written, that this bill produces student safety in describing competency, and there's–what I'm speaking to you spe­cific­ally is, in section 5, that the minister establishes competent standards that a teacher must be–meet in order to be issued and to maintain a teaching certificate. And also, 8.14(2), that the com­mis­sioner may initiate and in­vesti­gate, on the com­mis­sioner's own initiative, if it is in the public interest, on the conduct of a teacher and also the competency. 

      So, like Mr. Swaan, the only two things that the com­mis­sion can engage in is either the conduct or the competency, and I'm failing to understand how competency is directly related to student safety. The idea of competence as a standard in teaching is to provide a framework for defining the knowledge, skills and dispositions that teachers need to possess in order to take effect–or to effectively educate students, and we're using competency, also, in edu­ca­tion, through its recent learning framework docu­ment that was published last year.

      There's several limitations to competence, parti­cularly as they relate to teaching. Standards–or, sorry–these competencies don't reflect current research for a com­mu­nity's culture. So, competence standards are typically developed based on current reach–research and best practice, but these can often be delayed or based on poor models of education that are political dependent.

* (19:00)

      When we rely on perhaps outdated forms of com­petency to deter­mine whether a teacher is able to teach, we might be actually moving towards and relying on harmful colonial perceptions about what teaching and learning is, and that can, in fact, be detrimental.

      We're also relying on an idea that a com­mu­nity might have specific ideas about what they require out of teachers, and like bill 64, which tried to centralize power and decide, sort of, what was happening through the gov­ern­ance of com­mu­nities–competency coming from an overarching in­sti­tution might actually hinder innovation and also might impact the ways in which teaching and learning is required, and–or is–the kinds of things that is, kind of, expected out of a com­mu­nity. And so, what's best left to competency is, rather, a divisional approach that–where the nuances or ideas of competency is based not on an overarching sort of idea, but rather from a divisional com­mu­nity or school culture.

      These kinds of competencies can also be too broad or too specific. Competence can either–and it can be difficult to apply some of these into practice, spe­cific­ally in that they might not provide enough guidance on how to implement them effectively and also, if they're too specific, that they might not be relevant, even based on some of what we know in edu­ca­tional research.

      Competencies are also contextual factors. So the language of competencies for students, for example, is based on an inter­national level and articulated down to a national level, and then basically described through a province-to-province basis. So, the way in which we describe a teacher or the way in which we're looking at competency from an inter­national level might not actually be relevant or, in fact, innovative in the way that we know edu­ca­tion needs to move towards.

      Competency also may not reflect the full range of a teacher's respon­si­bility. So competency focuses on instructional practices, but they do not fully reflect the broad range of respon­si­bilities that teachers have, such as building relationships with students, collabor­ating with colleagues and engaging in pro­fes­sional dev­elop­ment. So, competency can narrow the defining features of what a good teacher is, and that is based on, I think, an archaic way of viewing what teaching and learning should be.

      Furthermore, this doesn't necessarily promote the idea of professionalism, but rather as a technical model where teachers are acting as a technician rather than as an intellectually thinking teacher.

      So, when we're thinking about this bill, I'm also unsure about how this bill is proactively protecting children. As far as I can tell, many of the qualities of this bill are based on retroactive pro­tec­tions for children. In section 8.12(1) with the complaint of a teacher, the commissioner can deter­mine not to in­vesti­gate or to in­vesti­gate, but at–in this case to not in­vesti­gate or take further action if the complaint was frivolous, trivial or, in the sense of what Mr. Swaan was talking about, which–whether or not emotional harm is being caused.

      My question around the emotional harm com­ponent of this bill is how that might be deter­mined and whether or not–if any com­mu­nity member can perhaps, like, learn about the things that I'm teaching in school, and they have an exception to that, how that relates to the parental respon­si­bility of engaging me in con­ver­sa­tion about the kinds of things that I'm teaching about.

      So, for example, learning experiences that are related to gender-affirming care, abortion, transgender rights, drag storytime, Land Back or white supremacy, how might somebody who takes exceptions to these ideas connect to whether or not I'm emotionally harming children or acting in pro­fes­sional respon­si­bility for being a teacher in 2023.

      And, lastly, one of the thing that I'm concerned about is the way in which these kinds of complaints might occur that actually drives good teachers out.

      When we have many kinds of injustices in our society, and we are teaching about them with students, is the way in which a student might–or, is a way in which somebody makes a complaint, or multiple com­plaints–or, you know, there's some­thing that I'm thinking about, which is online presences and creating like groups of people to go and attack teachers.

      These kinds of stories are well documented in the United States that push educators out. Overall, I do not believe that this bill as written demonstrates that it actually solves student competencies–or, sorry, solves students safety, but rather tries to make an over­reaching system that attacks teachers and their pro­fes­sional respon­si­bilities.

Mr. Chairperson: Thank you, Mr. Durling, for your pre­sen­ta­tion.

      We will now move to a time of questions.

Mr. Ewasko: Thank you, Mr. Durling, for coming tonight and presenting, and good luck on your masters as you continue to do that.

      Just in–just to let you know. So, bill 34, right now in its present form–because you've mentioned that many times–it is set up as a legis­lative forum and op­por­tun­ity to then go forward and then write some of the regula­tions and the standards and that.

      And so, we've committed to working with Manitoba Teachers' Society, ad­di­tional teachers, Manitoba School Boards Association, to write those standards.

      So, do you agree or not that we should be writing those standards in Manitoba for teachers?

S. Durling: As an idea of competency around stan­dards, written from an overarching perspective, no.

      I think that writing these kinds of things can be used in ways that don't reflect current research, and they can be used in ways that limit the ability to decide what good teaching is, and what good teaching is not.

      And those can become, I think, politically motivated, that move us away from things like reconciliation, or moving towards climate justice.

Mr. Altomare: Well, thank you, Mr. Durling, for presenting tonight.

      It is interesting that you're in a master's program right now that's dealing with competency. I'd like you to expand on that a little bit more.

      What does the current research say about how teacher competency can be defined, and how–what can it be founded upon?

S. Durling: My specific research is not directly towards teacher competency, but rather global competencies that are being developed.

      I think one of the things that worries me around competency is that the way in which competencies have been defined over inter­national in­sti­tutions are based on colonial mindsets that further perpetuate many of the injustices that we see in our society.

      And so, if we have governmental bodies moving towards defining what a good teacher–or, good teach­ing, or bad teaching–is, those can be used in ways that perpetuate the kinds of colonial violence that we see happening in Canada and around the world. And so, you know, for us to–and I'm thinking about parti­cularly in the United States–is a good teacher one that speaks to critical race theory.

      And I think that's one of the problems that we see coming out of these, is that we have many politically motivated parts of what good teaching is and good teaching–or, bad teaching is. And so, if we're relying on these kinds of models, we're setting ourselves up to further injustices.

* (19:10)

Mr. Gerrard: As we heard from an earlier presenter, there is already a mechanism to look at teacher com­petency. You're studying this.

      Tell us what that mechanism is currently, and how well it's working.

Floor Comment: For teachers?

Mr. Gerrard: Yes.

Mr. Chairperson: Sorry–Mr. Durling. I have to do that so when they type it out–you know. Anyway, Mr. Durling, go ahead.

S. Durling: So, as far as I'm aware–so, if there was an issue of competency, like Mr. Swaan said, that goes to my principal or myself, and there's dialogue. If that is unresolved it goes up to super­in­ten­dents.

      And I think that's one of the things that I'm kind of pointing out, is that the–it's–competency is–and capacity is nuanced. It's based on com­mu­nity. It's based on research and innovation. It's based on teachers' abilities to, like–and–teachers' abilities and who they are.

      And so, like, currently there's already systems–if I'm not practicing in ways that I think are ap­pro­priate, there's ways already for us to approach that.

Mr. Chairperson: The hon­our­able minister, we have 15 seconds.

Mr. Ewasko: Mr. Durling, thank you for your pre­sen­ta­tion today. And because we've only got a couple seconds, it's more of a comment.

      So, you made a couple references to a couple situations earlier on, and just to let you know that the com­mis­sioner must follow The Human Rights Code, which has already been confirmed that that would not be followed under this legis­lation. So, I'd just–

Mr. Chairperson: Your time has expired.

      Mr. Durling, thank you so much. We must move on to the next presenter, Ms. Amy Warriner. I'm told Amy is virtual.

      Amy, we'll give you a moment to link in here, and as soon as I can see you, I'll recog­nize you to speak for up to 10 minutes.

      How is everyone doing for temperature? Just while we're–the windows are good? Yes, okay, all right. Want everyone to be comfortable.

      Hello, Amy. Welcome to com­mit­tee. You have the floor for 10–up to 10 minutes, and we look forward to hearing from you. Please go ahead.

Amy Warriner (Private Citizen): Good evening, everyone. I'm just grateful to have this op­por­tun­ity to address the com­mit­tee today.

      I know that many have already said it, but it bears repeating, my pre­sen­ta­tion today should not be taken as any indication that I'm not in favour of legis­lation to protect children. Their pro­tec­tion and care have always been, and remain, one of my primary concerns.

      So, my name is Amy Warriner, and I'm speaking here today as an educator of 27 years of ex­per­ience. I've worked rurally for 13 and now in the City of Winnipeg for the past 14 years, and I've loved both experiences.

      Over the course of my career, I've taught every grade from kindergarten to grade 12. I've been a school counsellor. I've occupied the roles of vice-principal and principal. I have three degrees 'incrilu­ding' a master's in edu­ca­tional admin­is­tra­tion. I'm also the president of my local division's administrators association.

      In addition, I'm currently involved in two min­is­terial projects. First, to support the renewed vision of French immersion, working with the Bureau de l'édu­ca­tion française principal advisory team, as well as a member of the prov­incial principal learning network, focusing on the pillar of improving student en­gage­ment.

      Today, however, I'm appearing in my most im­por­tant roles, that of citizen and parent. I have three children who have been well served by our current public edu­ca­tion system. As a member of the teaching press–profession, I take great pride in the work that we do and I firmly believe that teachers need to subscribe to standards of pro­fes­sional values and conduct which are currently reflected in our code of pro­fes­sional practice.

      With my ex­per­ience as a parent, teaching pro­fes­sional to–and teaching pro­fes­sional to frame my pre­sen­ta­tion today, I'd like to begin by noting that the edu­ca­tion admin­is­tra­tion amend­ment act risks ap­pearing as a knee-jerk response to allegations of teacher misconduct, and especially those coming from media.

      It's an unfor­tunate association to make, as it is my belief that a formal body for teacher certification is actually a positive one and would be a positive move if done properly. It could elevate the teaching pro­fession for the sake and well-being of our students. It's a lofty and admirable goal, a goal that, in principle, I support.

      I have some concerns, however, regarding lan­guage and intent presented in Bill 35 that I wish to bring to your attention. I request that this com­mit­tee consider altering the scope and refining its intent in the areas of teacher competence; the number of teachers on hearing 'panimal'–panels–on the hearing panels, pardon; the concept of sig­ni­fi­cant emotional harm to a student; and elements of procedural fairness.

      It's im­por­tant to me that you understand that as I speak to you day–today, over the course of my vast ex­per­ience in edu­ca­tion, I've encountered very few teachers who were not entirely committed to student success and well-being. I feel–fear that current dis­course risks giving public a false sense that their edu­ca­tion system is failing their children when the public narrative seems to revolve around outlier behaviours and other components of a failing edu­ca­tion system. And those are untrue.

      My ex­per­ience has led me to value and ex­per­ience hundreds of dedi­cated pro­fes­sionals who con­sistently demon­strate kindness, compassion, knowledge, com­mit­ment, understanding and professionalism, and we cannot lose sight of this as we discuss this proposed legis­lation. Further, let me note that as an educator and parent, I've ex­per­ienced a col­lab­o­ration, creativity and innovation of the public school system as it has worked to meet the needs of children, my own included.

      And today, as I address you, I would like to speak to you both about the strengths and pitfalls of Bill 35, and I propose to you a series of alternatives so that as you reflect, you do so armed with research and ad­di­tional infor­ma­tion.

      First, I would like this com­mit­tee to consider removing all references currently written in the act which refer to teacher competence. Teacher compe­tence is a very complex concept and needs to be assessed in light of current research with a deep under­standing of pro­fes­sional practice, and it cannot be fairly adjudicated by a panel that includes members who are not knowledgeable, educated, trained or ex­per­ienced in a school setting. It's not a black and white question, and in order to assess it, the person evalu­ating a teacher's competence must exert a subjective use of pro­fes­sional judgment.

      Pro­fes­sional judgment relies on supervisory use of pro­fes­sional knowledge, contextual under­standing balanced with the systemic application and–of sup­port. The research high­lighted in the report of the Com­mis­sion on Kindergarten to Grade 12 Edu­ca­tion underscores the need for ap­pro­priate pro­fes­sional dev­elop­ment to occur with a com­mu­nity–within a com­mu­nity of pro­fes­sional learners, and it highlights the need for pro­fes­sional standards to be clearly articu­lated. In fact, the research cited by the com­mis­sion works to define teacher excellence and does so by citing multiple factors that would influence and sup­port such standards.

      Competence does not belong in legis­lation, but rather, it must exist as part of a process, which is better supported in the field by qualified, educated and ex­per­ienced pro­fes­sionals in a supervisory role–in fact, that of the employer.

      In addition to the idea of adjudication of com­petence, the assessment of complaints to the hearing panel must be informed by ex­per­ience from the field, and therefore, the members of that hearing panel must have majority repre­sen­tation from people with ex­per­ience teaching in a classroom.

      Further, when school leadership is the object of a complaint, the panel must also have a majority repre­sen­tation of members having school leadership ex­per­ience. Just as we would not want a doctor to be judged by teachers, for example, the inverse is also true, which makes the point that expertise matters.

      Again, the report of the Com­mis­sion on Kinder­garten to Grade 12 Edu­ca­tion highlights the need for a profession to govern itself. The research cited from that report clearly supports my assertion. A balance, though, must be struck for public account­ability and legitimacy. There must be a majority teacher repre­sen­tation on the panel when discussions of teacher certification occur.

      As I've cited previously, expertise really does matter. This is why I strongly recom­mend that the wording of a sig­ni­fi­cant emotional harm to a student be removed from this legis­lation. It's a slippery slope when dealing with the complaint. Who is to define the meaning of significant emotional harm? Who has the expertise? How can it be measured? And until these questions are answered, the risk to those of us who diligently serve our students is too high.

      Additionally, we have current processes in place that serve the pro­tec­tion of children well, and allow us at a school level to do our jobs and support children with ap­pro­priate pro­gram­ming. There's systemic oversight and dispute reso­lu­tion processes already legis­lated in The Public Schools Act on ap­pro­priate edu­ca­tional pro­gram­ming.

      Further, there exists bodies assigned to advocate for children and their families through the office of the Manitoba Advocate for Children and Youth, and the inclusion of this wording is unnecessary and creates multiple system redundancies.

      Let the wording of the legis­lation reflect, for example–yesterday's presenter, Ms. Dobbelaere's def­inition, as it was clear, com­pre­hen­sive and targeted on student safety, all of which are concepts that I support.

* (19:20)

      Finally I'd like to address the lack of adequate procedural fairness for teachers who are the object of a complaint. There are two main failings in this legis­lation as it's currently written: first, it does not explicitly state that a teacher shall receive repre­sen­tation during an in­vesti­gation. This is a sig­ni­fi­cant shortcoming. If the purpose of the legis­lation is to protect the safety of children in our care, we must also ensure that the process itself is designed for the safety of all parties for it to be considered just. As a system, we must always uphold its values for everyone.

      Secondly, the report of the com­mis­sion on kindergarten to grade 12 edu­ca­tion stresses the need for trans­par­ency. Anonymity is, in fact, the opposite. It has no place in a fair and just process. Additionally we allow–when we allow complaints to be made anonymously, we create a climate for abuse. If a person is feeling victimized, there are procedural ac­com­moda­tions that can be made to allow that person a sense of safety. But the process itself cannot be undermined by 'complaintant' anonymity. We have an obligation to provide a process deemed fair for all parties.

      In summary, the report of the com­mis­sion on kindergarten to grade 12 edu­ca­tion clearly outlines what a pro­fes­sional teacher college, for example, should consist of, and this legis­lation clearly misses the scope of those recom­men­dations and instead focuses solely on concepts of discipline. This legis­lation is missing an im­por­tant op­por­tun­ity to elevate our profession.

      As a parent, I want high quality instruction for my children with a view to their unique talents and gifts. As a taxpayer I want to avoid waste and redundancy, and as a member of the teaching profession I want to protect its integrity. I don't want bad teachers; I want great teachers.

      I support the dev­elop­ment of a teacher pro­fes­sional certification body to elevate our profes­sion, protect our children and support public account­ability, but I request that this com­mit­tee re-evaluate the language and scope of this legis­lation as it is currently written.

Mr. Chairperson: Ms. Warriner, thank you for your pre­sen­ta­tion.

      We will now proceed to five minutes of questions, each question not longer than 30 seconds.

      Minister Ewasko, please go ahead.

Mr. Ewasko: Thank you, Mrs. Warriner, for coming on tonight and exercising your demo­cratic right coming to com­mit­tee and thank you very much for bringing forward also a few ideas in regards to amend­ments to the bill.

      So just for–just a quick point of clarity: any anonymous points or things that I brought forward to the com­mis­sioner is automatically denied and not looked at. Anonymous complaints are not looked at.

      Secondly, just a quick question: you mentioned a teachers college. Would you be in favour of a teachers college? Why or why not?

Mr. Chairperson: Ms. Warriner, please go ahead, if you'd like to.

A. Warriner: Yes, thanks. No, I think I would like that reference to be understood as a body of self-gov­ern­ment. Whether I use the term correctly or not, I think it is an im­por­tant aspect that can be dealt with and is dealt with in many pro­fes­sional areas and dealt with fairly by repre­sen­tation from the field that it represents.

      So, I think that that's the clarity I'd like to bring to that comment.

Mr. Altomare: And thank you, Ms. Warriner, for your pre­sen­ta­tion. Thank you for your work on Bureau de l'éducation française advisory team. It's really im­por­tant work, work that can't go understated.

      As a school principal, I'd like you to reflect on how this bill may alter your practice as a school leader. [interjection]

Mr. Chairperson: Ms. Warriner, please go ahead.

A. Warriner: Sorry.

      Yes, I've heard you ask that question of other people, and I've reflected on it. I think that, in large part, what's already been stated and answered in that is quite true. I think that the effects can be, you know, in terms of the types of complaints that might be brought forth and how those would be dealt with in dual systems and dual analysis or in­vesti­gations, both by the employer and then by the hearing panel or the com­mis­sioner, in which case I think that those types of things can become extra­ordin­arily time consuming for me in a role as a school leader. And that when they're frivolous, those things can cause a great deal of harm beyond the scope of what people understand.

      I think that, in terms of wanting to elevate and protect our profession, we need to have oversight; we do need that. I think it's currently provided very well by our employers and I think in­vesti­gations are thorough when it comes to many, many issues. I sup­port the bill in principle for the pro­tec­tion of children and to protect them from ex­ploit­ation; there's no denying that.

      I think in terms of the day-to-day impacts of the work that I do, the scope is actually quite large and probably would bear a deep analysis.

Mr. Gerrard: Thank you for your pre­sen­ta­tion.

      Just as I understand it, you were talking about the assessment of competence. And we have, already, an approach. And I think you're suggesting that the current approach is designed so that if you've got a teacher who's struggling, you can take that teacher and help the teacher to become a great teacher.

      Whereas, you're concerned about the process in this bill for assessing competence might actually be more penalizing and not helpful.

Mr. Chairperson: Mr. Gerrard, your time has expired.

      Ms. Warriner, if you wish to respond, you may do so.

A. Warriner: Yes, I think that's a fairly excellent summation of, sort of, the point that I was trying to make around that.

      I think that teacher competence is contextual sometimes, and so different things can happen to support teachers to be great teachers. And I think, in the process of supporting, we have op­por­tun­ities to address when competence is lacking.

      And, should other steps and actions be required, there are processes in place for that that allow those people a fair and due process.

Mr. Chairperson: We have 28 seconds remaining. I see Minister Ewasko.

Mr. Ewasko: Thanks, Ms. Warriner. And you know what? I think you mentioned it, but I think we all echo it: we do want continued great teachers.

      We already do have great teachers in this great province of ours. I think at the same time, with Bill 35, I think when we come to the–writing the standards and that, I think we're going to protect kids and teachers.

      So, thanks for your pre­sen­ta­tion tonight.

Mr. Chairperson: Ms. Warriner, we've run out of time. Thank you for sharing with us, we are very ap­pre­cia­tive.

      We now move to the next presenter, Ms. Jacqueline Ross. Is Jacqueline Ross here? I see movement in the room, but I don't think that's Jacqueline Ross. I think someone's just–not online. We will move Ms. Jacqueline Ross to the bottom of the list.

      Is Ms. Clare Burns here or online? And again, online presenters, if I do call your name, please raise your hand so that our moderators can see. Okay, Ms. Clare Burns will move to the bottom of the list and ask in–later on this evening.

      Ms. Rebecca Sulkers. Ms. Rebecca Sulkers? Is Rebecca here or online? Ms. Rebecca Sulkers will be moved to the bottom of the list.

      Mr. Gabriel–or, I hope I'm saying it right–Hurley. Is it Gabriel or Gabriel? [interjection] Gabriel, my apologies.

      Welcome to com­mit­tee. We invite you to share your thoughts with us. You have 10 minutes, and please go ahead.

Gabriel Hurley (Private Citizen): In the month of February, 2021, an Ontario science teacher named Chanel Pfahl, made a mistake which I hope none of you have ever made: she posted a political opinion on Facebook.

      On a non–a public facing page, the teacher criticized what she called, critical race theory, which she believed to be a political movement associated with promoting anti-capitalism and the idea that all white people are inherently racist.

      She wrote, quote, kids aren't in school to be indoctrinated with critical race theory. Schools should be non-partisan. Focus on modelling kindness to everyone and speak out against any form of discrimi­nation you see. End quote.

      Another teacher on this Facebook group reported her for voicing her opinion. As a result, she was suspended for one week from her job, without pay, and subject to an in­vesti­gation by the Ontario College of Teachers, an in­vesti­gation which threatened her licence to teach in Ontario.

* (19:30)

      Some of you may be less concerned by this event than others. Perhaps you may disagree strongly with the opinions that she voiced, but should we only support due process for those who have the opinions we support?

      Consider that Ms. Pfahl is not just a science teacher but also a private citizen, and that she wrote the offending comment outside of school hours in a private discussion group on a topic that is very much now a matter of public debate in Ontario. There is no evidence that she had ever in her own classes had a complaint from her students on what she taught or from the parents of those students. Instead, the complaint came from another teacher, and it was only about the Facebook post.

      After a year of in­vesti­gation, the Ontario College of Teachers issued her an oral caution, a warning not to voice her opinions again, lest she face more severe con­se­quences next time.

      I bring this story to light because it relates to the proposed changes in Bill 35. These changes allow for a complaints process that is overly broad in scope and lacking in due process.

      The bill would create a gov­ern­ment com­mis­sioner with the power to in­vesti­gate and ban from the teaching profession any teacher found guilty of pro­fes­sional misconduct. The bill gives some examples of what pro­fes­sional misconduct means, but it also specifies that the term is not limited to those examples. In fact, pro­fes­sional misconduct could mean anything that the com­mis­sioner believes makes the accused unsuitable to be a teacher.

      No doubt, anyone found guilty of child abuse should be kept as far away from the teaching pro­fession as possible, but pro­fes­sional competence is best judged by a teacher's employer. The bill creates a hearing panel composed mostly of non-teachers to decide on a teacher's pro­fes­sional competence, cir­cumventing the respon­si­bilities of the school principal and divisional super­in­ten­dent.

      If a school division has no concern about keeping its employee in the classroom, then why should a Manitoba com­mis­sioner or a panel of non-teachers get involved?

      There are also problems with the process itself. The legis­lation allows any person to make a complaint about a teacher's alleged pro­fes­sional misconduct or incompetence. The complainants need not be the teacher's student or the parent of the teacher's student or have ever come in contact with that teacher. It could simply be somebody who sees a teacher having a little too much to drink after a Friday night hockey game and decides that this teacher doesn't meet their puritanical standards for what an educator ought to be. Or someone who spots a teacher's risqué photo on a dating app, and figures that anyone with a teaching licence should be a paragon of Victorian virtue.

      The Manitoba Teachers' Society already has a code of professional practice. This exists to maintain standards of professionalism and an orderly school environ­ment.

      One key element of the code is that, quote: "A member first directs any criticism of the pro­fes­sional activity and related work of a colleague to that col­league in private. Only after informing the colleague of the intent to do so, the complainant may direct in con­fi­dence the criticism to ap­pro­priate officials through the proper channels of com­muni­cation." Close quote.

      And furthermore, that, quote: "A member does not bypass imme­diate author­ity to reach higher author­ity without first exhausting the proper channels of com­muni­cation."

      Bill 35 encourages colleagues to act in an unprofessional manner by acting against the code of conduct, just like the teacher who thought that Ms. Chanel Pfahl should suffer for her inadvisable Facebook opinions.

      The teaching profession is constantly affected by public debate and rightly so. Even for those who do not have children, teachers are involved in shaping the minds of people who make up their com­mu­nities, but it also means that teachers are often subject to unfair criticism from multiple directions and from people with a variety of political agendas.

      By creating an overly broad definition of mis­conduct, usurping the respon­si­bility for pro­fes­sional standards, and creating a complaints process that is unfair and easy to abuse, the drafters of this bill have strayed from its original purpose.

      Respected members of this com­mit­tee, I ask you: Narrow the focus of the bill to match the original purpose: protecting children from sexual abuse and physical harm.

      Thank you.

Mr. Chairperson: Mr. Hurley, thank you for your pre­sen­ta­tion.

      We will now begin the five minutes allotted for questions; no question more than 30 seconds, the answer is as long as you would like.

      Mr. Ewasko, please go ahead.

Mr. Ewasko: Thank you, Mr. Hurley, for making it back here today, and thanks for your pre­sen­ta­tion.

      So, quick couple questions I have for you. So, first of all–and it's more of a comment, and then you can comment on it. We've had some edu­ca­tion stake­holders or partners chime in on the bill and basically say that the definition is not broad enough, first thing.

      Secondly, because I've only got a couple seconds, so, what is the present practice, from your opinion, on how misconduct is dealt with?

Mr. Chairperson: Mr. Hurley, please go ahead.

G. Hurley: So, in regards to the first question, I saw the pre­sen­ta­tion from the Canadian Centre for Child Pro­tec­tion yesterday. What I understand her concerns to be is that there are specific examples that she would like included in the definition. That's not my concern. Adding more specific examples does not concern me.

      What concerns me is the part at the begin­ning where it says pro­fes­sional misconduct of a teacher means conduct that makes them unsuitable to be a teacher, including, but not limited to, the following.

      So, the problem isn't that adding more examples would cause an issue. The problem is that those examples are including but not limited to. So, for example, she gave an example of, oh, gosh what was it–conduct towards students–no, conduct towards children who are not your students. That is not a concern for me. And just for the record, I am a teacher.

      The concern is that adding that would not limit the definition at all. There are no limits other than that it's in the opinion of the com­mis­sioner that the conduct would make them unsuitable to be a teacher, with no definition of what those things could be.

Mr. Altomare: Thank you, Mr. Hurley, for coming on day two of com­mit­tee hearings.

      It's great that you're partici­pating in this process. Your voice is an im­por­tant one, and I want you to expand a little bit more regarding the lack of due process. What portions of this bill raise your concerns around lack of due process?

Mr. Chairperson: Mr. Hurley, please go ahead.

G. Hurley: Thank you for the question.

      I'm concerned that it could lead to opinion shopping, where, for example, if you have a concern about what your–what the teacher in a classroom is doing, you could either go to the school, or you could go directly to the com­mis­sioner, or if you don't like the response from one you could go to the other.

      As I've already mentioned, the code of pro­fes­sional practice, as it stands for teachers, is that if you have a concern about professionalism, then you need to talk to the teacher, your colleague, first. But, because the–this bill allows anyone to make a complaint, that could lead to unprofessional conduct, or at least encourage unprofessional conduct, by encouraging teachers to contact a com­mis­sioner with regards to what they believe to be unprofessional conduct rather than contacting their colleague.

Mr. Gerrard: I'm struggling trying to understand why the bill has competency.

      We seem to have a pretty good way of addressing teacher competency, so why do we need to duplicate it and to impose a different definition or a new way of doing it? [interjection]

Mr. Chairperson: I'm sorry, my mic was not on.

      Mr. Hurley, please go ahead.

G. Hurley: I don't know.

      Certainly, concerns about competence are some­thing that everybody should care about for teachers. I–I've–so–but I can't speak for why it's included in this bill.

Mr. Ewasko: So, Mr. Hurley, just–quick question.

      I had asked you earlier about what the present process is and you didn't quite answer that, but just in regards to competence, we've already committed that in regards to teacher standards here in Manitoba, and as it's been mentioned from a couple prior presenters, here in Manitoba­–and the Manitoba Teachers' Society agrees as well–that we actually have to sit down and create those standards for teachers and to write them.

      Those con­sul­ta­tions are going to happen with teachers, with employers, with teacher repre­sen­tatives, et cetera. So, give me 15 seconds of your com­ments on both.

* (19:40)

Mr. Chairperson: Mr. Hurley, go right ahead.

G. Hurley: Nothing wrong with esta­blish­ing stan­dards, but the question is, how are they addressed in the school?

      Currently, teachers are observed by principals in their teaching, and that's where the discussions about competence should start.

Mr. Chairperson: Mr. Hurley, thank you. Thanks for your pre­sen­ta­tion, and thank you for coming out. We do ap­pre­ciate it.

      I'm going to call Terri Willard, who's the next presenter. Terri Willard, are you here virtually or in person? Not virtual, it appears, not in person. Terri Willard will go to the bottom of the list.

      Mr. Sam–I hope I say it correctly–Zurzolo. Mr. Zurzolo is online. We will–Hello, Mr. Zurzolo, do I say it right?

Sam Zurzolo (Private Citizen): Mr. Zurzolo, Zurzolo. However you want to say it. Don't mind.

Mr. Chairperson: Okay, we were discussing it here. Welcome to the committee. You have 10 minutes to present. We look forward to hearing your thoughts.

      You have the floor for 10 minutes.

S. Zurzolo: Forgive me, as my attention will be on my screen. Chair, Minister, esteemed members of the com­mit­tee and honoured guests: my name is Sam Zurzolo, and I'm a teacher of the Winnipeg School Division at Elmwood High School, and I've been a teacher for 16 years.

      I come before this com­mit­tee to voice my opinion and propose a change to Bill 35. This bill purports to provide safeguards against ill-intended actors in the edu­ca­tion system. It sets up a process, whereas a member of the public fearing for the safety of a child, either in their direct care or their periphery, may present to the com­mis­sioner their fears of grave misconduct.

      The com­mis­sioner is then guided to act on their best under­standing of the situations and initiate in­vesti­gations into the misconduct, form a review panel to judge the founded infor­ma­tion and enact a form of punitive action against the purveyor of said mis­conduct.

      I am not against addressing the issues that this bill is designed to protect. I do not oppose the attempt to offer avenues for the public to address concerns about misconduct and misbehaviour of those who are in care of children.

      It must be said, without question, that any and all methods to which we could protect children from physical and psychological harm should be explored. We should and must install strong policies and systems from which we can ensure the safety of the students in our schools.

      We've listened to many presenters address the content of this bill. If it has not been obvious, what this bill purports to do and what it actually may do seems to be at odds with its intent. I'll be brief–excuse me–I will be brief in my critique and try to summarize the statements of those who have preceded them.

      If the intent of this bill is to ensure that students are safe from physical and psychological harm, then the question of the role of competency arises and must be addressed. There has been no connection drawn in this bill between the safety of the student and the competency of a teacher.

      In fact, in a previous pre­sen­ta­tion, a repre­sen­tative of the Centre for Child Pro­tec­tion offered an example where it was a highly competent teacher that used their competency to lure students, not a low competency teacher.

      So, why then, does this bill seem to insert the words incompetency as in section 8.9, reading that a complaint could be made that a teacher has been incompetent to carry out the pro­fes­sional respon­si­bilities of a teacher?

      Is there data that exists, that draws parallels to the competency of a teacher and their likelihood to harm a child? Further, the minister has re­peat­edly pointed out that we should have a one-table system from which concerns regarding teacher behaviour should be reviewed and brought into the purview of a single entity.

      Perhaps the minister could elaborate on why a one-table system is the best we can come up with. In those juris­dic­tions which have adopted a similar review board and com­mis­sioner model, is there data that shows that there's been a link between the competence and the incidences of abuse?

      I will not belabour this com­mit­tee with more of the same. Let me just say that I believe that the word competency was inserted here, when we could have just used a different phrase. Perhaps a better definition of what this bill should be looking at is teachers not being dutiful, teachers ignoring their duty to report, ignoring their duty to keep students safe.

      Competency does not ensure that a teacher will perform their duties. I propose that the word incompe­tency be removed and replaced with the word unduti­ful.

      That's the end of my pre­sen­ta­tion.

      Thanks for your time.

Mr. Chairperson: Thank you for your pre­sen­ta­tion.

      We now move to five minutes of questions.

      Minister Ewasko, you have 30 seconds, as does any other question-asker. Please go ahead.

Mr. Ewasko: Thank you, Mr. Zurzolo, for coming on tonight and presenting. And you know what? You're the first one out of the many presenters I've listened to over the last night and a half, here, that has brought forward that type of amend­ment.

      Just a quick question–or a quick comment. You asked me about why a–one table. So when you talk about misconduct and you talk about competence–

Mr. Chairperson: Five seconds.

Mr. Ewasko: –and apparently I've only got five seconds, so I'm not even going finish that.

      I'm going to be able to just say thank you for your pre­sen­ta­tion. Hopefully I'll have enough time to finish that up later on.

Mr. Chairperson: Mr. Zurzolo, if you wish to respond, you're welcome to.

S. Zurzolo: No response to that.

Mr. Altomare: Thank you, Mr. Zurzolo, for your pre­sen­ta­tion this evening.

      It did pique my interest around the term undutiful. Where did that come from? How does that–how do you believe that makes–this amend­ment would make this bill a little bit better?

S. Zurzolo: I think the term incompetence is way too general and really brings itself to start to question things that belong with pro­fes­sionals, with principals, with superintendents, with the Minister of Edu­ca­tion himself, to sort of judge whether a teacher is doing what their tasks are.

      Now, when we talk about duties of a teacher, some of the duties of a teacher are very well laid out in the public schools act, and one of the duties of a teacher is, of course, to have safety in your classroom, to have safety with all your students; we also have a duty to report when we suspect abuse. It's these duties that I think are failing in terms of what's happening and where these abuses are coming from.

      And, now, don't get me wrong. These abuses are not as widespread as some members of the legis­lative seem to purport, but they are things that do need to be addressed, and I have a sense that if we can simply just talk about the duties of a teacher as laid out in the public schools act, and perhaps the duties in terms of reporting harassment spe­cific­ally, that would address the concerns that this bill is purporting to address.

Mr. Gerrard: I'm just trying to clarify what you're proposing. I think you're talking about section 8.9, complaints: Any person may make a written com­plaint to the com­mis­sioner that alleges, and then (b) that a teacher has been or is not dutiful in carrying out the pro­fes­sional responsibilities of a teacher.

      Is that the change that you would suggest?

S. Zurzolo: Perhaps simply replacing the word wouldn't do it the full justice.

      Now, once you're talking about duties, you're kind of moving yourself away from the necessarily–the pro­fes­sional respon­si­bilities and more into the specific duties outlined in the public schools act, and I believe it's the child pro­tec­tion act–I'd have to verify that–but where we have our duty to report. And really, that's the crux, is the duty to report abuses.

      So, any involvement with a competent teacher, like I said, it's–it doesn't seem to be–there doesn't seem to be a link between competence and abuse, and if there is, I have yet to see it. It does seem to be a very simple, you know, a very easy thing to point to and say, oh, these must be incompetent teachers, but I don't see the data. I haven't come across that data, and I'd love to see if there is any reports available to where incompetence is the problem.

Mr. Ewasko: Mr. Zurzolo, just in regards to the single desk for teachers or for parents or students to be able to bring forward complaints of a teacher.

      So, you mention that you have not seen any of the incompetence piece. Incompetence–what can happen is this becomes a pattern, and if that becomes a pat­tern, that's where the com­mis­sioner and the panel can come into play and then be able to offer various different things, whether it's a suspension of a cer­tificate or some­thing that the teacher would have to do to carry on with upgrading or get them­selves–

Mr. Chairperson: Minister, your time has expired.

      Mr. Zurzolo, unfor­tunately we have very few seconds, about 15 seconds or so, but please go ahead.

* (19:50)

S. Zurzolo: Okay, yeah.

      So, if we could, I would simply report–or, I would simply say: find me that connection that incompetence leads to safety–or, excuse me, that competence leads to safety, and incompetence leads to abuse.

Mr. Chairperson: Mr. Zurzolo, thank you for your pre­sen­ta­tion.

      We must move now to the next presenter, and I call forward Mr. Augustine Watanabe. Am I saying that right? I hope so. Is Mr. Augustine–

Floor Comment: My name is Augustine Watanabe. So, Irish, English, Japanese.

      My wife is Japanese, I took her name.

Mr. Chairperson: Welcome, Mr. Augustine Watanabe.

Augustine Watanabe (Private Citizen): Yes, that's right.

Mr. Chairperson: You have the floor for 10 seconds–actually, you know what we'll extend that to 10 minutes. You do have it for 10 seconds, and also 9 minutes and 50 seconds after that.

      Please go ahead. You do have the floor. Thanks for being with us.

A. Watanabe: So, as someone who has worked in edu­ca­tion for the last three plus decades, I take my role as a–I take my job as a role model very seriously.

      And with ex­per­ience from elementary school to grade 12, in a variety of subjects, in multiple juris­dic­tions, I feel it's my duty to speak as a pro­fes­sional to the issue of teacher certification, pro­fes­sional mis­conduct and competence as an educator.

      I was in Ontario in 1997 when they started their college of teachers. It was esta­blished to protect the public interest. It was about professionalism. Nobody mentioned protecting children at the time; it wasn't an issue. It's about teacher professionalism.

      And, by the way, the college of teachers of Ontario has a 37-member council, and of those 37 members, 23 are pro­fes­sional educators. So, 23 out of 37, that's 60 per cent of the College of Teachers of Ontario. So, I heard last night that we want to have standards that are similar to the rest of the country. Well, Ontario has 60 per cent of the college of teachers being pro­fes­sional educators.

      Children do need pro­tec­tion. I agree with that, of course. Everyone–who doesn't agree with that? And, as a citizen, I'm also going to tell you I'm a survivor of child­hood sexual abuse.

      I'm a product of the '60s scoop mentality. I can't say I'm a '60s scoop survivor, because I'm not Indigenous, but anything that's gone–happened to the '60s scoopment survivors, yeah, it happened to me.

      I was moved from–4,600 kilometres from Newfoundland to Ontario, against my will, when I was five, as an example. So, it helps me understand, as a high school guidance counsellor, the issues that both students and adults are living with and the icky issues that no one really likes talking about. That's my job.

      If Bill 35 is truly about the safety of children, why are the powers of the minister conflate competence with protecting children?

      And I'll get to what Ms. Classen said last night. There's a contradiction, right in part 2, where it allows for re-con­sid­era­tion of a refused licence. How does that make children safer?

      I fun­da­mentally–by the way, I might disagree with some of my colleagues–but I fun­da­mentally agree that we need to support the Mani–teacher–toba teachers' society's role as a union, from its role as a pro­fes­sional regulator. They need to be two separate things in my opinion–my pro­fes­sional opinion. Teachers need to be seen as pro­fes­sionals.

      There is, however, one major cultural difference in our society towards educators as opposed to other pro­fes­sionals. Everyone has been a student. Everyone has an emotional connection to the school system. Whether it's a wonderful memory or a terrible one, our experiences colour how we see the school system.

      Most people think they know how schools operate, but they don't. Most people working within the school system don't fully com­pre­hend all the ins-and-outs of how it actually works on the ground. They don't understand the funding models, they don't under­stand the policy decisions or the most recent research, and that's because they're too busy with the group of students right in front of them on a daily basis.

      So, how are people who don't have any sense of how the school system actually works and how the profession operates–they're supposed to understand it? For decades–decades–I have heard colleagues comment on wanting professional respect from the public, both in Manitoba, and Ontario and Japan.

      While I think COVID helped change the image of the profession in some minds, I do think the college of teachers would do more about profes­sionalism. I do ask you, though, to look up at the gov­ern­ance makeup of pro­fes­sional law societies, col­leges of physicians, surgeons, nurses and social workers. Again, they're regulating them­selves, because they know what they're doing.

      The majority of people sitting in gov­ern­ance positions should be pro­fes­sional educators. And when I hear some say we can't trust educators to help them­selves–or, to police them­selves, I wonder why doctors and lawyers don't hear those same things, because not everyone's been a doctor or a lawyer, but everyone's been a student.

      The minister re­peat­edly referred to the hearing panels as having three people and was all even, last night. And while I respect that opinion, I'm going to ask you, what about the rosters of hearing panel members being comprised, four out of the 12 are pro­fes­sional educators. That's one third, 33 per cent, from that–from the roster.

      Why can't the roster–and this is an amend­ment sug­ges­tion–why can't the roster of panel hearing members be 20? How about having 10 pro­fes­sional educators, five Manitoba School Boards Association members and five members from the public at large?

      Why can't hearing panels be five people instead of three? Three pro­fes­sional educators, one Manitoba School Boards Association member and one member from the public at large?

      And while we're at it, I don't agree that the com­mis­sioner has too much power. I think the com­mis­sioner needs to be someone with a Ph.D. in edu­ca­tion; needs to be a uni­ver­sity professor of edu­ca­tion.

      Bill 35, from my point of view? I was sexually abused when I was a child. I know that protecting children is fine, but to label this bill as protecting children negates the whole idea of pro­fes­sional respect.

      Bill 35's inclusion of teacher competence, along with certification and pro­fes­sional misconduct, takes away–and I know it's been said before–a vital em­ployer respon­si­bility. I want you to remove section 9.9(b)–incompetent to carry out pro­fes­sional respon­si­bilities of teachers–explicitly says that.

      Because, by the way, The Child and Family Services Act dictates we have–someone was talking about duties earlier tonight–we have a duty to report. I don't think many Manitobans know that every adult in Manitoba has a duty to report a suspicion. They're not–we're not respon­si­ble for doing a–the in­vesti­gation. We have a duty, if we find some­thing, to report it. That's for every Manitoban.

      And besides, again, who decides what constitutes competence? People who have never worked in edu­ca­tion?

      In my life, I've had the pleasure of working with wonderful, caring parents over the years. I also worked with someone who was accused of sexually abusing a young girl in his class. He had no idea where the accusation came from. He knew he hadn't done what he was accused of. He also knew if the public became aware of the accusation, his career was over, guilt or innocence aside.

      He was put on leave during the in­vesti­gation and after a lengthy and stressful time, he was exonerated. And here's the thing: the girl was being sexually abused. It's called transference. She was being abused by her father and her brother. And he got tagged for it, for a year.

      Now, luckily for him, his father died, so he had to go home and take care of his carver–father, and used that as cover for why he wasn't working. To this day, there are many people who don't know he was ever under an in­vesti­gation, which is as it should be.

      I had another colleague who was also put on leave for alleged sexual misconduct with a teen girl. He was working with in­car­cer­ated youth. She did not like being told what to do, and she blatantly said, I'm going to get you in trouble.

      Again, after in­vesti­gation, he was exonerated, but it was much more difficult for him to explain to friends and neighbours and family, over many months why he wasn't at school, why he was at home for those many months. What story did he have to come up.

      Now as painful as those experiences are for those educators, the system worked. And we have to protect the children and as it's been alluded to, it hasn't worked in the last couple of years for some young athletes in the city–student athletes, and also that not all predators in the school system are teachers.

      But I want you to contrast those two in­vesti­gations I just mentioned to the parent who said to my face, "I don't want my daughter engaging with any of these gay people." To my face. And I knew that students, colleagues and parents that I work with are part of the LGBTQ2+ com­mu­nity. I don't want that person anywhere near, judging my incompetence–or competence.

      Contrast that to the parent who emailed the teacher at 6 p.m. on a night, and didn't get a response, so emailed again and again and again. And, angry about not getting a response, emailed the principal, then emailed the super­in­ten­dent's office, then emailed the trustees, in one night.

      The teacher had two, three kids at home. Of course she didn't answer it. I don't want people who have nothing to do with the edu­ca­tion system commenting on our competence.

      I had a parent–parents vehemently disagree with me. I'm a high school guidance counsellor right now. I taught, like, all grades, but now I'm a high school guidance counsellor. They thought I was biased against them, that I wasn't doing right by their daughter.

      And then later on, like years later on–because you know, grade 9 to 12–when the kid was in grade 12, they were talking to me about self-identity, self-deter­min­ation and how teens build identity. And they would not have imagined the first time they met me, would we be having that con­ver­sa­tion a couple of years ago, later. I did because that's my job. My job is to have difficult con­ver­sa­tions. That's my job.

* (20:00)

      And it's also because I'm a pro­fes­sional with ex­per­ience and the training that goes with it. I could talk about teaching pedagogy, Maslow's hierarchy of needs, Bloom's taxonomy, Hattie's ranking, Carl Rogers or the effect of trauma on the nervous system: how it effects learning and behaviour–means nothing to parents.

      They're emotionally attached to their parents, as they should be, and they want what's best for them. And they're also coloured by the emotional experiences they had while they were students. And emotion blinds reality for sometimes, okay?

      I've opened novella-length emails; seeing who it was from, what it was about, I didn't even bother reading it. I just phoned the parent right away, because I knew that a phone con­ver­sa­tion would be much more constructive than any response to that.

      So, protect children of course. Recog­nize the pro­fes­sional of educators, yes. Judge them on an arbitrary under­standing of competence, no. So, I see my time there is–it's like planning a lesson plan, right? Yes, I recog­nize the minister's–and actually minister Nello is also, both former teachers.

Mr. Chairperson: Thank you for your pre­sen­ta­tion.

      We're going to move to five minutes of questions. So, I'm just going to set the clock here.

      Minister Ewasko, please go ahead.

Mr. Ewasko: Thank you, Mr. Watanabe, for coming in and giving your pre­sen­ta­tion, and the courage to share this story, as well. It doesn't sound like it's the first time you've shared it, but I'm sorry that you've gone through some of the things that you've gone through.

      But also, as a guidance counsellor, myself, before this wonderful gig, I applaud you for what you're doing on a day-to-day basis, and I'll ask you a question after I get another chance.

Mr. Chairperson: Mr. Watanabe, you have the option–you're welcome to respond if you want to.

A. Watanabe: There was no question, but thank you.

      I guess I would just say that I'm not here for myself. I'm this close to retirement. I'm here for the integrity of the profession, and I'm–yes, sure, protect the kids, but I'm here for the integrity of the profes­sion.

      Because this bill, just like the ones that when I was–I started my career in Ontario, under Mike Harris in the mid-'90s, early '90s. And the effects of those changes in the edu­ca­tion system felt, you know, 25 years later. And this bill is also going to have a decades-long effect.

      So, I'm here for the children, the parents and my colleagues that I will never meet.

Mr. Altomare: Thank you, Mr. Watanabe, for your pre­sen­ta­tion; certainly well-researched, well though out. I'd like to ask a question about how Bill 35 may impact your practice as a guidance counsellor in a high school.

Mr. Chairperson: Mr. Watanabe, please go ahead.

A. Watanabe: Like I said, it's not here about me. And frankly, I'm this close to retirement, it won't affect my practice at all. Because I'm always going to do what's in the best interest of the child, and if people disagree with that, I don't care.

      The best interest of the child is what guides my pro­fes­sional judgment and my pro­fes­sional compe­tence. But what I will say about this bill, and also about Ontario, because that's–I was educated in Ontario, although I did graduate from U of M–you know, Lakehead and Uni­ver­sity of Western Ontario–Ontario published a report over 20 years ago talking about why are there such a lack of males and male role models in the edu­ca­tion system: 20–over 20 years ago.

      And the con­di­tions they can–the con­di­tions they identified, one of them being the fear of males being accused of some­thing sexually inap­pro­priate with a student. That was one of the sig­ni­fi­cant factors why men don't go into edu­ca­tion. And 20-plus years later, nothing's changed.

      We do have to respect that, but I also think that we have a paucity of role models for these young boys, and even the teen boys. And the males that do go in edu­ca­tion usually go into high school or maybe middle school. Most elementary schools are almost a hundred per cent female.

Mr. Gerrard: Yes, I give you an example of in­competence that was brought up to me recently. I've been helping children with learning dis­abil­ities, and families, all right? And one of the families came to me and said, we've got a teacher who's completely in­competent in helping a child with his difficult learning dis­abil­ity.

      Not surprising, because it's not mandatory for teachers to have training about learning dis­abil­ities in Manitoba, right? So, it seems to me that would be much better dealt with by the teacher and the supervisor, super­in­ten­dent in the school board, rather than going through this sort of a process.

Mr. Chairperson: Mr. Gerrard, your time has expired. Mr. Watanabe, please go ahead.

A. Watanabe: Yes, so, like I said, I want the word competence–and we've heard how many times the pro­fes­sional teachers have said we want the word competence removed from this legis­lation. That should say some–the sheer number of people asking, that should say some­thing.

      But I will say–because some people tonight, just didn't seem to understand that Noni Classen from the child centre–pro­tec­tion for children, Canada, last night testified–and I agreed with her. I agree with her that in some cases, predators use the guise of extra help as a cover for abuse. And I think that's what you're referring to. She also pointed out last night that the employer should be addressing issues of compe­tence as it relates to job performance.

      So, she actually used the word from my per­spective, here's what I'm talking about. That's kind of word jumbling to put in a legis­lation. I understand the legis­lation is a framework, and then after framework you've got regula­tions. And the devil is always in the details, right?

      But how do you bridge that divide between, I'm talking about job performance versus someone using their pro­fes­sional position as cover? So, in my case, I actually had an idea–I had a thought about that last night, and this is an idea not new to some people, but enshrining the rule of two in law.

      Not as a sug­ges­tion, as a must. It won't be easy; it can't be black and white, it has to be nuanced and it has to be–what's the word for it? It has to be–it can't be black and white. So, rule of two if you're a volunteer outside of school hours.

Mr. Chairperson: Thank you for your pre­sen­ta­tion, we do ap­pre­ciate it.

      We now call Ms. Rachel [phonetic] Dunlop–or, Rachelle Dunlop. Is–they are never going to ask me to chair one of these things again after butchering so many names.

      My apologies, is it Rachelle?

Rachelle Dunlop (Private Citizen): Rachelle, yes.

Mr. Chairperson: Dunlop, okay. Welcome.

      You have–we look forward to hearing your comments.

R. Dunlop: I just want to preface this with, I've loved watching all the different educators coming up here because I love seeing the vast array and variety of different educators that we have amongst the pro­vince.

      Like, it's really cool that so many of us are here, and we're all bringing forward different points. Anyway, so I'm going to bring forward my point now.

      Good evening. My name's Rachelle Dunlop. I've been a teacher for three years, and prior to that I was an edu­ca­tional assist­ant for 14. After 17 years' ex­per­ience in edu­ca­tion, I'm quite familiar with the inner workings of a school.

      I'm here tonight because I have some concerns about Bill 35, the edu­ca­tion admin amend­ment. This is my first time speaking against a bill. Originally, I was so scared to make a mistake in front of the Minister of Edu­ca­tion, I just wanted to stick to the very non-Rachelle sounding guide I was given.

      You see, I'm neurodivergent. And that leaves me with a wonderful bag of anxiety that I constantly carry while I'm on patrol for things I might say or do, that might be misconstrued. Then I heard all the speeches from so many outstanding and caring colleagues in my field.

      They were vul­ner­able, and real, and I wouldn't make the impact I wanted to make without speaking in my own words. Let me be extremely clear here: I always want what's best for my students, and I will always advocate on their behalf for their needs.

      Their safety and emotional well-being is my top priority. And I take my respon­si­bility of in loco parentis very seriously. It is an honour that parents have so much trust in us.

      Yesterday, when Ms. Classen spoke about the Centre for Child Pro­tec­tion research report for 2018, she mentioned that over a period of 20 years, 95 per cent of the Canada-wide child abuse offenders were educators or involved in the field of edu­ca­tion. That's a terrifying number if you say it that way.

      Upon further in­vesti­gation–I looked up the infor­ma­tion, and in 20 years there were 714 abusers from the field of edu­ca­tion. I then went to my trusty calculator. Divide 714 by 20, round it up, you get 36; 36 offenders in one year in all of Canada.

      Although I agree that even one offender is too many, let's look at the real data here for just a minute. How many teachers with an active teaching licence do we have in Canada currently? A quick google gave me some varying responses: anywhere from 395,000 to 408,000.

      Lets say, on average, there are 400,000 teachers in Canada. Thirty-six divided by 400,000 is 0.00009 per cent. I think that is some­thing that Ms. Classen forgot to point out when giving us her numbers.

* (20:10)

      That still leaves us with that miniscule amount of offenders we do have–which I want to reiterate that any offenders is always too much, and I'm glad we already have a process in place in Manitoba to deal with those kinds of perpetrators. We already have a child abuse registry, so there is no need for a bonus teacher child abuse registry, especially a registry that puts teacher competence in question. The two are completely unrelated and irrelevant. Ms. Classen did mention that a lot of the abusers went under the guise of being competent. So, in that case, it's not even protecting kids.

      The next point I want to make is that the bill still does not clarify what sig­ni­fi­cant emotional harm is. Yes, I've heard the Minister of Edu­ca­tion say multiple times last night, that, yes, they are going to work with MTS on a better definition. But until I actually see it written in the bill, I'm going to keep bringing it up.

      I also need to get a drink of water because I was not shock–surprised at how much nervousness I was going to have. Okay.

      All right. Cari Satran and Lise Legal, who both spoke–or, Lise Legal–who both spoke last night, absolutely hit the nail on the head last night when they addressed the issue of emotional harm. If the gov­ern­ment cares about emotional harm so much, why are they underfunding schools? Students are in harm's way when there are staffing shortages and classrooms stuffed to the brims with no extra support. It seriously does take a village to raise a child, but that's a village that I assume has the resources it needs to do that raising.

      When I was an edu­ca­tional assist­ant, the biggest thing we all knew in the fall was that our schedule was going to change at least a dozen times through­out the school year. We all knew that if a child had the ap­pro­priate docu­men­ta­tion, diagnosis or funding, wasn't a behaviour, violent flight risk–okay, I'm going to say that again so it's clear. We all knew that if a child had the ap­pro­priate diagnosis and docu­men­ta­tion or fund­ing, if they weren't a behaviour, violent flight–or, violent flight risk, we as the EAs would get pulled from that class to go work with someone else that was having a harder time. That child who still needed support lost their right to an EA just because they were hitting–they weren't hitting anyone, right?

      We can't provide the highest quality care when we're pulling EAs from students that have the right to an EA, only to put them with a student that is deemed a higher risk at that time.

      I was an EA for longer than I've been a teacher, so a lot of my ex­per­iences with the lack of funding for edu­ca­tion comes from that perspective.

      I mentioned at the begin­ning that I am neuro­divergent. I spe­cific­ally have ADHD. This benefits me as an educator, because my empathy towards my students is extremely authentic due to the dif­fi­cul­ties I had as a student. It also benefits me as an educator, because if Mme. Rachelle is bored, the kids are bored. So, I make sure that my lessons are engaging and fun.

      The not far–the–wow, did I just say fart in the min­is­try? Anyway–the not-fun part of being a teacher with ADHD is the constant scrutiny I give myself. I'm always afraid I'm going to say some­thing wrong by accident. My anxiety about this can be extreme. Weekends and evenings are sometimes ruined by this, because my anxiety can get carried away with: maybe I didn't handle the situation the right way, maybe I should've been more validating to that student, maybe I should've et cetera, et cetera, et 'ceretera.'

      Anyway, the story has a point, and I'm getting to it. If this bill goes through without defining emotional harm, we're going to have a whole lot of capable, fantastic, caring and authentic teachers also going through the constant anxiety that I go through, and nobody deserves that, ever.

      In closing, what I'm asking for tonight is that this bill–or at least the parts of the bill that are not clear–be scrapped. It is a waste of time, resources and money. The research from the Centre for Child Pro­tec­tion doesn't prove it's necessary. If we need to improve the system we already have, an uncrease in–I'm going to say this clearly–if we need to improve the system we already have, an increase in funding would certainly help us to do that.

      Thank you for listening.

Mr. Chairperson: Ms. Dunlop, thanks for your great pre­sen­ta­tion.

      We're going to move along to some questions. The questions are going to be 30 seconds or less, and we'll do this for about five minutes. You get as much time, though, as you like to respond.

      Minister Ewasko, why don't you start us off here?

Mr. Ewasko: Thanks, Ms. Dunlop, for coming.

      And I do know that there is, at times–and I'm hoping we're proving to you that this isn't a scary process and–because I thought you dud–you did very well in your pre­sen­ta­tion. Not that you need that or not, but I just wanted to say this isn't a scary place to come and give your comments and your concerns, and I want to thank you for coming tonight and doing that.

      And in regards to a couple of the amend­ments, I would argue with you a little bit on the funding over the last few years, but that being said, that's not what we're here to talk about today.

Mr. Chairperson: Minister, I'm obliged to tell you your time is expired.

      Ms. Dunlop, if you would like to respond you're welcome to; not obligated.

R. Dunlop: I have no comment.

Mr. Chairperson: Okay, Mr. Altomare, please go ahead.

Mr. Altomare: Thank you, Ms. Dunlop, for coming.

      I would've loved to have been on a staff with you, it would've been a great ex­per­ience. I think certainly the kids would've–your kids continue to benefit from your back­ground and what you bring to the classroom, it's im­por­tant. Especially when kids see them­selves in their teacher. Never discount that.

      Question I have for you is: How can this bill be intended to reflect its intended purpose of child safety? [interjection]

Mr. Chairperson: Ms. Dunlop, I'm sorry, I have to recog­nize you for the recording.

      Ms. Dunlop, please go ahead.

R. Dunlop: The competency part; that part isn't relevant at all. That part can come out.

      And we really need to define emotional harm, because I have watched and ex­per­ienced so many actually frivolous and vexations complaints come to the school, and principals are stressed dealing with that. Admin is stressed. Co-workers are stressed.

      Because people will complain about every­thing. Like, one time I was in a school and a kid was not supposed to bring the Pokémon card to school. Well, the teacher heard about it when that Pokémon card went missing, when the kid was not supposed to even bring it to school, and that parent was livid with–and she went straight to admin. She didn't even talk to the teacher. Like, things like that are ridiculous, and I think it adds extra stress that we don't need.

Mr. Gerrard: Thank you.

      What you say about, well, the need for smaller class sizes and better funding–I've been hearing re­peat­edly that when you've got children with ADHD or autism or learning dis­abil­ities, that you really need to have smaller class sizes in order to be able to help them appropriately.

      Maybe you could comment on that.

R. Dunlop: I waited that time.

      No, I absolutely agree. We need more support in the classroom, and EAs, like–EAs are the lifeline of a lot of teachers, and I think it's im­por­tant that more funding in–comes for them. More support for teachers.

      Because ultimately we are here for the children, right? We want them to succeed; we want them to have the best experiences they can at school, and they can't do that when all the resources aren't there.

Mr. Ewasko: Thank you, Ms. Dunlop.

      So, just a quick example, if you may–if you've seen an example of a complaint, and how was it handled? And, sort of, what was your opinion of it?

R. Dunlop: What kind of complaint?

Mr. Ewasko: A complaint that's been handled appropriately at school.

Mr. Chairperson: Ms. Dunlop.

An Honourable Member: And how was it handled.

R. Dunlop: Okay, well, I'm just going to go back to the Pokémon card complaint, because that's the one that's in my head right now.

      But that parent called the principal, and he actually ended up dealing with it because the parent was so upset. And then eventually he was able to explain to that parent and calm them down, like, no, he's not supposed to have the card at school and the school isn't respon­si­ble for that card.

      But that's some­thing that administrator did–like, that shouldn't be some­thing that they have to deal with, nor a com­mis­sioner should have to deal with that.

An Honourable Member: A clari­fi­ca­tion?

Mr. Chairperson: On a clari­fi­ca­tion, Mr. Ewasko.

Mr. Ewasko: So, in that example you just gave, that would be the admin­is­tra­tion, and that would not come to the com­mis­sioner. So, just for–just so you're aware.

      Thank you.

Mr. Chairperson: Mr. Altomare, we have 25 seconds.

Mr. Altomare: Ms. Dunlop, how would this bill impact your day-to-day practice in school?

R. Dunlop: It wouldn't, because I'm always scrutin­izing myself big time. It's my co-workers I'm worried about.

Mr. Chairperson: Thank you, Ms. Dunlop. You did great, and we really ap­pre­ciate you taking time to come down and share with the com­mit­tee.

      I'm going to move along here. We have received a written submission from Jennifer–[interjection] Engbrecht; I hope I'm saying that right.

      Is there leave to have it included in Hansard this evening? [Agreed]

* (20:20)

      Okay, great, we're going to do that then. We're going to include Jennifer Engbrecht's written submis­sion in Hansard, and I do want to encourage all com­mit­tee members to take a couple minutes to read that.

      I'm calling Mr. Jay Ewert. I believe Jay may be out of town, and possibly virtually. Is that the case? We do have Jay with us virtually.

      Jay, as soon as I see you I'm going to recog­nize you, you're going to have 10 minutes. Welcome to the Legislature.

      And, Jay, if you notice that someone else is sitting here, I'm going to take a momentary–excuse myself for a moment here, but you have the attention of the committee, and I ask the Vice-Chair just to sit here.

      Jay, please go ahead. You have 10 minutes.

Mr. Vice-Chairperson in the Chair

Jay Ewert (Evergreen Teachers' Association): Can you hear me all right?

      I'll presume as much and carry on. Good evening to the Chair, Minister Mickleson [phonetic], Minister Ewasko, Minister Altomare, Minister Gerrard and ad­di­tional ministers present, and to all the esteemed presenters and observers this evening. Thank you for having me.

      My name is Jay Ewert, and I'm proud to be a Manitoban educator with over 15 years of pro­fes­sional ex­per­ience. [inaudible] And tonight I come to you as the president of that asso­ciation to suggest ways to improve Bill 35.

      As many people have said before me, child pro­tec­tion is of the utmost importance. And I don't ask you not to pass this bill, I think it should be passed, but not in its current form. The pro­tec­tion of children is one of the main priorities of teachers, myself included.

      We all adhere to Abraham Maslow's hierarchy of needs. We understand, as educators–as we're all taught that physiological needs and safety and security are the precursors. Love and belonging, self-esteem and self-actualization, where learning happens, can't happen before that.

      And so, without safety and security of students, a teacher has no vocation. It's the basis of our pedagogy. We're aware of the term in loco parentis. We have a sacred respon­si­bility of pro­tec­tion of children when their parents are not there.

      And this bill lays bare so that, although we would love for any apparently incompetent teachers, as part of this bill–but I would say offending teachers–to be eliminated, this also puts the rest at risk who are creating safe spaces for our pupils.

      Reporting allegations of abuse is a right. It's a human right. It's some­thing I encourage in my stu­dents, it's some­thing I encourage in my–

Mr. Vice-Chairperson: We're just having some technical dif­fi­cul­ties here, the screen is frozen up, so just give us a moment.

      Your time is not running right now, just give it a moment. [interjection]

      Mr. Ewert, go ahead.

      We just had a technical interruption there, but go ahead Mr. Ewert, thank you.

J. Ewert: Oh, wow. Geez, I was going there. Did you hear any of it? Should I start again?

Mr. Vice-Chairperson: No, go ahead from where you were, we got it all up until–okay. Go ahead.

J. Ewert: Well, let's get on with what I would suggest for Bill 35.

      Competence of teachers. This term competence is very problematic. First off, it's not part of the pro­tec­tion of children. When Noni Classen was speaking last night, she mentioned this guise of competence. We have this idea that competent teachers are luring, and so it doesn't seem to be the canary in the coal mine. And I'm not sure if someone has a lack of curricular under­standing suddenly becomes a sexual predator, or someone of misconduct, because when you say competence, I think what you mean is misconduct.

      Now, MTS and the ETA, we support pro­fes­sional dev­elop­ment and competence in our teachers. It's enshrined in our code of pro­fes­sional conduct. In the K‑to‑12 ed plan from April 2022 that was submitted by MTS, they encouraged pro­fes­sional standards to guide edu­ca­tional–educator dev­elop­ment, practice and evaluation.

      In our locals, PD funds are often jointly managed by local associations and divisions. We as teachers support competence, but competence is in the realm of the employer. The author­ity of the Minister of Edu­ca­tion also mandates days of pro­fes­sional dev­elop­ment that each division must adhere to.

      Now, if you also look at what Tom Schioler said, we have existing structures of competence in place, but attacking competence does not address pro­tec­tion of students.

      Pro­tec­tion by way of regula­tion is absolutely, absolutely necessary. I agree with that. But pro­fes­sional conduct frameworks do not currently have the word competence. Why now? How does it address that pro­tec­tion? As Sam Zurzolo so succinctly put: show me the connection. What lawyer would defend having a word in a law that does not apply to the expressed intent of that law?

      Now, you also need a hearing panel, and that I agree with. You need people who can judge, who are well informed and have the ability to remove teacher–contracts–I'm trying to think of the word.

      But this bill proposes a hearing panel of non-teachers, people who aren't educated in what the teaching profession entails, what competency, apparently, is and what is misconduct, which is the most im­por­tant part. That panel should not be made up of a majority of non-teachers any more than I should be on a panel judging doctors. And I think The Regulated Health Professions Act of Manitoba would agree, which is the majority of which are health-care, medical and nursing pro­fes­sionals.

      Why are we looking not within Manitoba for like-minded organi­zations, for the guidance? Are they insufficient? Have they not been able to identify misconduct, and if they have been, why are we not following their suit?

      Some­thing I have a real problem with, though, is sig­ni­fi­cant emotional harm. The words vexatious have come up. This one brought the term hellacious to me. Oftentimes, laws have, in the first few pages, predefined terms, predefined so as to negate any chance of mis­repre­sen­ta­tion or misinterpretation in the application of that law. Sig­ni­fi­cant emotional harm: what is that? The bill does not identify. It's personally subjective, an evaluative term that's lacking in definition. Without proper definitions, this can go, as I said, hellaciously wrong.

      During COVID, when teachers were asked to promote health protocols mandated by our employer, enforced by teachers as agents of the state, we were met with vehement resistance by certain folks, including online bullying, in-person accusations, appeals to trustees. I recall one in parti­cular that likened their child's ex­per­ience to that of someone in an internment camp. That sounds like sig­ni­fi­cant emotional harm. Should those teachers who encour­aged six feet apart and mask wearing as mandated be on a registry?

      Reports of parents complaining of teachers for teaching acceptance of 2SLGBTQIA+. I have an ally poster on my classroom door so students can be assured that the con­ver­sa­tion is open. It is a safe space. If this bill is put into action, do I then wonder that I'm taking a risk? If so, it shall still remain. But why should it be a risk, only because of a law that refuses to define the very words that it uses to enforce its expressed intent?

      What of the parents that complain about class­room teachers teaching curriculum–based that it is an emotional harm to them. Should they be allowed to make this complaint. And I hear it. You can say that the com­mis­sioner can deny this but what com­mis­sioner would deny this when an undefined term, such as sig­ni­fi­cant emotional harm is what governs it. Because if they deny this, and it turns out there is a terrible event happening, they are complicit. And yet, here they have to make that judgment on an undefined term.

* (20:30)

      These are instances of teachers making every attempt to follow the direction of their employer to educate and make school safe, and yet their very employer is about to consider not even defining the destruction of that ability to provide that safety. Please properly define sig­ni­fi­cant emotional harm so that proper justice to protect our children can be put into place.

      Having such ill‑written and unfinished bills could harm the ability of the intent to protect the very children that it was written for.

      In closing, the pro­tec­tion of our children is of the utmost importance. Please ensure this bill does come to pass, but not in its current form. I am a teacher and this is a second draft, and you need a third one.

      I'm giving you some great sug­ges­tions and I've heard them from many people. I would like to see that third draft, some­thing we can send home, get the parents to sign. But, please, remove competency from the bill, provide a hearing panel with proper repre­sen­tation of teachers to adequately inform their decisions, and please define sig­ni­fi­cant emotional harm before you remove those that are actively protecting our students with this yet-to-be finished piece of legis­lation.

      Thank you.

Mr. Vice-Chairperson: Thank you, Mr. Ewert.

      We will now go into five minutes of questions.

Mr. Ewasko: Thanks, Mr. Ewert, for your pre­sen­ta­tion tonight, and bringing forward some of your amend­ments that I–that do sound a little familiar, but that's okay. That's part of this wonderful demo­cracy we have in Manitoba where you're able to come here, virtually now, to be able to share your opinions.

      So, Jay, just a quick question or a comment. You do know that this bill is a legis­lative form and an avenue for us to then get going towards the regula­tions and being able to come up with those–

Mr. Vice-Chairperson: Minister, your time is up.

      We'll go to Mr. Ewert.

J. Ewert: Yes, absolutely. Well, as a teacher, form­ative feedback is of the highest form of learning. A student needs to have formative feedback so they can have those discussions, improve and then grade what they do.

      And that's what I'm provi­ding. We have formative feedback and, not only that, these points that you say seem to be coming up a lot, and you'll see a theme: they're coming from teachers, because we're provi­ding that formative feedback; we're provi­ding voice as a demo­cratic society. In fact, the division that I work in, part of their mandate is getting kids that are active members of a vibrant demo­cracy. I'm proud to be here to provide this formative feedback because this kind of discourse, if we are ever closed to it, we're no longer a demo­cracy.

      So, yes, I am aware this is a process, and that's why I'm here in good faith and in con­fi­dence, hoping that these points are being made so that you can come back with a bill that will sufficiently protect children.

Mr. Altomare: Thank you, Mr. Ewert, for your pre­sen­ta­tion this evening, and thank you for your service to the kids, families up in Evergreen School Division. It is some­thing that is, I'm sure, as creating a safe space in your classroom, a very im­por­tant thing to continue to do.

      My question for you is: The panel being majority teachers, talk to us a little bit about why that's im­por­tant to you. [interjection]

Mr. Vice-Chairperson: Mr. Ewert.

Mr. Ewert: Sorry.

      Made in Manitoba. The first place we should be looking at is what we have here. I did refer to The Regulated Health Professions Act of Manitoba, and I think Tammy Tutkaluk also referenced this saying how she wouldn't feel proficient to judge doctors, and nor would I.

      I don't know, but I'm one of those people who listens closely to a doctor and accepts that I don't have a medical degree. But I am also a pro­fes­sional. I went to school for many years, and not only that, it takes 10,000 hours to become an expert in some­thing. I'm well in excess of that in my career. I know what good teaching looks like.

      You put me on that panel. I can do a good job. You put someone else on that panel that doesn't have an edu­ca­tion degree, that hasn't pursued 15‑plus years of teaching, they're going to have less ability to judge teachers. And if we're going to do this adequately–and why wouldn't we; why would you protect children without doing it right–then we need to look at what Manitoba is doing, what other pro­fes­sional organi­zations are doing, ask ourselves what's working and put it to action.

Mr. Vice-Chairperson: Thank you.

Mr. Gerrard: It's true that we can, you know, define words like sig­ni­fi­cant emotional harm in a bill or in regula­tions, but it seems to me that this is such a critical component that would be a mistake to put it in regula­tion.

Mr. Vice-Chairperson: Mr. Ewert, you've got a minute and five seconds to reply.

J. Ewert: I didn't register a question on that, but the word mistake.

      When we're talking about the pro­tec­tion of children, there isn't room for mistakes. We are here as a formative process to make sure that we make sound legis­lation. It exists.

      The second presenter–I'm sorry, the name has gotten away from me–he said he admired a well-crafted, logical argument and a well-crafted legis­lation, as do I.

      I'm a proud member of this province and this demo­cracy, and I stand here in respect, humbled knowing that I'm part of this process. Mistake is not what can be part of protecting these children. Take a pause, take a moment, don't discount that you've heard these points before. You've heard them because they're being heard loud and clear by Manitobans.

      Thank you.

Mr. Vice-Chairperson: And our time is up.

      Thank you, Mr. Ewert, for your pre­sen­ta­tion.

      We will now go to our next presenter, Mr. Sean Giesbrecht.

      He's online, so Mr. Giesbrecht, whenever you're ready to go, I will give you the go-ahead to go. Okay. We'll just wait a minute for you to get online.

      There we go. Mr. Giesbrecht, go ahead. You've got 10 minutes for your pre­sen­ta­tion.

Sean Giesbrecht (Private Citizen): Good evening. My name is Sean Giesbrecht, my pronouns are he/him. I'm in my ninth year of teaching. I have degrees in economics, history and edu­ca­tion, and I also hold a master's in edu­ca­tion. I currently support students, teachers and other staff as a high school teacher-librarian. I'm also the parent of two young children.

      The safety of my own children, and for those students in my care when at school, are of the utmost importance to me. So I'm here this evening to share concerns I have with some aspects of Bill 35 as proposed, and I do ap­pre­ciate this op­por­tun­ity to share those concerns with you; spe­cific­ally, how folks may weaponize this supposedly well-intentioned legis­lation.

      As has been stated by many of the previous presenters, I'm in full support of laws that improve child safety. It's my pro­fes­sional respon­si­bility as a teacher to keep student needs and safety at the top of mind. One need only look at how I organize and operate my library learning commons to see this commit­ment. So, I'm going to try to paint a picture for you.

      Gone are the days of a silent environ­ment, where shushes stifle student con­ver­sa­tion, col­lab­o­ration and co‑operation. I have spaces for group work, in­de­pen­dent work, silent reading, board games, crafting; I have a quiet space for kids to listen to music or podcasts and spaces for kids to just chill with their friends. The room is bathed in natural light, and my walls are lined with provocative, inspiring and interesting student art. It's a beautiful space.

      My only rule is be a good human. Make sure your actions don't impair anyone else's access to this space as a safe space. And luckily, I don't have to enforce that rule often.

      My students come to me for book recom­men­dations, research support and tech support. I also serve as the primary contact for many students struggling with all that life can throw at them. In the past few months, I've had students say, why do I feel like I want to drown in alcohol right now? Or, I don't think I can get all of my work done this week; to, I don't know if I can make it.

      I have students that sip on tea and tell me about their hopes for a future and I have students that confide in me that they don't see a future for them­selves. I'm not a counsellor but I do every­thing I can to get those students to the folks who can best meet their needs. So when a student tells me that they're hurting them­selves or they may be using drugs and alcohol, I don't judge; I take that as a call to action. We get them help.

      I also have students that code robots with me and build Minecraft worlds with me and share their accom­plish­ments with me. In the last month, a student shared that they won a scholar­ship for $20,000 a year for four years.

      I'm free to act in place of the caring parent. I'm able to interact with my students so that their academic, social and emotional needs are met without worry that someone will use this against me.

* (20:40)

      Further, I manage a large catalogue of learning resources: books, magazines, videos and subscrip­tions. It's this catalogue that provides me great comfort–and unfor­tunately, with this bill, great trepidation.

      See, I'm comforted that students who need access to a broad range of texts have that access. They ex­plore worlds which mirror their own, truths with which they have no ex­per­ience. They look at philoso­phies, they question things, and they read for enjoy­ment. When someone discovers Murakami's magical realism or Scalzi's sci-fi futures or even the wonderful world of Harry Potter, I have a front-row seat to a student's world growing by leaps and bounds. It's truly a gift.

      I have an active com­mu­nity of readers who forward requests. They create displays; they host book clubs. And I will–I love these kids, but I don't honour every student request. I follow curricular guide­lines, and I evaluate texts based on their suitability for a K‑to‑12 learning environ­ment.

      But not everyone shares the values that our school system holds. See, today's students also explore topics which, admittedly, cause discomfort for some mem­bers of our com­mu­nity.

      I have books, both fiction and non-fiction, on resi­den­tial schools and their generational impact. I have texts which feature 2SLGBTQIA+ content. Com­mu­nity members would find books on drug use and abuse. There are books with depictions of intimate relationships in my stacks. Students check out books on mental health, how to cope with suicidal thoughts and self-harm. Books and their teachers save lives.

      My 106-year-old grandmother–she turns 107 in two weeks–she'd take umbrage with the presence of curse words in my pages. And as much as I love and respect my Oma G, her discomfort does not trump my professionalism, nor does anyone else's in the com­mu­nity.

      See, if I tallied the number of books which are found in my stacks that also have made their way onto banned book lists, we'd be well into the hundreds. In fact, it's language like that found in this bill which give salivating, bigoted com­mu­nity members the ammu­nition they need to remove these books–spe­cific­ally, that teacher conduct which causes sig­ni­fi­cant emo­tional harm is grounds for review under this legis­lation. Those folks who don't want children learning about the harms of Canada's past and present will state that a book's very existence is going to or has caused harm. They've done it in other juris­dic­tions. They will do it here.

Mr. Chairperson in the Chair

      Now, I welcome challenges to any and all resources in my space. My division has a robust policy outlining the process by which a book can be challenged for removal. This process involves con­ver­sa­tions with me, with other teachers, school leaders and the complainant. There's a panel of educators who review the material for its curricular relevance, and the complainant is given mechanisms to discuss, receive and even appeal the decision a panel makes.

      I take the curation of my collection very seriously, but I can't possibly read the hundreds of books I purchase each year. I get reviews from trusted sources, consult with colleagues, check suitability guides, consult Common Sense Media, School Library Journal and other fabulous resources provided by public libraries. But still, some books may be challenged, and I welcome that.

      With this process, I'm telling you now that teachers with classroom libraries and teacher-librarians are worried. We know how bigoted individuals will take this well-meaning legis­lation and twist it to meet their political or ideological bent. The fact that these folks can make a complaint to a body made up of mostly non-teachers is not just con­cern­ing, it's terrifying. My career and my livelihood is now at the hands of folks who have no training or expertise in adjudicating my pro­fes­sional choices? That has to go. And I need my actions to be judged as they have been for my entire career: by my peers.

      Finally, I need language in this bill to guarantee my right to repre­sen­tation from my union. Other regula­tory bodies enshrine this right, and we deserve the same respect. If someone's coming at me, I need them to have my back.

      My asks are the same of the majority of the previous presenters: remove competence, guarantee union rights, better define sig­ni­fi­cant emotional harm and protect the privacy of myself and my colleagues who may be under in­vesti­gation.

      Thank you for your time.

Mr. Chairperson: Mr. Giesbrecht, we thank you for your pre­sen­ta­tion, and we're going to move to five minutes of questions. No question is going to be longer than 30 seconds; it's your discretion how long you'd like to answer.

      I'm going to start with the minister. Minister Ewasko, please go ahead.

Mr. Ewasko: Thanks, Mr. Giesbrecht, for being with us tonight and bringing forward your pre­sen­ta­tion and with some of your sug­ges­tions on your amend­ments as well. Give a big happy early birthday to your oma, Oma G. And, wow, every day is an absolute blessing.

      So, thank you very much for coming here with your pre­sen­ta­tion. I've only got a couple seconds left. If I've got some time, I've got a question for you later on.

Mr. Chairperson: Mr. Giesbrecht, if you wish to respond, you may.

S. Giesbrecht: Yes, thanks, I'll pass that on to her.

Mr. Altomare: Thank you, Mr, Giesbrescht, for you pre­sen­ta­tion this evening.

      Books do indeed save lives. That is a very im­por­tant comment and one that I know a lot of students take comfort in. It's absolutely im­por­tant that that phrase is on the record this evening.

      I would like to you–for you to expand a little more around your views on how this bill can alter your work as a teacher-librarian.

Mr. Chairperson: Mr. Giesbrecht, please go ahead.

S. Giesbrecht: I–yes, thanks for the question.

      See, the choices that I make, as I said, I consult a lot of reviews, journals, I talk to colleagues, I read as many books as I can. But, again, I have like 7,000; it's a bit too much for me. And I worry that the books that some of our most vul­ner­able students need, right–the students who are questioning their identity, who are–understand their identity and need to find them­selves represented in texts, students that want to learn about traumatic events in history so that they may learn how people have overcome the–those struggles.

      I worry that this legis­lation and this broad, this loose definition of emotional harm–or the lack of a definition of emotional harm, I worry that that may impair my ability to get the best material into the hands of students that need it for their survival. And maybe–okay, let's take away the super dire circum­stances, so that their existence in my space is one that they know they are welcome, they are safe, that they have a place, they have a home, so that if things do get bad, they know they can rely on me to help them get what they need down the road.

      So, I worry that, with this legis­lation, it's going to cause me pause–more pause than I already take–before I make choices that I know benefit the kids of our province.

Mr. Chairperson: Are there any other questions?

Mr. Gerrard: Yes, I've been hearing a lot recently about the importance of teacher-librarians, so thank you for what you do. It's vital.

      Now, the process, which is ongoing at the moment, seems to work, so why should we change it when it comes to buying books and things like that?

Mr. Chairperson: Mr. Giesbrecht, please go ahead.

S. Giesbrecht: Yes, that's a great question. I don't think it's just the process that works for buying books, right? It's a process for the evaluation, the process for raising concerns with conduct.

      When I was in the classroom, when I was a classroom teacher, you know, I'd had–I had a few moments where parents were–had concerns about how I taught or what I taught or my approach to assessment or what have you, right? It usually went some­thing like they either contacted me directly or they talked to my principal, Never went above that, but I know it can.

      And my principal would direct them to me, and I'd sit down and I'd have a con­ver­sa­tion with that parent, that–those students, those com­mu­nity mem­bers. And I'd explain, hey, this is what I'm doing, this is my intent, this is the result of those actions and we gained a mutual under­standing, at least of what I was hoping to do and what I ended up doing.

      If it was more sig­ni­fi­cant than that, then my principal would sit down with me and say hey, Sean, I'm not sure that this is meeting the needs of our students, I'd like you to consider this, this or this. I haven't had those con­ver­sa­tions, but at least it was an option for me. Right? It was private, it supported my own pro­fes­sional growth, my dignity was retained, I didn't appear on some list that somebody may use for untoward reasons down the line.

      So, yes, the processes, both of books and teacher evaluation, I think they're strong when it comes to competence.

      Thank you.

* (20:50)

Mr. Chairperson: Mr. Giesbrecht, thank you for your pre­sen­ta­tion.

      We're going to move along to the next person. Thank you for being with us, though.

      We have Ms. Elizabeth Bourbonniere. Do I say that right? I'm told that I do. Let's hope that I do. Is Elizabeth with us this evening? Yes, virtually, is that right? Okay, terrific.

      Hi, Ms. Bourbonniere. Do I say your name correctly? Can you help me out there?

Elizabeth Bourbonniere (Private Citizen): You do, but my family pronounces it Bourbonniere, but you did pronounce it correctly in French.

Mr. Chairperson: Bourbonniere. Well, welcome to the Manitoba Legislature, virtually.

      You have 10 minutes to make your pre­sen­ta­tion; you don't have to take the whole time if you don't want to, but we are all ears, and the floor is yours.

      Please go ahead.

E. Bourbonniere: Good evening.

      My name is Elizabeth Bourbonniere, and I've been teaching in Manitoba for 24 years. I'm currently a high school English language arts teacher.

      I'm not an exceptionally political sort of person, and I haven't been involved with MTS or a local association very much, but this bill concerns me enough to feel that I need to speak.

      While I agree that students should be protected from teachers who pose a danger to students, I'm concerned about the possible unintended effects of Bill 35.

      My major concern is that the plan casts a wide net, inviting anyone to make complaints related to alleged misconduct or incompetence. Any teacher could be affected. It also raises the question of how competence and sig­ni­fi­cant emotional harm are defined and by whom.

      Classrooms are busy places and teachers have hundreds of interactions with students in a day. While most teachers endeavour to interact with students in a respectful way and do their jobs of educating students responsibly, there's always the possi­bility of a teacher's words or actions being misinterpreted or misrepresented.

      At times, students will misrepresent a teacher's words or actions to their parents to try to avoid getting in trouble for their own behaviour, and sometimes students will push, trying to provoke a reaction from a teacher.

      In Manitoba school divisions, there exists a concern protocol for families to follow when they have a complaint. In most cases, concerns can be addressed at teacher or administrator level, and in a timely manner. My concerns at offering a centralized complaint process for any aspect of a teacher's conduct or competence may encourage parents to imme­diately take the extreme option, rather than engaging at the teacher's school or division level first to solve the problem.

      I'm also concerned about the possi­bility of complaints being made for political or advocacy purposes, and harming reputations of good teachers. In my view, the scope of the registry, and the complaint and reporting process, should be reserved for cases of serious misconduct dangerous to students, with minor complaints being redirected to divisional concern protocols and employer HR processes.

      Teacher registries like the one being proposed in Manitoba have been around for some time in Ontario and BC since 2015, and in Saskatchewan and Alberta since 2022, and there have been some problems. It's im­por­tant that the Manitoba gov­ern­ment learns from some of the drawbacks in other provinces. Looking at what has happened in other provinces shows that Manitoba teachers' concerns about Bill 35 are not un­founded.

      Teacher discipline cases and consent reso­lu­tion agree­ments are posted in detail on the BC teacher registry page, and as a result, news outlets regularly report on both serious and less serious cases when they are released on the site as recent discipline decisions, resulting in teachers being named and publicly shamed in the media.

      Of course, the reporting in the media of misconduct affects the reputation of a teacher within a school com­mu­nity, even if that misconduct was momentary, unintentional and minor. This is some­thing that would affect how students and parents view the teacher, and I fear the public shaming could cause parents and students to view anything the teacher does as potential wrongdoing, prompting gossip and fuel further complaints in an attempt to get rid of the teacher.

      Substitute teachers will be at risk. In 2017, the BC commissioner of the Teacher Regula­tion Branch, Bruce Preston, commented in the New Westminster Record that teachers on call, who are often new teachers, tend to be a group often named in com­plaints, saying that, quote, teachers who are teaching on call, well, you remember. It's a game that students play with the teacher on call. You have to be pretty good with classroom manage­ment skills to navigate the TTOC, Teachers Teaching On Call, role now. And students are much less respectful of author­ity than they were a number of years ago. They're far more challenging. End quote.

      The com­mis­sioner in BC is aware that substitute teachers have been a group vulnerable to complaints as a result of students playing games, but it's unclear how substitute teachers are being supported or how the difficult nature of their job is being considered in misconduct in­vesti­gations.

      In Alberta, the minister has refused to allow for the names of deceased teachers to be removed from the registry, and the registry has been criticized for creating privacy concerns for transgender teachers by including their birth name under their legal name.

      Also in Alberta, while minor cases can be viewed on the registry, major ones involving criminal convic­tions for sexual offences against minors are some­times missing because the case has been subject to a court-ordered publication ban. This, of course, defeats the purpose of the registry, if the goal is to protect children by identifying abusive adults.

      A 2019 CBC article highlights the fact that Ontario has included snitch-line tips about teachers teaching about same-sex marriage and their problems with sexting, as misconduct under the same category as teachers, quote, using racial slurs and making sexual advances toward students, end quote.

      In BC, a parent has created an organi­zation called Speaking Up BC, identifying herself as taking an advocacy role, and encouraging parents to make com­plaints against teachers seemingly in order to advocate for their children with special needs.

      When you google BC teacher complaint, the site appears as the result imme­diately under the BC edu­ca­tion commissioners webpage. The parent leading the organi­zation has personally made complaints against four teachers, appealing to the prov­incial ombudsman when her concerns were not addressed by the com­mis­sion.

      She warns her followers of risking a legal challenge for fear of being respon­si­ble for the other party's costs if they don't win the case in court. It is con­cern­ing the complaint process against individual teachers is seen as an inexpensive alter­na­tive to a court case when advocating for greater resources for their children.

      But what is the impact on individual teachers, reputations, their mental health, and their careers, when a complaint like this is launched against them for advocacy purposes?

      In the US, we are seeing states that encourage the reporting of teachers who use diverse texts that represent marginalized groups, or social justice issues, so that teachers can be fired, fined, charged, or lose their teaching licence. Will the availability of a centralized discipline body for teachers encourage parents to bypass divisional protocols for re-examination of learning materials by simply reporting a teacher for misconduct when the class is using materials that the parent doesn't like?

      In other provinces, complaints unrelated to a teacher's pro­fes­sional work have been seen. Stefanie Quelch, legal counsel for the BC Teachers' Federation wrote in a feature for a bar talk, a publication of the Canadian Bar Association in 2019, that, quote, not only do matters end up before the TRB, the Teacher Regula­tion Branch, following discipline by an employer, but any member of the public can file a complaint against a teacher with the TRB. These complaints sometimes have nothing to do with the teacher's work. For example, a con­fronta­tion with a neighbour or strata has led to complaints to the TRB. While matters that do not relate to a teacher's work are usually, eventually, dismissed, it takes multiple months–often more than a year–for this to happen. End quote.

      She further points out that the processes created, quote, a sig­ni­fi­cant increase in the level of legal services required by teachers to assist them in navigating the variety of proceedings that they face, end quote.

      If the goal of this registry is to prevent teachers who've committed serious offences against children from working with children in the future, then that should be the focus of the registry.

      I am asking the com­mit­tee to take a careful look at this plan, to separate competence from conduct, and to limit the scope of complaints and reports examined by a centralized discipline process, and listed on the registry.

      Thank you.

Mr. Chairperson: Thank you so much for your pre­sen­ta­tion. We're really ap­pre­cia­tive.

      We're going to go into five minutes of questions. None of the questions are going to be more than 30 seconds, and you're free to respond for as long as you'd like within that five-minute period.

      Minister Ewasko, please go ahead.

* (21:00)

Mr. Ewasko: Thank you, Ms. Bourbonniere, for your pre­sen­ta­tion. It seems like you put a lot of effort into doing some research and that.

      And so, quick question for you: Is there a regula­tory framework that treats competence separate from misconduct in the research that you've done?

Mr. Chairperson: Ms. Bourbonniere, please go ahead.

E. Bourbonniere: I haven't looked spe­cific­ally at that.

      I know that, looking at the one in BC, there were a whole lot of different categories of things that can be items that people can complain about, and I was a bit concerned by how full those categories were and the kinds of things that were in there.

      So, I'm just hoping that in our province, some of the things happen–other province and–taken in account in terms of planning this to make sure that this is done properly.

Mr. Altomare: Thanks, Ms. Bourbonniere, for your pre­sen­ta­tion this evening.

      I did hear that you were talking a bit about substitute teachers. Can you talk to us a little bit more about your concerns regarding substitute teachers and this bill?

Mr. Chairperson: Ms. Bourbonniere, go ahead.

E. Bourbonniere: For substitute teachers, it's a hard job, right? You're going into a classroom that you're not familiar with, a student's not familiar with. A lot of times students think, hey, we have a sub, right? And the behaviour goes from there.

      And sometimes, you know, if they kind of feel they smell blood, right? All sudden, there are some students who'll kind of push it, and will try to get a rise to deliberately not be listening and that kind of thing, and–so, it's a hard thing.

      Oftentimes substitute teachers are newer teachers. They may not be familiar with the building, and I'm concerned that, you know, the com­mis­sioner's aware, hey, this is a big category of people that are struggling with this, and getting lots of complaints about substitute teachers. They call them teachers in call, I guess, in BC.

      But, you know–so, what does that mean? What does that mean for discipline process? How are, within the system, substitutes being supported so they're not running into the same dif­fi­cul­ties?

Mr. Gerrard: Yes, you raised a concern about the potential for, if this bill is passed, exactly as it is now, that we may have some of the problems happening here that we're hearing about in the States.

      What is the–you know, the most sig­ni­fi­cant changes that you feel need to be put in place to prevent the problems that are happening in the United States from happening here?

Mr. Chairperson: Ms. Bourbonniere, go ahead.

E. Bourbonniere: I think that, you know, when there are place–in divisions, there are concern protocols, especially for, you know, selection of materials about kind of what is being taught. I think that some­thing like that should be going through division processes first, to be able to have a con­ver­sa­tion about those things, to go through a process to have evaluated.

      I'm not sure who it really serves to go to a centralized process for that, and it could be a year before it's actually even looked at, right? So, I just, I guess, would like this to be some­thing where we're focusing on, you know, serious misconduct, and not so much focusing on some of these things that can be dealt with through processes through a division.

Mr. Ewasko: Thank you, Ms. Bourbonniere, for that.

      Just taking a look at some of the comments you've made in regards to how we move forward, you've done some cross-juris­dic­tional comments and that. So, what do you–what's your ideas in regards to some of this reporting, then, if you've stated some of the things that have happened in Alberta and in BC?

      We in Manitoba have taken a look juris­dic­tionally–cross-juris­dic­tionally and feel that we've come up with a fairly decent Bill 35, so–

Mr. Chairperson: Minister, I have to cut you off. Your time has expired.

      Ms. Bourbonniere, please go ahead. We have about 20 seconds.

E. Bourbonniere: Well, I guess I hope that the minister and the committee will consider the views of teachers as have been presented to you over the last couple days.

      You know, there are some major concerns about this, and there are things that have happened that are a concern in other places, where things aren't being handled properly or people are being–not having privacy, and that kind of thing with names on registries.

Mr. Chairperson: Ms. Bourbonniere, thank you for your pre­sen­ta­tion.

Mr. Altomare: I ask for leave for a 10-minute break.

Mr. Chairperson: It's been asked that we would have a 10-minute recess. [Agreed]

      We're going to take a 10-minute recess and come back at about 9:15.

The committee recessed at 9:05 p.m.

____________

The committee resumed at 9:21 p.m.

Mr. Chairperson: Welcome back, everybody, to the thrilling and exciting com­mit­tee of Social and Economic Dev­elop­ment. We are here discussing Bill 35.

      I call the com­mit­tee back to order. And we are going to resume our list. Ms. Jordana Etkin. Is Jordana Etkin here?

      We do not see Jordana Etkin. We will move Jordana to the bottom of the list.

      Mr. Gregory Walker. Is Mr. Gregory Walker here? Mr. Gregory Walker is with us online.

      Mr. Walker, we'll just wait until we can see you, then we'll give you the floor for 10 minutes.

      Just to remind everyone: following 10 minutes from the presenter, there is 5 minutes of questions. No question is longer than 30 seconds and the answers can be at the discretion of the presenter.

      I see you there, Gregory. Welcome to the Legislature, virtually. You have the floor for 10 minutes. We're all ears and we look forward to hearing what you have to say.

      Please, go ahead.

Gregory Walker (Private Citizen): Good evening to the com­mit­tee. My name is Gregory Walker. I have been a teacher for 20 years in the Winnipeg School Division. I am also the President of the Winnipeg Teacher's Association.

      I have been fortunate enough to earn five degrees from the Uni­ver­sity of Western Ontario, the Uni­ver­sity of Alberta, and my most proud moment, when I earned my bachelor of edu­ca­tion at the Uni­ver­sity of Manitoba.

      My teaching, my classroom has been–excuse me–has been inspired by my family. On my father's side, my grandfather was a farmer in the rural RM of Forrest, outside Brandon. A very simple decision by the Province of Manitoba under Duff Roblin's leadership has sort of led my destiny.

      When the premier decided that children in rural areas, when they were finished with a one-room schoolhouse, would be permitted to go into the cities, into the towns that had high schools and continue to pursue their edu­ca­tion and get a high school diploma. That changed every­thing for my paternal family. My father, my aunt and my two uncles all received high school diplomas and then pursued post-secondary educations.

      On my mother's side, my edu­ca­tional philosophy is inspired by my grandmother, who would take me and my cousins, twice a day on Sunday, to mass at St. Ignatius church, and she would stop us at the door and she would look at us very seriously and she would say: your job, when you go through these doors, is to listen carefully but never turn off your brain. Think, ask and assess before you make any sort of commit­ment or devotion.

      This was a very serious, devout woman but she always encouraged us to be critical thinkers in every part of our lives, and I have tried to add that to my repertoire of skills I want my high school students to leave my classroom with.

      I am here tonight because I have a concern about Bill 35, the edu­ca­tion admin amend­ment act. My concern is about the inclusion of teacher competence in this bill.

      I fail to understand how investigating and adjudi­cating complaints related to a teacher's knowledge and skills or their ability to instruct and assess learning of the Manitoba curriculum addresses the safety of children, which is the stated in­ten­tion of this bill.

      In my 20 years as an educator, I have taught economics at the grade 11 and 12 levels. I would expect, with the negotiations of the standards under competency, that part of that assessment of my pro­fes­sional competence is based on curricular out­comes and objectives.

      The Province designs thoughtful curriculum docu­ments, which teachers must expertly meet the priorities of skills and knowledge that the Province has esta­blished as necessary. In this regard, I am unclear how my competence as a teacher can be assessed when the Province of Manitoba lacks any curriculum docu­men­ta­tion on the subject of econom­ics. How can I be held to a prov­incial standard by a com­mis­sion when my province does not have any standard for the teaching of economics?

      In the past 12 years, I have spoken directly to political leaders of all three parties as well as the last two mayors of the city of Winnipeg and to the head of the chamber of commerce, of which I am a member. All have agreed with me that the public edu­ca­tion system should be em­pha­sizing economic and financial literacy as well as fostering entrepreneurship for the next gen­era­tion. But developing a curriculum docu­ment has, so far, been a failure.

      I am a trained economist. That was my first pro­fession before I decided to join the ranks of a teacher. I think of individuals and the choices they make based on self interest: What is their benefit and what is their cost? Those lead to concepts of incentive: What is in it when I make a decision? What is the cost I accept? What are the benefits that I accept? And I have spent many years around seminar tables and conference tables, at gov­ern­ment levels talking about incentive and thinking about incentive because incentives are what guide and motivate people's decision making.

      The problem when we think about dissent with–about incentives is that we often forget to think about the unforeseen disincentives that we may create. As the president of the WTA, I hear a lot from my members, and I worry about this bill having an unintended disincentive for teachers. This all links to their profes­sionalism and their competency being linked to child safety, which is the first and foremost priority that I respect. But I think that we are creating a disincentive when we give op­por­tun­ity for teachers to feel or be vul­ner­able, and I think that is what's happening with my members now.

      I think if we create this disincentive, we are also going to create a circum­stance where future gen­era­tions of teachers will think twice about entering the profession. I think, by weakening this profession and perhaps finding a shortage of teachers, which they've already ex­per­ienced in the United States, and I have seen statistics that right now, in our province, we are seeing between six and 670 teachers leave the profes­sion every year, but the three uni­ver­sities are pro­ducing 600 teachers; you're already at deficit. How are you going to give an incentive for people to go into teaching?

* (21:30)

      I don't think I know explicitly what that answer might be. I think what we're doing is we're creating a situation where you will not have another gen­era­tion of teachers with uni­ver­sity, professionally trained cer­tifications. And I think that if you weaken the profes­sion, and you weaken the pro­fes­sional status of teachers, all you're going to do is create a disinflation spiral of public edu­ca­tion provisions.

      It is con­cern­ing to me many times when policy is developed–and I have been at the table when policy gets developed at various levels–we don't think much about what are the incentives in the legis­lation and what are the disincentives.

      And so, I come from this from a slightly different angle. I think of it in terms of my economics and I know the power of public edu­ca­tion and how it feeds the economy. I don't think this was the in­ten­tion of Bill 35, to create these disincentives, but I think we are starting to see it.

      I see it on a daily basis with the struggles our employers have in trying to fill substitute positions. We struggle in the city, unlike before, to find enough substitutes to fill the open jobs that regular teachers are unable to attend because of illness or other things.

      I just received infor­ma­tion in the last week from the Manitoba School Boards Association that it appears that the number of full-time equivalent teachers working in my division has dropped from last year to this year by 312.

      Now, I don't know how that's happened or why it's happened, but my biggest worry is you are having teachers–my members–who have decided the vul­ner­abilities, the pressures, the strains, it's not enough anymore. And I don't think we're finding re­place­ments.

      So, I think we've created disincentives that we did not anticipate when we thought about this legis­lation.

      Thank you for your time.

Mr. Chairperson: Mr. Walker, thank you for your pre­sen­ta­tion, and I ap­pre­ciate your perfect landing at zero seconds. That was impressive.

      We now go to a five-minute question time. No question will exceed 30 seconds.

      Mr. Walker, you–it's up to you how long you wish to take to answer the questions. I'm going to start off with Minister Ewasko with the first question.

      Minister, please go ahead.

Mr. Ewasko: Thank you, Mr. Walker, for attending this evening and staying up with us. I mean, I guess it is only 9:30–this is the second evening so it feels a little later than 9:30, but thanks for your pre­sen­ta­tion. Thanks for your words of advice and your comments in regards to some potential amend­ments moving forward.

      I do definitely want to understand from you why teachers would not want to be part of a regulated, respon­si­ble organi­zation such as the teaching profes­sion here in Manitoba as there–

Mr. Chairperson: Minister, your time has expired.

      Mr. Walker, if you wish to respond, please go ahead and do so.

G. Walker: Thank you for the question. I'm not a hundred per cent sure that this legis­lation is not part of a larger picture and my impression of the numbers that I have looked at is that we are starting to head towards a crunch.

      And, to use a Malcolm Gladwell term, there is always a tipping point. And I am usually not a pessim­istic person but I think, fun­da­mentally, the challen­ging or linking child safety to competence is–and I'm sure you've heard it from many others, but I'm looking at it from an economic perspective–I think that creates the disincentive that might be a tipping point for those who may be pro­fes­sionals now, or those who were thinking that they were going to enter into the profession, to think twice and look for other op­por­tun­ities.

      And for me, that disappoints me more because it doesn't give me a chance, as a teacher, to be able to do the things that I care about most: economic and financial literacy, and trying to foster entrepre­neurship. I have had students graduate from my class­rooms who have gone on to start some extremely suc­cess­ful busi­nesses; some of them here in the province of Manitoba, others in other parts of this country. I've had students who decided that they were passionate enough about economics that they wanted to pursue it. One of my former students is a graduate of the London School of Economics. I've had five Loran Scholars in my classroom.

      And I would hate to think that the next gen­era­tion of teachers, or possible teachers, won't have some of the same op­por­tun­ities that I did. And that all will create damage to the economy, because we all know that literacy, numeracy, are all key skills that we have to have coming into our economy. And I'm thinking of it from an economic perspective only, and that is why I am most concerned about this one issue of connecting competency to the safety of children in schools.

Mr. Altomare: Thank you, Mr. Walker, for your pre­sen­ta­tion.

      I'm really quite fascinated with the disincentive argument that you've posited this evening. Can you itemize some other disincentives that you see in this bill that have you concerned?

G. Walker: Well, one of the–one of my favourite stories to tell my students is that there was a nursery school in Israel that had a problem.

      Parents were not coming back to the nursery at 4 o'clock to pick up their children. And so, in fact, the nursery decided that they were going to try and change behaviour by applying a disincentive; they were going to punish parents for being late, and they were going to charge them $10 if they showed up after 4 o'clock.

      What they didn't think about or understand was they were really, actually, creating an incentive for the parents. By charging them only $10 for being late after 4 o'clock, and not having limits to it or anything, what they started to find in the parents' behaviour is they started to show up at the nursery at 7, 8, 9 and even 10 o'clock. Why? Because they got that many hours of babysitting for $10. They could go to the movies. They could enjoy, you know, a nice romantic dinner before they had to go and pick up the kids.

      In the meantime, you have workers at the daycare working, essentially, for free, because it was only a $10 disincentive. So, it goes both ways.

Mr. Chairperson: Mr. Walker, thank you.

      We, unfor­tunately, have run out of time. But we do ap­pre­ciate your remarks and you taking the time to be with us. Thank you.

      We will now move to Mr. Cameron Watson. Is Mr. Cameron Watson with us? I'm told Mr. Watson is online, and as soon as I see you, Mr. Watson, you will have 10 minutes, and a five-minute question period.

      Mr. Watson, thanks for being with us, just test your mic so we can hear you.

Cameron Watson (Private Citizen): Is it good? Can you hear me?

Mr. Chairperson: Perfect. Go ahead; you have 10 minutes. The floor is yours.

C. Watson: Right on.

      Thank you for the op­por­tun­ity to speak today. This is the first time I've ever actually spoken at a com­mit­tee. I'm a grade 9 social studies teacher, and I was actually talking to my class today a little bit about how gov­ern­ment works, and I was mentioning the fact that I would be speaking at a com­mit­tee today. And I'm looking forward to taking part in my demo­cratic right, so, thanks for having me.

      I'm a teacher of 13 years at William Morton Collegiate in Gladstone, Manitoba. I have previous teaching ex­per­ience in Ontario, Saskatchewan and South Korea. I have a bachelor of arts, master of arts, a bachelor of edu­ca­tion and a post-bacc in edu­ca­tion. I have won an award for my craft in 2018 from Brandon Uni­ver­sity. And I'm a proud teacher.

      I support the gov­ern­ment's interest in student safety, but I worry about the makeup and the prov­incial panel that would oversee teacher misconduct and competency claims.

* (21:40)

      I was accused of teacher misconduct several years ago. A parent contacted my principal and accused me of bullying his child. I was imme­diately put on leave, and an in­vesti­gation took place. My super­in­ten­dent and principal investigated the claim. I was devastated by the claim. I contemplated quitting. I felt that my reputation would never recover. I take my profession­alism and my abilities as a teacher very seriously.

      Thankfully, once the accusations were investi­gated, I was cleared of all wrongdoing. The evidence presented by the parents was that I put their child on a third line of a hockey team when he believed that he should be on the first line of a hockey team.

      The issue was dealt with in a con­fi­dential, pro­fes­sional manner by my principal and my super­in­ten­dent. If the panel you propose had existed, would a second in­vesti­gation occur? The accusation of bullying is some­thing that would be deemed significantly emo­tional, from what I'm–expect.

      The composition of the panel worries me, as the bill proposes that only one teacher will be on the panel. Would others on the panel have–with no personal relationship to me or the parents or others that do not understand the realities of my profession adequately understand the situation? Would this panel have taken away my teaching certificate?

      I'd like to report that I have continued to teach and I've excelled in my position and I'm proud of what I've done. I worry about a dual-track in­vesti­gation on teacher misconduct.

      I would like to propose an amend­ment to the bill that would enshrine the panel with at least 60 per cent public school teachers. I would also like to see a right to MTS repre­sen­tation when a teacher accused of misconduct–and that that is enshrined in this bill.

      I don't think that–teachers, when they're accused of these things, it takes a really big toll. That happened many years ago; I still bear that scar.

      The rural division in which I teach has dif­fi­cul­ty retaining teachers and principals. Mr. Walker men­tioned before that Winnipeg School Division has trouble with retention. Our school division has really struggled for retention of teachers, principals and attracting staff. This is one more thing that I think would really push people out of this profession. It would–it's a thing that if–I worry if this was in place when I was a younger teacher, I don't know if I'd be doing this today.

      Our division suffers from chronic underfunding, despite the minister's claim of historic funding. Our division has less funding in 2023 than it did in 2017, despite student enrolment increases and inflation. The emotional harm this has caused students is really sig­ni­fi­cant. There's been a loss of staff, a loss of special needs support, a loss of extra-curricular activities, loss of tons of op­por­tun­ities for rural kids, unrepaired buildings, cancelled projects, the list goes on.

      If you want to stop emotional harm, fund all schools and divisions appropriately. I don't really have anything else to say, so I will yield the rest of my time to the panel. I know that you guys have a busy schedule tonight.

      Thank you for your time and attention.

Mr. Chairperson: Thank you for presentation, Mr. Watson.

      We are going to begin a time of questions, and I will give the minister the first question.

      Minister Ewasko, please go ahead, you have 30 seconds.

Mr. Ewasko: Thank you, Mr. Watson, for being with us tonight, sharing your pre­sen­ta­tion, your story, your passion. And I see how frustrated you are, and not only frustrated, but emotionally affected by those allegations how many ever years ago; you didn't mention that, but I don't need that answer.

      Mr. Watson, I'm not bringing forward this bill lightly. As a teacher myself, I guess I'm going to have to wait, because my 30 seconds are up–

Mr. Chairperson: The minister's time has expired. Are there any other questions–[interjection]–sorry, yes, Mr. Watson, if you wish to respond, please do go ahead.

C. Watson: I don't doubt that the panel is–I believe that you guys have done your homework, but I do think that there's some things that I hope you hear from the people that have spoken tonight. I really think that the panel needs to have people that understand our profes­sion on it. I really strongly believe that because I find that people that–outside of our profession judging our misconduct or our competency is just a recipe for disaster.

      I really strongly believe that it's got to at least have 60 per cent teachers. That's similar to Ontario. I don't disconnect the fact that a panel should exist. I believe in student safety. I believe that students and parent concerns should be taken forward to a public panel. I don't think that's a bad idea.

      I do worry about a dual track, though. Like, if you're investigating warrants, it's tough emotionally and then you, if you had to do it again, like, you could wreck people. You could wreck them in their career. And I think that has to be taken really seriously, so.

Mr. Altomare: Thank you, Mr. Watson, for your pre­sen­ta­tion this evening. Certainly, it does give us a lot to think about when we're looking at amend­ments for this bill. And we will take the–your pre­sen­ta­tion seriously when doing so.

      I want to ask you how the bill, as it is written now, can impact your daily practice as a teacher.

Mr. Chairperson: Mr. Watson, please go ahead.

C. Watson: I do worry, outside of the misconduct part, but we're living in a very hypersensitive world right now. From the time that I started teaching to now, I do worry about how much just differences in opinion on culture and other things, it can really put teachers at risk.

      And I know that this panel is not supposed to hear frivolous complaints and I really hope that that is what they will do and the com­mis­sioner will–won't prevent that from happening. But I think that you–it might be an underestimation of how many frivolous complaints that might be put forward and how many of them might go on to this panel, and how serious that could be for the people in our profession.

      I really think that the panel needs to be con­structed properly and I really do disagree, like a lot of people before me, that competency should be really looked at. I think–I see those as two completely different things.

      Misconduct, as you understand it, like, just by being accused of it, everybody should have that right. If my child–if I thought my child was being bullied, I'd want an avenue to be able to kind of see that through and in­vesti­gate it.

      I do think that the process that's in place right now is not a bad one. I think that what happened in my case was fair. I give my super­in­ten­dent, my principal, total respect for what happened. It was dealt with quite well. I just hope that–two in­vesti­gations would be wrong, so you can't have both at the same time. And the panel has to be made up appropriately.

Mr. Gerrard: Thank you for sharing your story and the dif­fi­cul­ties that you went through and the false allegations.

      The process for you seemed to work. Why do we need to change it at this juncture?

Mr. Chairperson: Mr. Watson, please go ahead. You have 30 seconds.

C. Watson: I think that's an excellent question. I think that this bill is asking to do way more than maybe–I think that a focus on egregious offenses, is this bill could be a little bit more focused. Like, a panel that concentrates on things that are, you know, especially like of a sexual nature or a physical nature, but I think that it's too broadly focused and that is very prob­lematic.

Mr. Chairperson: Mr. Watson, thank you for your time.

      Our time for your pre­sen­ta­tion has, unfor­tunately, expired, but we do sincerely thank you for coming and joining us this evening.

C. Watson: Okay, thank you.

* (21:50)

Mr. Chairperson: Yes, you're welcome.

      We're going to move on to Ms. Sonja Blank. Is Ms. Sonja Blank with us?

      I'm told Ms. Blank is with us virtually, is that accurate? Okay, we're going to try Sonja Blank one more time.

      Sonja, I think we can see you, I'm going to ask the tech people if we can get better visual at our end here, and Sonja, you have 10 minutes, please go ahead. We welcome you to the Manitoba Legislature, thanks for coming.

Sonja Blank (Private Citizen): Yes, and thank you for having me.

      As you said, my name is Sonja Blank, and I want to acknowl­edge that I'm joining you today from Treaty 2 territory.

      I've been a teacher in Dauphin, Manitoba, for the past 24 years, and just like my fellow colleagues, I'm here today because I care about students. Because I believe in protecting children, and because I believe that Bill 35 poses a risk to both teachers as well as our students.

      Yesterday and today, we've heard from many extremely knowledgeable, caring and committed colleagues of mine, as well as other presenters, proposing amend­ments to Bill 35. They've asked for those amend­ments because of their fears on how Bill 35 will affect them, their colleagues, and even their students.

      I agree with all those proposals for amend­ments. We've heard about teachers seeing them­selves walk on eggshells, being targeted as members of margin­alized groups, and potentially judged by outdated beliefs.

      We've heard about concerns related to retaining and recruitment of teachers at a time when these are real–not imagined–realities in public edu­ca­tion in Manitoba. On the other hand, we've heard the minister talk about supports from stake­holders for a single-door approach, which is easy to do when you're a stake­holder who's not directly affected by the bill, and your livelihood and mental health are not at stake.

      We've heard the term demo­cracy used a few times in this room as the fun­da­mental structure im­por­tant in the process of making decisions around the values we share. In this case, our common value is keeping students safe. But will Bill 35 achieve that?

      I agree with this bill's primary purpose, as stated by the minister, as the pro­tec­tion and safety of children, which–to a teacher, there's nothing more im­por­tant than that.

      We stand with our students behind locked doors during a lockdown, and we are the last to leave our classrooms in a fire drill, or a real fire­–which happened at my school. Keeping students safe is our mandate.

      This bill, with its intent to define and provide a process on evaluating teacher conduct is, in my humble opinion, it's out of order for several reasons.

      In terms of the issue of conduct, I agree with Mr. Parry [phonetic], who spoke so eloquently yesterday that this bill is an overreach of the demo­cratic decision-making powers that lie within the purview of the legis­lative powers of the Prov­incial Assembly.

      Mr. Parry's–Parry-Hill's well-spoken comments yesterday pointed out that there are already demo­cratic structures in place to address cases of mis­conduct. The specific conduct cases that Ms. Noni Classen, from the national centre of child pro­tec­tion, made reference to yesterday–the approximately 1.2 per cent–and that might be a number that goes higher or lower–of all Manitoba teachers are cases of sexual misconduct–those are criminal cases and, therefore, belong in the judicial arms of the demo­cratic system, not the Legislature, because legis­lation already exists to ensure sexual predators are dealt with according to criminal law. And, hopefully, there they will be held accountable.

      So, in essence, we are creating a new law for 1.2 per cent–or, we've heard, even maybe lower–of teachers. However, that law will affect 100 per cent of teachers of Manitoba, when laws already exist to address those 1.2.

      However, I know we all agree that even 0.0001 per cent is too much when it comes to abuses of powers against children. So, some­thing does need to be done to reduce or hopefully eliminate, even, the slightest number of those cases.

      Last night, after we concluded the first round of these pre­sen­ta­tions at midnight, I had a number of questions run through my head and keep me up until 2 o'clock in the morning. So, if I'm a little bit rambling on today that's why.

      Some of those questions were: How can we improve the system to do better for students as it pertains to their safety? How do we eliminate the blind spots Ms. Classen referred to and identify those who hide under the guise of competency? What part does the government have to play? And what role does my employer have in all of this?

      As has been mentioned by others, local school divisions are our employer and are respon­si­ble for teacher supervision and evaluation. But Bill 35 further makes me wonder, is there any evidence that this respon­si­bility has not been fulfilled by school divisions to warrant handing this task over to a gov­ern­ment-regulated body? And if that respon­si­bility has not been fulfilled by school divisions, what measures were taken to rectify that shortfall? And if no measures were taken to rectify that shortfall it begs to question why not.

      It seems that Bill 35 puts the responsibility of an apparently faulty system at the feet of 98.8 per cent of innocent teachers, instead of putting it where it belongs: at the base of a system that has apparently allowed, as Noni Classen pointed out, for said blind spots, missing warning signs and bad actors hiding behind the guises of competency.

      It appears that for 98.8 per cent of the teaching force the existing system has been effective and efficient. So, to finish this line of thinking: in my school division and in speaking with colleagues around the province, I'm not aware of any training or pro­fes­sional dev­elop­ment at the division level or school level related to what Ms. Classen rightly points out as the existence of early warning signs.

      The skill of early detection of such warning signs is obviously some­thing that according to the national centre of child pro­tec­tion–and I wholeheartedly agree–should be ensured to protect our students. So as for the role of the gov­ern­ment, has there been a mandate given to local school divisions to ensure that this kind of training is made mandatory for all employees?

      For me this ties back to bill 64. Bill 64–the people of Manitoba clearly expressed that local school divisions have a place in the province and that with–and that we want them to continue to do their job. Supervision and evaluation of teachers is part of their job.

      On a personal note, keeping students safe is not only a respon­si­bility for me as a teacher, but an obli­gation I take very seriously. Believe me, when it comes to my students, I become a mama bear. And not just me; I've witnessed my colleagues fiercely safe­guarding their students whenever this was necessary.

      But saying that we can't have at least 50 per cent of educators making up the disciplinary panel is honestly insulting to me. This suggests that I and other teachers are biased and cannot be trusted to make the right decisions when it comes to judging the compe­tence of our colleagues. And even more troubling is the inference that we would choose to turn a blind eye and protect someone who abuses children. Truly, that is offensive on a deep level.

      Public school teachers like myself work hard every day with limited resources and in­creasingly growing needs, and still we are and will always be fiercely committed to our students. And we'll continue to put students' needs and pro­tec­tion first.

      Finally, I think con­sid­era­tion has to be given to another aspect of these in­vesti­gations. As pointed out numer­ous times yesterday and today, many of us believe that there are already processes in place at the school and divisional levels to in­vesti­gate complaints, as is their mandate. And school divisions can do so suc­cess­fully.

* (22:00)

      And although Bill 35 reassures that frivolous, vexatious and malicious complaints will be weeded out by the com­mis­sioner, with approximately 700 schools and over 200,000 students around the province, not only does that seem an onerous and unrealistic ex­pect­a­tion in terms of the number of potential complaints that can come forward, but, given that a prov­incial com­mis­sioner cannot know the entire context and circum­stances surrounding a situation, again it begs the question: Can the length and involvement into such in­vesti­gations really be justified when an existing local author­ity can complete those in­vesti­gations more efficiently?

      To summarize, I am, too, very worried about children being at risk and believe whole­heartedly that we need to put pro­tec­tions and training in place to ensure the safety of our students. At the same time, I am worried about this bill. Given the potential risks to innocent teachers of not only losing their hard-earned pro­fes­sional reputation but possibly even their livelihood.

      So, to ensure the best outcome for everyone involved, we need to ensure that we protect both students and teachers.

Mr. Chairperson: Ms. Blank, thank you for your pre­sen­ta­tion. Unfor­tunately the time has expired.

      We're going to move to five minutes of questions. Each question can be 30 seconds. The answers, though, are at your discretion, Ms. Blank.

      Minister Ewasko, please go ahead.

Mr. Ewasko: Thank you, Ms. Blank, for your pre­sen­ta­tion. I've only got 30 seconds, so, a couple things.

      So, yes, I have sent out a mandate letter for respect in schools and commit to kids to be taken by all school personnel. So that's to answer your earlier question.

      There's also been respect in sport has been sent out to all schools and coaches that have to–that are doing those positions as well.

      Quick question for you: Have you ever seen an example of a complaint that was handled appro­priately, and what did it look like?

S. Blank: Thank you for that question. Yes, I have. In fact, personally I've been involved in one.

      A student that I tried to redirect a few times, he was pushing–or they, I should say–they were pushing in the bus line and several times I said, you know, it's time for you to come a little closer to me so that, you know, we'll need to keep an eye on your behaviour a little bit here.

      And so, the child didn't feel like doing that at the time, continued to push. I needed to redirect the child by gently putting my hands around their shoulder. And later that day I was informed by my principal that a charge of inappropriate behaviour and conduct had been filed against me.

      And, long story short, just like Mr. Watson said earlier, the amount of emotional distress on me, I can't even begin to imagine what that would have been like had that gone to a public panel.

      The child was very angry with me at the time. We went through meetings–multiple meetings–that in­volved the principal, that involved the parents, the child, the divisional office staff. And yes, it turned out that, you know, it was just an issue of anger against me at the time, but luckily there was a witness, and–several witnesses, as there were other children in line who, you know, back–who were interviewed as well. And they–I was, you know–it was deter­mined that I had done nothing wrong.

      However, I still–the other day I was talking about this in pre­par­ation for this–for speaking to this com­mit­tee, and I broke down in tears. Because, as a teacher, I think nobody has as high ex­pect­a­tion of us than we do of ourselves. And to think that anyone would think that we would have harmed someone, it's just–yes, emotionally, sometimes, unbearable.

      I hope I answered the question.

Mr. Altomare: Thank you, Ms. Blank, and thank you for acknowl­edging that you're on Treaty 2 territory. Ap­pre­ciate you living what we're teaching our kids right now, and it's very im­por­tant.

      You mentioned at the outset of your pre­sen­ta­tion that Bill 35 poses a risk to kids. Can you expand on that a little bit? [interjection]  

Mr. Chairperson: Ms. Blank, go ahead. I just have to recog­nize you for the sake of the Hansard written notes.

      So, yes, Ms. Blank, go ahead.

S. Blank: My apologies.

Mr. Chairperson: That's okay.

S. Blank: Yes, so how does it pose a risk to children?

      You know, when we as teachers who are still, you know, we're still in an environ­ment right now where COVID has lingering effects of what we–of our daily life in the classroom, both for the children and for ourselves. And so, to add to that the psychological load and emotions of all the risks associated with this bill, you know, marginalized teachers being at risk, the fact that we have a sub shortage, a failure-to-fill rate, you know, not–the financial strains, the lack of funds moving into the classroom, it affects a teacher.

      And we know that teachers' working con­di­tions affect students' learning con­di­tions. So, what happens to me ultimately will have an effect on children. I mean, as a parent, you will know that if, you know, if you spend days and days walking on–

Mr. Chairperson: Ms. Blank, I'm sorry, I'm obliged to tell you that the time has expired.

An Honourable Member: –have leave?

Mr. Chairperson: Mr. Altomare has–there's a request for leave for Ms. Blank to finish her statement. Is that agreed? [Agreed]

      Yes, Ms. Blank, we'll give you a few extra seconds to finish your comments.

S. Blank: That's very kind. Thank you so much.

      So yes, to sum it up, Mr. Altomare, I think that every­thing we do, whether we are parents, whether we are teachers, when we are emotionally upset, our students pick that up.

Mr. Chairperson: Ms. Blank, thank you for sharing with us this evening. We really do ap­pre­ciate it. The point of these com­mit­tees is to hear from the public, and we ap­pre­ciate your remarks. Thank you for coming.

      Com­mit­tee will now move to, on the list, Mr. Chance Henderson. Is Mr. Chance Henderson with us? It does not appear Mr. Chance Henderson is with us. We'll review that at the end of the evening.

      Mrs. Breanne Kanaski. Is Mrs. Breanne Kanaski with us? Mrs. Breanne Kanaski does not appear to be with us at the moment. We'll try at the–[interjection] Drop her to the bottom of the list also.

      Ms. Nicole Bobick. Is Ms. Nicole Bobick with us? It appears that Ms. Bobick is with us.

      And we'll just give you a moment, Nicole, to get set up there. You're going to have 10 minutes to make–up to 10 minutes to have a–make a pre­sen­ta­tion, followed by five minutes of questions.

      Nicole, welcome.

Nicole Bobick (Swan Valley Teachers' Association): Can you hear me?

Mr. Chairperson: We can hear you. You have 10 minutes. The floor is yours. Please go ahead.

N. Bobick: Good evening, and, of course, my name is Nicole Bobick, and I'm the president of Swan Valley Teachers' Association, and I'm joining you from Swan River, on the beautiful Treaty 4 territory.

      I've been a teacher for 15 years and served on our local teacher association for over 10 of those years. I'm here today to share concerns regarding Bill 35 as a teacher, a public citizen and repre­sen­ting the voice of the teachers within the Swan Valley.

      It has been made clear over and over that we all want to protect students from harm; this is an absolute. In fact, I commend the gov­ern­ment, who is willing to move forward to do so. However, a quick bill will not solve this problem.

      Passing a bill that sounds like it is incomplete or vague can ultimately do more harm than help. Just ask anyone within our Swan River com­mu­nity about the arrest-and-release policy of the federal gov­ern­ment. Crime has increased by 50 per cent over the past five years and our current crime rate is six times higher than the country's average. The fact of the matter is that not all bills help those who they're trying to protect.

* (22:10)

      I have three specific areas regarding Bill 35 that are a concern, that I would like to address here tonight: (1) teacher misconduct and teacher competency and why they should not be addressed together. And, really, we already have systems in place to address child abuse allegations, teacher misconduct and competency. And, thirdly, Bill 35 creates another way for teachers to be attacked and falsely accused; this will happen, and the result will be damaging to teachers' mental health and to the profession itself.

      I will try to help the minister and the com­mit­tee members to understand what this bill looks like, feels like and sounds like to the teachers teaching in the classrooms of today.

      Teacher misconduct and teacher competency should not be addressed together for many reasons. Number 1, teacher competency is something that grows over time. We all enter into this profession with various skills that we build upon and grow. A teacher is, in fact, a lifelong learner and should model that to their students and to the com­mu­nity. A teacher should be supported to grow and feel comfortable asking questions about how to improve their skills.

      When teacher misconduct and teacher compe­tency are grouped together with protecting children from child abuse, as they are in Bill 35, the trust of pro­tec­tion and fair process is lost, and fear replaces that trust as teachers may not want to be open anymore about the areas they need to improve upon.

      A colleague has previously mentioned the trust cookies. Some trust cookies from our current gov­ern­ment need to be placed in the cookie jar. This can be done by amending Bill 35. In Swan Valley, the school division has adapted their teacher evaluations to a pro­fes­sional growth model to promote growth and to not tear down teachers who are learning and growing. This also hinders col­lab­o­ration and con­fi­dence.

      Secondly, that brings me to speak about the growing number of uncertified teachers teaching in classrooms right now. Never before have we seen numbers like this. Here in Swan Valley, approxi­mately 10 per cent of our teachers are uncertified. How can you reprimand someone who has not been taught to be a teacher? Work­place health and safety guide­lines here in the province say that it is up to the employer to train employees for their job. This, in the teaching profession, is a gradual process.

      With the lack of subs and budget cuts, PD for teachers is limited, as teachers cannot get a sub to cover their class, nor does the division have extra funds to pay for division-wide pro­fes­sional dev­elop­ment like they used to. It's usually the first thing on the chopping block for the school boards. Teachers would love to have time to develop their skills even more than they already do, but teaching is not a profession that ends at the end of the school day; it involves our evenings, early mornings, weekends, summers, every­thing in between, being good parents and com­mu­nity members.

      Last but definitely not least, this bill, as written, looks as it is creating another avenue for those who do want to damage teachers, for those who do want to take their anger out on teachers and who do no–and do want to get them in trouble. We pay their wages anyway, they say to me. I've heard this from words in–from parents in our com­mu­nity over and over.

      This bill looks like it wants to protect children, but it does not look like it wants to protect teachers. What about the sig­ni­fi­cant emotional harm to teachers who will live through the in­vesti­gation process and have been falsely accused? In my ex­per­ience as a teacher and a principal, angry parents may lie; it does happen, especially if they think they are protecting their children.

      When you look up the bill and read it, this is what the teachers in Swan Valley are interpreting. Instead of adding to the cookie jar, you are eating the last one right in front of us. Right now we already have sys­tems in place that are respon­si­ble for teacher miscon­duct and teacher competency, as well as to protect children from abuse. School divisions and MTS are currently respon­si­ble for teacher competency and mis­conduct; child pro­tec­tive services, human rights com­mis­sion, the RCMP are all systems in place to protect all people from abuse.

      It feels like the gov­ern­ment proposing this bill does not trust school divisions to do their job. It feels like all teachers are being punished for the crimes of very few. We would not do this to the students in our classrooms. We would not punish all of them for the behaviour of one or two.

      Let's be honest: these disturbing events have happened, and they started this process. But let's get it right. We need to make adjustments; let's do that, but let's first ask ourselves: does the general public know about the systems in place already to report these abuses?

      Sometimes, if things are not working, it stems from a lack of com­muni­cation, and I believe this is the case here. Parents may not know the process and systems in place already to protect their children, and they need to feel that they do to believe their children are safe. The bill reads: Any person may make a written complaint to the com­mis­sioner that alleges pro­fes­sional misconduct by a teacher or that the teacher has been incompetent to carry out the profes­sional respon­si­bilities of a teacher.

      How is a member of the general public able to deter­mine the teacher is incompetent? Is it fair to allow parents to bypass talking about issues with their children's teachers, principals, resource teachers, super­in­ten­dents?

      I'm not talking about abuse here. To be clear, I'm talking about the concerns regarding teaching practices or other parental concerns. Do we not want to lead by example and model good com­muni­cation, problem solving, relationship building, conflict reso­lu­tion skills? Account­ability keeps people honest, and open com­muni­cation–with those we have concerns with is a skill that is currently becoming lost.

      This bill feels like every complaint will be treated as guilty until proven innocent.

      Teachers who–want to protect students from harm but they also want to be protected from the harm they already endure in their day-to-day jobs. This bill will create yet another plat­form for teachers to be attacked, judged and falsely accused. Every day, teachers deal with false accusations. This bill allows those with vindictive in­ten­tions to voice their attacks without con­se­quence.

      This scares teachers, to put it simply. Teachers are leaving the profession at a staggering rate. New teachers, after one, two, three years, are saying no; no way I'm doing this for the rest of my life. I had a call today, fourth-year teacher, asking me how to resign.

      Teachers are retiring earlier and as soon as they can. I'm getting out of here as soon as possible, they tell me. The amount of sick leaves is suddenly increas­ing and the substitute list is dwindled into a handful, at best. Teachers who have been teaching for over 25 years tell me that they have never felt like this before. Uni­ver­sities are disclosing that they are receiving 40 to 50 per cent less enrolment in the Faculty of Edu­ca­tion.

      This bill, simply put, does not make teachers feel safe and protected from attacks. Why would you enter a profession that has no safeguard to protect teachers from false attacks?

      I am, as far as I know, the first and only openly queer teacher in the Swan Valley School Division. I am fearful and have had many attacks. My–I am fearful that this bill will subject our 2SLGBTQIA teachers to more hateful attacks and discrimination that they already endure.

      I'm also a teacher who teaches in a unique way–ways parents are not used to or understand sometimes. I also fear for those teachers as myself teaching and guiding students through topics such as resi­den­tial schools, Indigenous perspectives, diversity, culture, homophobia, transphobia, biphobia, mental health, puberty, evolution, Holocaust, just to name a few.

      Mental health for our society is not okay. Teachers are not okay. Teachers have had a hard time saying that they're not okay because they've had to be okay every day for their students, your children. It is my job to tell you they're not okay. They have nothing left to give. Gas tanks are empty. They cannot do more. They cannot take much more.

      Help them. Support them. Use this bill as an op­por­tun­ity to protect students and teachers. Put some trust cookies in that cookie jar.

      I'm here to tell you that we must work together to develop and write a bill that we can all stand behind.

      Imagine a bill that teachers trust is not going to harm them. Remember the point of this bill is to protect children from abuse. I propose adding pro­tec­tion for teachers from abuse, harassment, discrimin­ation and sig­ni­fi­cant emotional harm as well.

      When I was young, I always felt it was my pur­pose to help support and protect people. I–

Mr. Chairperson: Ms. Bobick, I'm sorry I'm obliged to tell you the time has expired.

      We're going to move along to the questions now, and there is five minutes allotted for questions.

      Minister Ewasko, the first question does go to you. Please go ahead.

Mr. Ewasko: Thanks, Ms. Bobick for joining us this evening and bringing forward your pre­sen­ta­tion and also your recom­men­dations for possible amend­ments.

      I am working hard, as is our gov­ern­ment and the de­part­ment, on those trust cookies, so hopefully you will–you and other presenters will see that we are listening, have been listening for 15, 16, 17 months-plus, already.

      I've got a quick question for you. Is there a regula­tory framework that treats competence separate from misconduct?

Mr. Chairperson: Ms. Bobick, please go ahead.

N. Bobick: It's not my role to review and look at all policies and all procedures and all areas of the country.

      I do feel that this bill, the way it is written, the way that it has been put together–I heard tonight that it's a decent bill. Decent isn't good enough.

* (22:20)

      So, to answer your question simply, I'm not sure if there's any that are doing really well. What I see, from what I read from this bill, is it puts teachers in a very risky position, and we are in a place where we cannot have any more harm placed upon us. It is a crisis. It–we are having a teacher shortage crisis. And this is not going to help us.

Mr. Altomare: Thank you, Ms. Bobick. And thank you for acknowledging that you're coming from Treaty 4, also living the work that you do every day by making that statement.

      You noted at the begin­ning of your pre­sen­ta­tion that this is a quick bill, and that it could do more harm than good. Can you expand a little bit more on that?

Mr. Chairperson: Ms. Bobick, please go ahead.

N. Bobick: Thank you for the question. The optics of this was the allegations that came out through the media. It was referred to last night. We all know that this may happen within schools.

      But I think more con­sul­ta­tion needs to happen. This bill just came out of those situations that I see–and yes, I agree, we need to look at how we can do this better, how can we protect our children better. We can't do this with a quick read. We can't do this on opposite sides of the table. We need to find a way where we can meet in the middle.

Mr. Gerrard: Yes, as you point out, the bill came out of situations like that of Kelsey McKay and the abuse that he perpetrated toward kids.

      Will this bill actually improve the reaction to individuals like Kelsey McKay?

Mr. Chairperson: Ms. Bobick, please go ahead.

N. Bobick: I don't think that this bill will improve it.

      I think that we need to look at the systems that are in place and why they're failing. Let's look at that first. What's the data? Were any reports previously made there? Why were they not investigated? What are some avenues that people could make reports if they didn't feel that their school divisions were looking into this the way they thought? Do parents know all of the ways that they can make a complaint? Do parents know all the agencies that are out there to protect children?

      I think that we need to look at these things first before we propose a bill that is, to speak frankly, just very vague and not clearly defined. I do hear that those definitions will be clarified, but right now, it does not look like that, it doesn't not feel like that and, when you read it, it definitely doesn't sound like that.

Mr. Ewasko: Ms. Bobick, we've shone the light on many of this–many of the issues going on right now in regards to grooming and all those types of things.

      I just want to alert you to a couple quick stats, and it was brought up by Mr. Gerrard.

      Did you know that Kelsey McKay, the football coach, was charged with multiple sexual offenses against children? There were over 10 complaints about this coach ending in over 30 criminal charges dating back to the late '90s, and those complaints are going through the court system right now.

      I feel that we do have to act. I do feel that this bill will provide the safety for teachers and for students, especially when we start writing the regula­tions in regards to the standards.

Mr. Chairperson: Minister, the time has expired.

      Ms. Bobick, we thank you for your pre­sen­ta­tion and for coming and sharing with us this evening.

      We are going to move along the list now to presenter No. 26, Mrs. Bobbi-Lynn Geekie.

      Is Mrs. Bobbi-Lynn Geekie with us? We do not see her at the moment. We will drop her name to the bottom of the list.

      Mrs. Karla Rootsaert. Is she with us? Yes. Okay.

      Mrs. Karla Rootsaert, welcome. We–you'll have 10 minutes to present. As soon as I see you on the screen, I'll give you the floor, followed by five minutes of questions, no question being more than 30 seconds, and your answers can be as long as they want within that five-minute limit.

      Thanks for joining us this evening, Karla. You have the floor for up to 10 minutes. If you want to take the whole time, you're welcome to, or finish early–whatever you prefer. We're all ears.

Karla Rootsaert (Private Citizen): Okay.

      Good evening, and thank you to the com­mit­tee for the op­por­tun­ity to speak today.

      My name is Karla Rootsaert. I have been a teacher for 27 years in a number of schools in Manitoba, most recently in the Garden Valley School Division for 21 years.

      As teachers, student safety is our No. 1 priority. The first point of the MTS teacher code of professional practice is that our primary pro­fes­sional re­spon­si­bility is to our students. It is our duty to ensure that schools are always safe places–not just safe places for making mistakes or expressing one's identity or for asking difficult questions, but safe places free from harm and abuse for every child.

      I am in full support of laws that improve child safety and enhance child pro­tec­tion. Protecting children is paramount.

      I am here tonight because I have some concerns about parts of Bill 35. One of my concerns is about the inclusion of teacher competence in this bill.

      Competency and conduct are two distinct entities. Competence is the respon­si­bility of the employer which, in this case, would be the school division. School divisions already have robust frameworks in place to evaluate teacher competence. In addition, these evaluations have been customized to specific teacher roles and specialties.

      Having your direct supervisor evaluate your performance and discuss it with you creates relation­ships and provides mentoring for teachers to grow in their pro­fes­sional practice. In addition, these evalu­ations have been created by staff with classroom teaching ex­per­ience, and they understand the areas of growth and proficiency that would be required for teachers.

      I do not understand how investigating and adjudi­cating complaints related to a teacher's knowledge and skills or their ability to instruct and assess the learning of the Manitoba curriculum addresses the safety of students, which is the stated in­ten­tion of this bill.

      I am hired, supervised and evaluated by my employer, the Garden Valley School Division, but under Bill 35, the com­mis­sioner has the power to address issues of competence. This allows for a third party, comprised mostly of non-educators, to evaluate teacher performance. It creates a situation where individuals without expertise in edu­ca­tion are now respon­si­ble for judging teacher competency. It also leaves teachers with no avenue to improve their practice.

      To address this concern, the panel composition should be con­sistent with other regulated professions in Manitoba, where most of the members are from the profession.

      I know that the minister has previously stated that the gov­ern­ment will work with edu­ca­tion stake­holders to create a competency framework. So, my question is, will that framework replace my division's evaluation docu­ments? Or will there be two separate competency frameworks that teachers will be held respon­si­ble for? Does one supersede the other? And will there be two in­vesti­gations for each allegation?

      Another concern for me is the undefined term sig­ni­fi­cant emotional harm within teacher misconduct. This is vague and allows room for inter­pre­ta­tion. The bill specifies that the com­mis­sioner would be able to dismiss frivolous and vexatious claims, but the bill does not explain what would qualify as either sig­ni­fi­cant emotional harm or what would be considered frivolous.

      This means that the public also does not have specific guide­lines for reporting under this category. My concern is this would lead to complaints from the public due to misunderstandings, lack of knowledge or different perspectives.

      In our school division, parents have always been encouraged to talk to the person they have an issue with first. I have been able to have insightful–and sometimes intense–con­ver­sa­tions with a number of parents through­out my career about a range of topics, including: having certain books in my library; the strategies I use to teach math; interpersonal conflicts between students; mask wearing; or teaching certain curricula topics. Without these con­ver­sa­tions, would parents have made a report to the com­mis­sioner instead, especially knowing that they are able to make that complaint anonymously?

* (22:30)

      This does not lead to better under­standing between teachers and parents, nor does it allow for reso­lu­tions of issues at a school or divisional level.

      As it stands now, sig­ni­fi­cant emotional harm could be associated with anything, from how a student is graded, to classroom manage­ment practices, to resources in the classroom, or teaching of topics considered sensitive. In my own ex­per­ience, topics that have been considered sensitive include resi­den­tial schools, Indigenous culture, certain types of instru­ments or music, anti-racist edu­ca­tion, anti-biased educa­tion and the inclusion of 2SLGBTQIA repre­sen­tation in classroom resources. Concerns on these topics could be reported as causing sig­ni­fi­cant emo­tional harm, which could result in many teachers avoiding these topics. This would leave students and teachers from equity-seeking groups vul­ner­able.

      Our job is to keep students–all students–safe in school. Students and teachers from these groups need to know that they are represented and supported in our schools. Teachers need to know that supporting these students will not result in being reported by indi­viduals who are not in agree­ment with certain view­points or lifestyles.

      The reality is these attitudes exist in all of our com­mu­nities, despite human rights provisions, and are on the rise. The threat of having complaints placed upon you for addressing some of these topics will cause some teachers to remain silent out of fear and, as a result, students to feel unsupported and alone. This is contrary to the stated goal of student safety.

      The reassurance that frivolous or vexatious and malicious complaints will be dismissed by the com­mis­sioner is not encouraging without a clear definition of these terms. The impact on the teacher could be signi­fi­cant, depending on whether or how far the in­vesti­gation proceeds before it is deemed un­founded. This would have sig­ni­fi­cant and possibly devastating career and personal repercussions and even more so in smaller com­mu­nities. Qualifying sig­ni­fi­cant emo­tional harm more narrowly would help to minimize this vul­ner­ability for teachers while ensuring pro­tec­tions are in place for students.

      Finally, the bill does not have spe­cific­ally stated provisions for MTS repre­sen­tation at public hearings. Other regulated professions have wording that makes the right to repre­sen­tation clear. This should be clearly defined in the bill.

      Based on these concerns, I would like to propose the following: removing competence from the bill; ensuring that hearing panels are in line with the composition of disciplinary panels of other pro­fes­sional bodies in Manitoba; include the expressed right to representation for a teacher being investigated; and defining the term sig­ni­fi­cant emotional harm.

      Thank you for your time this evening.

Mr. Chairperson: Ms. Rootsaert, we thank you for your pre­sen­ta­tion.

      We're now going to move to five minutes of questions, and I'm going to start by acknowl­edging Minister Ewasko.

      Please go ahead.

Mr. Ewasko: Thanks, Mrs. Rootsaert, for your pre­sen­ta­tion and being with us tonight. Thank you for bringing forward some of your amend­ments, as well, near the end there.

      A couple things I do want to just say quickly; I've only got 30 seconds. The anonymous allegations or whatever else, that's not on, and the com­mis­sioner is definitely going to have that author­ity, because it's pretty hard to do an in­vesti­gation when you have nothing to link it back to.

      Thank you again for your pre­sen­ta­tion.

Mr. Chairperson: Minister, your time has expired.

      Mr. Altomare.

Mr. Altomare: Her turn to respond.

Mr. Chairperson: Forgive me. Sorry, folks, I–that's my error. It's getting late.

      Okay. Mrs. Rootsaert, please feel free to respond to the minister, if you would like to.

K. Rootsaert: No response. I'm good.

Mr. Chairperson: Thanks for being gracious.

      Mr. Altomare, please go ahead.

Mr. Altomare: I apologize for, you know, mixing that up a little bit.

      Ms. Rootsaert, thank you for your pre­sen­ta­tion this evening. Certainly listened with interest, espe­cially around what you were describing as a teacher's pro­fes­sional growth.

      How could this bill, as you understand it, affect a teacher's pro­fes­sional growth over time?

Mr. Chairperson: Ms. Rootsaert, please go ahead.

K. Rootsaert: When we have evaluations with our principal, they see us many times, they know us personally.

      We have reviews every five years, so they have five years of data to look at. They can have con­ver­sa­tions with you. They can discuss your areas of growth, they can mentor you, they can provide funds for PD, they can link you to other teachers.

      And I don't see that kind of provision in the bill as it stands for allegations that are related to competence.

Mr. Gerrard: My question is this: This bill came forward in part because of what happened with Kelsey McKay, and it wasn't picked up for many years; do you think that this bill will enable situations like that to–this–like that to be identified earlier, and problems prevented?

Mr. Chairperson: Ms. Rootsaert, please go ahead.

K. Rootsaert: I'm not sure that I would be qualified to make that assessment.

      I mean, certainly, the misconduct piece is im­por­tant. Protecting kids from harm and keeping them safe from sexual predators is absolutely im­por­tant.

      But, yes.

Mr. Ewasko: Ms. Rootsaert, I just want to assure you and others that are online and in this com­mit­tee room tonight that definitely we're going to make sure that we develop those standards together–teachers, em­ployers, teacher representatives–to make sure that those standards, those teaching standards, are written together as the teachers' society also had wanted back in the K‑to‑12 com­mis­sion.

      So, thank you very–

Mr. Chairperson: Minister, your time has expired.

      Mr. Altomare. [interjection] Oh, forgive me. Ms. Rootsaert, don't take it personally. It's been a long day.

      Please, go ahead and feel free to respond.

K. Rootsaert: Yes, I ap­pre­ciate those statements.

      I also think that the definitions will be very im­por­tant, not only to reassure teachers, but also for the public and parents to know what the parameters are in–related to misconduct.

Mr. Altomare: So, Ms. Rootsaert, would you be open to a clear and succinct definition of teacher compe­tency in the bill?

K. Rootsaert: I'm sorry, I didn't quite catch that.

Mr. Altomare: [interjection] Okay. Yes.

      Can I ask–can I have leave for–yes. Thank you.

Mr. Chairperson: Is there leave? [Agreed]

      That's fine, we'll go a few seconds over.

Mr. Altomare: Ap­pre­ciate that.

      Ms. Rootsaert, I just–are you open to a clear and succinct definition of teacher competency?

K. Rootsaert: I think if it is developed with teachers and works in–with the divisional ones as well, that would make sense.

Mr. Chairperson: Mrs. Rootsaert, thank you for coming and sharing with us this evening. We do ap­pre­ciate it.

      We're going to move now to the list of–continue down the list.

      Mr. Michael Flett. Is Mr. Michael Flett here? It appears Mr. Michael Flett is not here. He was called last night, and so this is the second calling. He will be struck from the list.

      Ms. Paula Calado. Ms. Paula Calado. Is Ms. Calado here? Ms. Calado is not here. She was called last night and this is the second calling. She will not be called again.

      Mrs. Catharine Foy. Mrs. Catharine Foy was called last night. This is the second calling. She will not be called again.

      Mike Urichuk. Mike is with us. Mike, we look forward to seeing you momentarily on the screen here.

      Mike, as soon as I see you, I'm going to give you the floor for 10 minutes, then there's five minutes of questions. The questions are 30 seconds each. You can take as along as you want to answer them within that five-minute window.

      So, once I see you, I'm going to give you the floor.

      Mike, welcome. Great to have you here. Just test your mic for us, Mike.

* (22:40)

Mike Urichuk (Private Citizen): You got it, man.

Mr. Chairperson: Awesome.

M. Urichuk: How is that going?

Mr. Chairperson: It's perfect.

      Okay, we're off to the races, Mike. You have the floor for 10 minutes, and we're all ears.

M. Urichuk: Good evening.

      I want to start today by acknowl­edging the many people that have come before me to speak to Bill 35 and their concerns regarding child safety in our schools. So, thank you to all of you fellow advocates and presenters for con­sistently bringing the con­ver­sa­tion around Bill 35 to the central concern of child safety and how safety is much more than just a disciplinary process.

      Thank you to the presenters that have spoken about how poverty impacts student safety; how under­funding impacts student safety. Thank you to the pre­senters that have spoken about equity-seeking groups and how their safety is tied to the harm of exclusion, xenophobia, homophobia, transphobia, misogyny and other forms of societal hate.

      I speak today to remind the com­mit­tee of what has been said, to thank those who have said it and to add my perspective on needed changes within this legis­lation.

      My name is Mike Urichuk, and I have worked in schools in various roles for over a decade, and most of my ex­per­ience has taken place in the Garden Valley School Division, and mostly in Winkler.

      I'm here tonight because I have some concerns about Bill 35, The Edu­ca­tion Admin­is­tra­tion Amend­ment Act (Teacher Certification and Pro­fes­sional Conduct), as it is currently written. As a teacher, the code of professional practice states that my primary pro­fes­sional respon­si­bility is to my students. I take this respon­si­bility seriously and I am concerned because Bill 35 falls short of protecting my students.

      In the second edition of the Canadian Centre for Child Pro­tec­tion's research titled Child Sexual Abuse and Victimization by K‑to‑12 School Personnel in Canada, the first key recom­men­dation of that report is to, quote, esta­blish a framework supported by legis­lation that ensures all complaints and concerns of a sexual nature related to any person working in a school environ­ment–i.e. teachers, administrators, bus drivers, therapists, edu­ca­tional assistants, the custodial staff–are reported to a singular, specialized and child-centred public body that is fully in­de­pen­dent and free from the conflicts of interest present in many existing systems. End quote.

      In Bill 35, a com­mis­sioner is appointed to review and address complaints and reports on the misconduct of teachers. So, this fails to meet the key recom­men­dation of the CCCP report, as it does not include all school personnel. To protect our students, the com­mis­sioner should be tasked with reviewing and ad­dressing complaints and reports on the misconduct of all school personnel and volunteers, not just teachers.

      Given that this data-driven recom­men­dation clearly would require the com­mis­sioner to provide oversight of misconduct by all school personnel, what was the reason that non-teacher school personnel were not included in the com­mis­sioner's scope of author­ity within Bill 35?

      In addition to misconduct, the com­mis­sioner can address complaints and reports regarding teacher in­competence and, when addressing a complaint or report regarding incompetence, the com­mis­sioner can order a hearing and appoint a hearing panel. This hearing panel will be made up mostly of non-teachers. This means that most of a hearing panel to deter­mine incompetence may not, them­selves, understand the required competencies of a teacher.

      Further, depending on the regula­tions that arise from this legis­lation, you could have a clinician–who is deemed to be a teacher for all purposes of the edu­ca­tional admin­is­tra­tion act, such as a speech-language pathologist–brought before one of these hearing panels, where not even one of the panellists would understand the competencies required of an SLP.

      Bill 35, as currently drafted, can create situations where individuals without expertise are respon­si­ble for judging the competency of edu­ca­tion pro­fes­sionals. To improve fairness, the hearing panel composition should be con­sistent with other regulated professions in Manitoba, where most of the panel is from the profession. While the ordering of these panels may be infrequent–such is the case in BC and other juris­dic­tions–they should be functional and fair when they are appointed.

      Further, the bill is silent on whether teachers, inclusive of clinicians, can have union repre­sen­tation at public hearings. Other regulated professions spe­cific­ally have wording that makes the right to repre­sen­tation clear. Why is this missing from Bill 35?

      The broad definition of misconduct. Very common topic that has been heard by this com­mit­tee already, including sig­ni­fi­cant emotional harm. Sig­ni­fi­cant emotional harm or incompetency could be associated with anything from how a student is graded to class­room manage­ment practices to resources or teaching of topics considered sensitive.

      In my home com­mu­nity, there is a small but vocal and motivated group of people who complain when teachers strive to create an inclusive classroom. The inclusion of 2STLGBQIA+ people has been categor­ized by some complainants as persecution of their child's religious beliefs and, thus, causing alleged emotional harm to their child.

      These complaints are draining to handle and cause a great amount of distress to all involved. Some teachers in my region have removed books from–some teachers in my region have removed books with repre­sen­tation of gay characters, taken down signs signalling safe spaces to 2STLGBQIA+ people, and refrain from discussing topics regarding human diversity altogether, just to avoid ex­per­iencing these complaints.

      And, I want to be clear, these teachers are trying their best in these situations. Teaching can be a stressful job and avoiding another complaint can be a self-preservation technique to protect teachers from burnout.

      I am worried about further removal of resources that promote respect for human diversity within our classrooms. I am worried about the number of the 2STLGBQIA+ teachers who would choose only to work in areas with more tolerant com­mu­nities.

      School should be a safe place for everyone where we can learn to respect diversity, and the reassurance that frivolous, vexatious or malicious complaints will be weeded out by the com­mis­sioner offers little rapport–offers little comfort, as well as the repeated statement saying that human rights must be followed. Because the impact on the teacher could be sig­ni­fi­cant depending on whether–or how far the in­vesti­gation proceeds before it is deemed un­founded, and how long the decision takes to be made.

      Some complainants in our region have gone as far to claim that teachers are grooming their children or exposing their children to child pornography. These are serious accusations and should warrant an in­vesti­gation.

      But, sometimes it turns out that they just suspected the teacher is not heterosexual and, there­fore, feel like these terms would categorize that teacher. And the time from a complaint being submitted to a complaint being deter­mined as substantiated or un­founded can be sig­ni­fi­cant.

      While the complaint is pending, a lot of damage can be done, and the damage in a substantiated claim is obvious. The damage in a frivolous claim can include increased stress, reduced teacher perform­ance, reduced student and teacher well-being and permanent impacts on working relationships.

      To reduce all forms of harm, Bill 35 should define its terms as clearly and spe­cific­ally as possible to allow for the processing of these complaints to be done as efficiently as possible. Qualifying sig­ni­fi­cant emotional harm more narrowly would help to mini­mize this vul­ner­ability for teachers while ensuring pro­tec­tions are in place for students.

      Further, as has been previously stated in past presen­ta­tions made to this com­mit­tee, competence and conduct are inappropriately linked in this bill. Please address student safety by addressing mis­conduct. And then address teacher competence separative–separately, as has been committed to by the Edu­ca­tion Minister to do so by consulting edu­ca­tion stake­holders such as the Manitoba Teachers' Society.    

      In conclusion, I would like to propose the following amend­ments:

      (1) Task the com­mis­sioner with overseeing misconduct for all school personnel and volunteers, not just teachers.

      (2) Remove competence from the bill.

      (3) Ensure hearing panels are composed of a majority of members of the profession, in line with the composition of disciplinary panels of other pro­fes­sional bodies in Manitoba.

      (4) Include the express right to repre­sen­tation for a teacher being investigated.

      (5) Limit reports by employers to suspensions and terminations, as opposed to any and all discipline for pro­fes­sional misconduct or incompetence.

* (22:50)

      (6) Define sig­ni­fi­cant emotional harm, and this includes specific language related to psychological harm to the pupil or child, where the act is based on a characteristic protected by The Human Rights Code, repeated conduct that could reasonably cause a pupil or child to be humiliated or intimidated or a single occurrence that could reasonably be expected to and has a lasting harmful effect on the pupil or child.

      (7) To protect the privacy of teachers who are deter­mined not–

Mr. Chairperson: Mr. Urichuk, you know, we can give you another few seconds. You don't have to read at a hundred words a second, here. You know, if you're reading the last paragraph, please, go ahead.

      I need to request leave. Is there leave to let him finish? [Agreed]

      Mr. Urichuk, if you're down to your last paragraph or so, please go ahead.

M. Urichuk: Just on the last one, I'll start at:

       (7) Protect the privacy of teachers who are deter­mined not to have the capacity to carry out the professional respon­si­bilities of a teacher because of a physical or mental dis­abil­ity.

      Thank you for your time.

Mr. Chairperson: Thank you for your pre­sen­ta­tion. We're going to move along to five minutes of questions.

      I'm going to start with Minister Ewasko.

Mr. Ewasko: Thanks, Mr. Urichuk. I'm going to make this quick because I only get 30 seconds.

      So, in regards to why not all staff is because the De­part­ment of Edu­ca­tion and Early Childhood Learning only regulates the teaching profession and not other pro­fes­sionals within the edu­ca­tion sector. And it limits the de­part­ment's role to the regula­tion of the teaching certificate.

      Secondly, earlier on in your comments you mentioned pro­fes­sional organi­zations within the province. Are you alluding to at all a teaching college?

M. Urichuk: No, I was saying that there are other colleges that have–that are, sorry–there are other professions seen as clinicians within our schools such as SLPs or school psychologists or social workers that do have colleges. I was just saying that if there is a hearing panel, if someone is deemed to be a teacher we should follow some of those practices that have been working for us.

      I wasn't making a value judgment about saying that there should or shouldn't be a teacher's college, but saying that the process that we administer mis­conduct should align with an existing practice that we deem as reasonable and ap­pro­priate.

Mr. Altomare: Thank you, Mr. Urichuk, for your pre­sen­ta­tion this evening.

      I was especially interested in the comment that you made early on in your pre­sen­ta­tion around the central concern of child safety and how it is more than just a disciplinary process.

      Can you expand a little bit further on that?

M. Urichuk: Yes. It seems like child safety seems to be synonymous with the number of pro­fes­sionals that are brought through this disciplinary process that's outlined within this bill. Child safety is so much more than just making sure that those who have committed offences or misconduct are, for lack of a better term, brought to justice, as that line of thinking would say.

      You really need to protect child safety through so much more, whether it be through supporting families or imple­men­ting programs that are early intervention, or funding enough staffing supports in order to properly assess emotional learning needs earlier on within careers. The list can go on and on and on. But as Bill 35's scope seems to be, it's largely just around making sure that trans­par­ency exists–which is im­por­tant–and to make sure that people are disciplined, as opposed to necessarily ensuring safety in the first place. It's more about disciplining people that made sure that–or disciplining people that violated the trust and the safety of our kids.

Mr. Gerrard: Right at the end of your comments you referred to the clause which dealt with the capacity to carry out pro­fes­sional responsibilities of a teacher because of a physical or mental dis­abil­ity.

      I'm going to give you a chance just to elaborate a little bit on what your comment was there, because it was pretty quick.

M. Urichuk: Yes, there's a lot in my pre­sen­ta­tion that I kind of just added as a recom­men­dation because I feel like it's elaborated pretty well from other pre­senters. But protecting the privacy of teachers who are deter­mined inable to carry out pro­fes­sional respon­sibilities of a teacher due to a physical or mental dis­abil­ity.

      Those are very serious situations, and privacy for those people–it's rarely due to an in­ten­tional wrong­doing or anything of that sort, and so the hope would be that the privacy of those teachers going through a difficult time in their lives would be protected.

      I hope that answered your question.

Mr. Ewasko: So, Mr. Urichuk, I just want to be clear. I want to tell you how this works today, and how the bill is going to work.

      So, the current legis­lative framework as of today gives the full author­ity to the minister to address any complaint or concern, including misconduct and com­petence, without limitation. The new act will assign an in­de­pen­dent com­mis­sioner, ensure standards are developed and the frivolous complaints are dis­missed–among other things.

      So, just a quick 10, 12 seconds for you to comment back.

Mr. Chairperson: Mr. Urichuk, you've got 10 seconds.

M. Urichuk: Yes, and I have no qualms about trying to identify how this–how that would be a limiter specified going ahead, but the issue is more when we are crafting some­thing that we are all going to be gov­ern­ed by going into the future, we don't want to tie ourselves just to what has been done in other juris­dic­tions.

      So, we want to listen to the pro­fes­sionals in the field who are telling us that if we are specifying what is going to happen, let's make sure that we specify properly and include what is deemed as im­por­tant from those who are involved within this profession and might have some first-hand knowledge.

Mr. Chairperson: Mr. Urichuk, thank you for your pre­sen­ta­tion. We really do ap­pre­ciate you taking the time and staying up late with us here at the Manitoba Legislature. Thanks again.

      We're going to move along to Mr. Randy Quiring. Mr. Randy Quiring appears to not be with us. He was called last night; this is his second and final calling.

      Ms. Barbara Gajda? Ms. Gajda appears to not be with us; that was her second and final calling.

      Mr. Jon Bettner? Mr. Bettner does appear to be with us.

      Mr. Bettner, welcome to the Manitoba Legislature. We're going to let you–wait until we can see you on the screen, there. As soon as I can, I'm going to give you the floor for 10 minutes. You get up to 10 minutes. You can take the full time or only part of it, it's your choice. Then we've got some great questions for you, five minutes of those. The questions are only 30 seconds each, but you can take as much of that five minutes as you want to answer those questions.

      And I can see you on the screen. The timer is set at 10 minutes. And welcome, Mr. Bettner, to com­mit­tee. We are here to listen to you and you do have the floor for up to 10 minutes.

Jon Bettner (Private Citizen): I want to firstly apologize for my absence yesterday when first called to present to this com­mit­tee. I direct the Dauphin com­mu­nity band, which rehearses on Monday nights.

      I'm Jon Bettner, I'm a teacher in the city of Dauphin on Treaty 2 territory and I'm a proud Mountain View Teachers' Association member.

      I will confine my criticism of Bill 35 to two distinct areas: composition of review panels and pro­posed competency standards as included in the bill.

      I personally believe that efforts to make public serious, proven instances of misconduct by teachers against children in their care are long overdue and bring edu­ca­tion into line with other professions. That said, this legis­lation is critically flawed by its over­sights in the aforementioned areas, and I remain unconvinced that this gov­ern­ment has soberly con­sidered the full ramifications of these provisions.

      Firstly, review panel composition is wildly out of step with other professions. When other pro­fes­sionals are brought before review panels for misconduct, they are judged by a jury composed mostly of their pro­fes­sional peers. This has a purpose, and it isn't to rig the deck in favour of the accused; it is to bring the needed lens of ex­per­ience to render informed judgment on an accused actions.

      I am not moved by concerns that a review panel made up of mostly teachers could create the op­por­tun­ity for inter­ference akin to the blue code of silence, to take an analogous example from US law en­force­ment. And the rationale is simple: teachers care about students and their well-being and safety far more than they care about closing ranks around colleagues that dishonour the profession, full stop.

      Although everyone passes through the edu­ca­tion system as a student, this, perhaps to their surprise, does not make them experts on edu­ca­tion, best practices in teaching or the school system. The idea that review panels should be composed of mostly non-teachers who have never once been in charge of a classroom opens up teachers to the types of mis­carriages of justice that this gov­ern­ment has claimed to want to avoid in Hansard transcripts on Bill 35. Teacher review panels must feature similar com­position to other professions, with the majority of parti­ci­pants holding active teaching certificates. Anything less is unacceptable.

* (23:00)

      This brings me to the most contentious section of this bill, which is an attempt to tie teacher competency standards to misconduct and the pro­tec­tion of children. This legis­lative non sequitur does not belong in a bill regarding teacher misconduct and, furthermore, will not achieve desired results.

      The current system of teacher certification allows a licensed teacher to teach all subjects in the public school system, regardless of grade level or subject area. Someone educated, trained and ex­per­ienced in the discipline of senior-year science is certified to teach senior-year science, kindergarten homeroom, middle-school art, elementary music and more under our current system.

      In rural Manitoba, the staffing shortage is far more acute than in Winnipeg, and we ex­per­ience far more dif­fi­cul­ty attracting applicants to positions. As a result, teachers routinely serve where we are most needed by our divisions, rather than where we are most competent. We under­take these efforts at great personal cost to ourselves in service to public edu­ca­tion, and under Bill 35 this service would become unacceptably risky for teachers.

      As an illustrative anecdote, I was involuntarily reassigned this year from teaching middle-school band, which I've taught for my entire career, to teaching a grade 8 homeroom this year due to budget constraints and music program enrolment collapse due to the COVID‑19 pandemic. Like many Manitoba music specialists, I am a world-class expert in the area of instrumental music edu­ca­tion. However, I've had very little formal training outside my discipline, and classroom teaching versus band are two completely different worlds. Most of what I know about class­room teaching has been self-taught, and I worked long, hard hours last summer and through­out this year to acquire resources, adapt them for my students, acquire content knowledge in multiple disciplines and learn pedagogical strategies to ensure I would be effective in my new assignment.

      My teaching career is proof positive that teachers go where our employers need us and take on the work of professionally developing in order to improve our own working con­di­tions, and it's a point of personal pride in our work. Teachers care about their own competency more than any government ever could, and teaching is a brutal job with a devastatingly high burnout rate. In this way, teachers self-select for competency in the profession.

      My story of being involuntarily reassigned is not unique, especially in smaller, rural divisions. Any teacher competency standards must recog­nize and allow for the common ex­per­ience of being involun­tarily reassigned. I would have sig­ni­fi­cant misgivings about being measured by competency standards potentially designed to evaluate veteran teachers with extensive training in their disciplines. And I would have grave concerns knowing that a parent could com­plain that I am incompetent after having been involun­tarily reassigned to a discipline which I have no training or ex­per­ience in, with my licence to teach hanging in the balance.

      An unscrupulous employer could even require that a teacher be reassigned to an area they know they have no skills in, which would be con­sistent with their right to manage. That same division could then have that teacher brought up on incompetence charges in a cruel game of gotcha and, as written, a teacher would be at the mercy of the com­mis­sioner under Bill 35.

      Even if a savvy commissioner were to sniff out a bad-faith charge in such a scenario from the division involved, a parent who sees that the reassigned teacher doesn't hold a candle to the 30-year veteran down the hall wouldn't know the difference and would not be afforded the same skepticism. Worse still, if that teacher incorporated controversial subject matter into their teaching, such as topics including recon­ciliation and Canada's past and current crimes, the Holocaust, social justice, 2SLGBTTQIA+ perspectives, family life or any other flashpoint issues, a parent may organize a campaign to ensure that this teacher loses their licence.

      In an age where social media accounts such as Libs of TikTok actively weaponize outrage culture to try to punish teachers for being openly queer or for perceived progressive indoctrination, Bill 35 appears to hand them gasoline and a box of matches.

      It defies belief to assume that a teacher compe­tency bureau in Manitoba could effectively ensure that every teacher operates to standards of pedagogy and content knowledge by a specific grade level or subject area while simultaneously maintaining the current system of broad teacher certification. It appears to imply two logical end results to teacher competency efforts, neither of which are desirable: (1) that these competency standards will be utterly meaningless, applying broadly to all teachers, regardless of their discipline, and functionally amounting to a rubber stamp for generic common practices across all the varied edu­ca­tional settings in K‑to‑12 public school; or (2) that our edu­ca­tion system will go the way of the United States and require certification of teachers by subject area, which would destroy public edu­ca­tion in this province over­night. It would leave a staggering number of teaching positions unfilled in rural Manitoba by artificially starving the edu­ca­tion job market of applicants. It would saddle new graduates with ad­di­tional regula­tory burdens, and it would increase teacher un­em­ploy­ment and attrition for wanted positions in their disciplines at a time when the Manitoba gov­ern­ment should be doing every­thing in their power to ameliorate the labour shortage in teaching.

      Ensuring teacher competence is already the domain of my school administrators who know my work, my reputation; the parents of my students and my students them­selves. Involv­ing a com­mis­sioner appointed by the gov­ern­ment of the day to intervene in this process will not improve out­comes, ensure efficiency or adequately protect teachers from base­less accusations.

      The core aims of Bill 35's provisions regarding the publicization of serious proven misconduct by teachers against children in their care are, in my view, reasonable and necessary. I implore you, however, to amend the bill to bring a review panel composition in line with other professions and remove teacher certification provisions from this bill.

      I yield the remainder of my time. Thank you.

Mr. Chairperson: Thank you, Mr. Bettner, for your time. We really do ap­pre­ciate it.

      I'm going to open the floor to questions for five minutes. I'm going to start with the minister.

      Minister Ewasko, please go ahead.

Mr. Ewasko: Thanks, Mr. Bettner, for joining us this evening.

      Absolutely, I know, as a teacher myself that extracurricular activities sometimes just clogs up and definitely has conflicts with other things. So, definitely, good on you for being there last night and joining us tonight.

      Thank you very much, and thank you very much for bringing forward some well-thought-out amend­ments, as well. Thanks, sir.

Mr. Chairperson: Mr. Bettner, if you'd like to respond, you can. There are other questions, as well, if you want to just go to the next question.

J. Bettner: No comment.

      Let's go to the next question.

Mr. Altomare: Thank you, Mr. Bettner. Thank you for acknowl­edging that you're coming from Treaty 2 territory, again, living the work that you do as a classroom teacher and bringing it to this com­mit­tee in that way.

      You mention that there are some oversights in this bill that have you concerned. Can you briefly review what those oversights are?

Mr. Chairperson: Mr. Bettner, please go ahead.

J. Bettner: So, those oversights are failing to account for involuntary reassignment when con­sid­ering teacher competency standards, the fact that teacher compe­tency standards by grade level or subject area are incompatible with our current system of broad teacher certification, which certified teachers to teach all sub­jects and, given that discrepancy between the two of them, there is no real way to reconcile those two.

      You cannot have teachers certified to teach every subject in Manitoba while simultaneously ensuring that they are fully competent in all of those subject areas, from kindergarten, homeroom, all the way up to, you know, specialty area senior years edu­ca­tion.

      And any attempt to sort of cut that Gordian knot by saying, well, then, let's certify teachers by subject area or grade level, is a can of worms that cannot and should not be opened because it will have disastrous con­se­quences on the edu­ca­tion job market.

Mr. Gerrard: Yes, thank you, and thank you for stepping up in a rural area when the need was there.

      Just tell us a little bit more about your ex­per­ience and your feeling after having taught students subjects which you weren't necessarily trained in but had to learn on the fly from books or online or wherever. [interjection]  

Mr. Chairperson: Mr. Bettner, please go ahead.

J. Bettner: Sorry about that.

      Well, to put it bluntly, it was–at first it was devastating because I, again, I'm an expert in my field. And then to suddenly sort of leave all of those knowledge and skills by the wayside and have to juggle multiple subject areas, which I know my col­leagues are far more competent than me in, but I've still been called upon to do a competent job with my students, it is extremely nerve-racking.

      It involves an absolutely insane workload that pulls teachers away from their families at night and other activities. And at the end of the day, I'm still left wondering, gee, you know, will–in a regulatory framework like Bill 35, would parents have ammu­nition to try to pull my licence, especially if they had sort of a nefarious angle based on, you know, my teaching style or the types of content that I might cover in an ELA curriculum, con­sistent with cur­ricular guide­lines, such as including, you know, per­spectives on Indigenous and gender and sexual minorities.

      It is supremely, supremely stressful, and I think adding the potential charge of incompetence to a teacher who is already in survival mode will only increase teacher burnout and attrition, which should be a major demon that is on the radar of this gov­ern­ment to try to fight it.

      Thank you.

* (23:10)

Mr. Chairperson: Minister Ewasko, 50 seconds.

Mr. Ewasko: Thank you Mr. Bettner, and thank you Mr. Chair for the op­por­tun­ity.

      So, right now when you're–as a certified teacher, as myself, yourself, Mr. Micklefield and, of course, Mr. Altomare, we can go in and teach anything that we are hired to teach. And you know that, and so that's really not going to change.

      And when you talk about competency, this–that is some­thing that the com­mis­sioner would be definitely looking at to see what type of situation that teacher has been put in as well.

      So, with the com­mis­sioner, with a member of the Manitoba Teachers' Society, with a member of Manitoba school–

Mr. Chairperson: Minister, sorry, you're time's expired.

      I'm–Mr. Bettner, I'm going to give you a few extra seconds there, the minister did go over. But if you want to respond briefly, you know, 15 seconds or so.

J. Bettner: Well, I'm heartened by that generous inter­pre­ta­tion of what is actually written.

      What is actually written there does not in any way place an obligation upon the com­mis­sioner to behave in that manner, especially a potentially hyperpartisan one appointed by a bad-faith gov­ern­ment.

Mr. Chairperson: Thank you for your pre­sen­ta­tion, Mr. Bettner.

      We're going to move along to the next pre­sen­ta­tion.

      Mrs. Ann-Marie Robinson. Is Mrs. Ann-Marie Robinson with us? It appears Mrs. Ann-Marie Robinson is not with us. She was called last night, we will strike her from the list.

      Mrs. Shelagh McGregor? We think that Mrs. Shelagh McGregor is with us.

      Hi, Mrs. McGregor. You're going to get 10 minutes as soon as I see you on the screen there, followed by 5 minutes for questions.

      Hi, Mrs. McGregor. Thank you for joining us. You do have the floor for 10 minutes–up to 10 minutes. Please go ahead.

Shelagh McGregor (Private Citizen): Okay, thank you. So, I've already been intro­duced. My name is Shelagh McGregor and I've been a teacher for 23 years in the Winnipeg School Division, in the North End of Winnipeg, which is located on Treaty 1 lands. I have a bachelor of arts, a bachelor of edu­ca­tion and a post-bacc in special edu­ca­tion. And in 2021, I was acknowl­edged with a teacher of excellence by the Province of Manitoba from my peers, who nominated me.

      I am here tonight because I have some concerns about Bill 35, the edu­ca­tion amend­ment act, the way it is currently written. But I just wanted to pause for a moment and say that I'm so honestly moved by all the previous speakers and I am–I'm really proud of how we are standing up for our profession over the last few days. And I've been nodding my head all night.

      So, I'm going to keep my pre­sen­ta­tion to two specific areas. And the first area is student safety. And I'd like you to think of school as our students' work­places. That's where they go to work; that's their work­place. We have work­place health and safety legis­lation for all workers in the province of Manitoba

      Students need their own version of legis­lation–I definitely agree, and in fact I am–I have my own legis­lation within my classroom on how–my ex­pect­a­tions on how people need to behave in my room. And I'm adamant in explaining to students that how we feel directly impacts our ability to learn.

      And if we don't feel safe, there is legitimate brain research that tells us that there is an amygdala in our brains that will prevent our neurons from accessing the frontal lobe, which is the very im­por­tant piece that we need to think and to question and where we make our decisions and so on. And it is so essential for that safety piece.

      And the safety can look so many different ways, as previous presenters have mentioned. Having some­thing to eat in the morning, having a safe place to sleep at night and the list goes on and on.

      But an area that's become very worrisome in the last few years is violence in the school as a work­place–a work­place for teachers and a work­place for students. The school scenes can be more volatile than maybe I've witnessed in my own career. They're also volatile online which, even though it happens after the school day, it permeates into the next school day. And many, many hours are spent dealing with this sort of issue at school and–instead of learning. Parents, they don't necessarily know everything that is going on, so there's a lot of mis­commu­ni­ca­tion going on there.

      Okay, once upon a time, if a physical fight broke out between students on school property, there would likely have been no hesitation for any teacher to just step in to break the students up so that no one becomes further injured.

      But now, there–at one time–let me just back up for a minute, at one time we had a certification process that teachers could go through called a non-violent crisis inter­ven­tion, which gave us some assurances that we were some­what protected if we had to physic­ally intervene in some­thing or help remove a student from an unsafe situation. That program has sort of rebranded and we're not entirely, in my division and–anyways, we're not entirely sure the trajectory of that program and how that's going to come around.

      But, like I was saying, once upon a time I would have no hesitation to step in and do what I thought was the safe–I have–loco parentis; I want to make sure that everybody is safe as best I can. And now, teachers are liable if they step in and try to make a situation safer, and they're also seen as being liable if they're standing back and not physic­ally intervening, if they are using their words, if they're calling the police.

      So, the optics of what the right thing for the teacher to do doesn't seem to be clear for the parent com­mu­nity, for the student com­mu­nity and for the teachers. And the–I am the on the executive for the Winnipeg Teachers' Association and I know it was a source of big con­ver­sa­tion, what to do in these inci­dences. We've had, you know, things happen this year, or experiences happen this year, where it makes us really question, well, what are our limitations, how are we going to be protected, how are the students going to be protected?

      We are human and, obviously, we do have the best in­ten­tions. But we are concerned, and when misconduct is brought up in this manner–and I know that the original thrust of this bill was–you know, it is an absolute tragedy what has happened with the–one of my former colleagues who would've been men­tioned in previous pre­sen­ta­tions. That is just–we're–I'm not talking about sexual 'predadation' in my parti­cular pre­sen­ta­tion because I believe that those proces­ses need to be handled in a judicial, criminal manner.

      But the concern and where I'm scared, personally, is the definition of what sig­ni­fi­cant emotional harm will be. What I have a window a tolerance about will be much different than my neighbour. We all have different windows of tolerance.

      I can tell you that, coming from a school with in­cred­ible inner-city characteristics moving to a school with a different 'socionomic' back­ground, the level of tolerance and what I saw in day-to-day school life at my newer school, the staff had a completely level–a different level of tolerance than what teachers would be ex­per­iencing in different buildings. And that's in the same division and it's maybe five kilometres away from each other. So what definition is this sig­ni­fi­cant emotional harm?

* (23:20)

      And teaching has recently has arrived on the top 10 most violent job lists. We're hit, hit and sworn at on a daily basis, and not just by students. And this year alone, I'm aware of at least two no trespassing orders placed on parents from coming onto school property, either for being extremely disrespectful, harassing school staff or coming and making other children–harassing, intimidating, bullying, yelling at children on our school property.

So, you know, we do have processes in place to facilitate the restoration process. And, often, and in my ex­per­ience over 23 years, I've have phone calls from parents who were quite upset about some­thing–someone has gone home and said some­thing–and once we've had an op­por­tun­ity to have a con­ver­sa­tion–a calm, respectful con­ver­sa­tion–you know, light bulbs go off and everybody understands and we move on, and processes are in place already at the school level and with the school divisions. We do seem to use restorative practices, and the problem-solving proto­cols are there.

      So I'm just wondering, and help me understand, why this process of respon­si­bility would be taken over from the division, and perhaps I'm not under­standing it correctly, and then be taken over by a commissioner and a panel. And what is the com­mit­tee's opinion of frivolous? So, for me, this is one area that needs im­prove­ment and in–and clarity in this bill.

      All right, the second area I'd like to speak about is teacher competency. I believe it does not belong in this bill. If this is for–

Mr. Chairperson: Mrs. McGregor, I'm sorry. I'm obliged to let you know that your time has expired.

      What I'm going to do is we're going to move along to five minutes of questions, and maybe some of the things that you were just about to share, you can work into those. I'll leave that up to you.

      We're going to start–we're going to head into the questions. I'm going to recog­nize, as I have–has been the pattern, the minister first.

      Minister Ewasko, you have 30 seconds to ask a question. Please go right ahead.

Mr. Ewasko: Thanks, Ms. McGregor, for coming on tonight and bringing forward your pre­sen­ta­tion.

      Just to inform you just about–because you asked a quick question about current process. So the current legis­lative framework–that's today without the bill being passed–grants full author­ity to the minister to address any complaint or concern, including mis­conduct, incompetence, without limitation.

      The new act, Bill 35, will assign an in­de­pen­dent com­mis­sioner, ensure standards are developed and that frivolous complaints are dismissed, amongst other things–

Mr. Chairperson: Minister, I'm sorry.

      Mrs. McGregor, if you'd like to respond, you're free to. [interjection]

      Yes, Mrs. McGregor, yes, please–please, go right ahead.

S. McGregor: Oh, I'm sorry, yes, protocol.

Mr. Chairperson: That's okay.

S. McGregor: Sorry, Minister, could you give me an example of what you would consider to be an example of some­thing frivolous?

Mr. Chairperson: Minister, please go ahead.

Mr. Ewasko: Thanks for the question my way, actually; this is the first one in two nights.

      So, in regards to frivolous types of allegations that might be out there, could be some­thing just as simple as, I didn't like the teacher giving me this certain mark on this certain project, and so they went straight to the commissioner, as opposed to going through the admin­is­tra­tion, which that power from the admin­is­tra­tion is not being lifted.

      The employer's responsibilities are still the assessment of performance, in­vesti­gation and disci­pline. We're talking egregious misconduct going to the com­mis­sioner.

Mr. Altomare: Thank you, Mrs. McGregor, for coming here tonight, for acknowl­edging our presence on Treaty 1 territory in our lands–again, living the work that we do every day, even at the com­mit­tee stage of which we're at right now. Commend you for your 2021 award for teacher excellence.

      You did mention that you were moved by previous speakers. What spe­cific­ally resonated with you from listening to the previous presenters and through partici­pating in this com­mit­tee process?

Mr. Chairperson: Mrs. McGregor, please go ahead.

S. McGregor: Oh, I waited for you to let me do that. Okay, thank you. I–see? I'm getting better at this.

      The pre­sen­ta­tion I believe by the gentleman from Gladstone, perhaps the last name was Watson, and he shared an ex­per­ience where he was falsely accused of bullying and how–the toll that it took on him.

      Because we are human beings, after all, and I think sometimes–well, I know our students don't think that we're real human beings or that we even have first names, I am an elementary school teacher–and some­times I think the public forgets that we are actually real people as well.

      And yes, so it was moving to hear some of the stories of my colleagues.

Mr. Gerrard: Yes, Shelagh, you mentioned that you were–found yourself unsure of how to react when there's a physical fight on a playground, and I wonder where you think that we need guidance from.

      Is that standards at a prov­incial level? Is it decisions made locally? What's needed to help teachers deal with such situations?

Mr. Chairperson: Mrs. McGregor, please go ahead.

S. McGregor: Thank you for that question.

      Do we have another hour to discuss this? I would love to pass along sug­ges­tions in terms of help that we as a, you know, a collective profession would know, you know, we don't have that–like I was saying–we don't have the good Samaritan rule as first aiders, as teachers, being–trying to be 'locol' parentis and so on.

      So yes, I think this area needs a little bit of rebranding, revamping, a little bit more clarity. And linked into the work­place health and safety, I know that violence in the work­place–not just violence towards teachers, but violence between students–there could be an area that gets written in there.

      And just because I know I have very little time, I was just going to talk about that pro­fes­sional certification–

Mr. Chairperson: Mrs. McGregor, I'm sorry, we are unfor­tunately out of time, but really do ap­pre­ciate your comments, your thoughts, your time, your pre­sen­ta­tion. Thank you so much for joining us this evening.

S. McGregor: Okay. Thank you for your time.

Mr. Chairperson: Thank you for yours.

An Hon­our­able Member: Mr. Chair?

Mr. Chairperson: Yes, Mr. Altomare?

Mr. Altomare: I ask for leave for five minutes to discuss further procedures.

Mr. Chairperson: Okay, I–so, it's been requested that we take a five-minute break–recess. Is that agreeable to the com­mit­tee? [interjection]

      Okay. There's not agree­ment to do that right now.

      I'm going to propose that we see who else is waiting to present and then, when we make it through the list of presenters, perhaps, Mr. Altomare, if you want to still do that, then you can raise that again with the com­mit­tee.

      Okay, we're going to go down this list here. Ms. Glynnis Eyford? Ms. Glynnis Eyford does not appear to be with us. That's the second time we've called, and her name will be struck from the list.

      Mr. Sean Free? Appears not to be with us. Also the second time called, and struck from the list.

      Mrs. Serena Klos? Also not with us, second time called, struck from the list.

      Mrs. Brittany Okatch. Also second time called and struck from the list.

* (23:30)

      Mrs. Delilah [phonetic] Jacob. Delia, sorry, Jacob. That is her second time and struck from the list.

      Mr. Kevin Rebeck. Mr. Kevin Rebeck does appear to be here.

      Mr. Rebeck, welcome to the com­mit­tee. As soon as I can see you, I'll give you the floor for up to 10 minutes. And I do see you so, please, you have our attention for 10 minutes followed by five minutes of questions. Please go ahead.

Kevin Rebeck (Manitoba Federation of Labour): Thank you and good evening.

      My name's Kevin Rebeck and I'm the president for the Manitoba Federation of Labour. The MFL is Manitoba's central labour body and unions affiliated to the MFL together represent more than 125,000 working Manitobans in the public and private sectors as well as the building trades, including manu­facturing, gov­ern­ment offices, retail stores, hospitals, natural resources, tourism, agri­cul­ture and, of course, schools.

      I'm proud to say that the Manitoba Teachers' Society is one such affiliated union and I'm here tonight to echo their concerns with this bill on behalf of working families in our province.

      I want to start by saying that public sector–public school teachers do tre­men­dous work and I know everyone sitting at that com­mit­tee table tonight can think of at least one teacher who had a positive impact on your life, a teacher who recog­nized a talent you had and who encouraged you to follow your dreams. Aside from parents and guardians, teachers have some of the biggest impacts on our lives, and I've been lucky to have many dedi­cated and hard-working teachers in my life.

      I'm not a teacher and I'm not here to speak for them tonight, but I am here on behalf of working families across this province who ap­pre­ciate the work that teachers do each and every day. And I know that teachers have been through a lot in recent years.

      When this gov­ern­ment came to power, they passed draconian legis­lation known as bill 28 that attacked the collective bargaining rights of teachers and other public sector workers and froze their wages. The gov­ern­ment followed up with bill 64, which threatened to completely upend our public edu­ca­tion system and threw K‑to‑12 schools into the kind of chaos that this gov­ern­ment's put the health-care system through. Thankfully, through the leadership of our public edu­ca­tion unions like MTS, this gov­ern­ment finally backed down on that bill.

      The public schools and teachers continue to struggle with years of underfunding by this gov­ern­ment. And we've seen all too clean–clearly in the news, in recent weeks, how school divisions are still struggling to maintain services and pro­gram­ming after so many years of starving our edu­ca­tion system. And I'd be remiss if I didn't thank our teachers for their dedi­cation to students through­out the COVID‑19 pandemic and the way they stepped up in a big way.

      I know that teachers care deeply about the safety of their students. And, as many have mentioned here tonight and last night, the first point of the teacher code of professional practice is that their primary pro­fes­sional respon­si­bility is to their students. It's their duty to ensure that schools are always safe places, not just safe places for making mistakes or for asking difficult questions, but safe places free from harm and abuse for every child. And it's clear that teachers support laws that enhance child pro­tec­tion.

      The teachers who presented last night and tonight and that are waiting to present, including MTS president Nathan Martindale, have raised concerns about other aspects of this bill. And we hope that all parties will act to improve this bill based on the recom­men­dations of MTS.

      The first is the issue of inclusion of teacher competence in this bill. Like others who have presented, I fail to understand how investigating and adjudicating complaints related to a teacher's know­ledge and skills or their ability to instruct and assess learning of the Manitoba curriculum is related to the safety of children, which is the stated in­ten­tion of the bill.

      Competence and conduct are two separate issues and they're inappropriately linked in this bill. This bill would give a com­mis­sioner the power to address issues of competence even though teachers are em­ployees of school divisions. I don't think any Manitoban–working Manitoban–wants a third party rather than their employer evaluating their job performance.

      The bill opens the door to situations where people who don't have expertise in edu­ca­tion would be respon­si­ble for judging teacher competency. And as others who've raised here tonight and last night, it's con­cern­ing that the right to union repre­sen­tation during in­vesti­gations is not explicitly mentioned in the bill.

      We hope this com­mit­tee will seriously consider the amend­ments that have been proposed here, and include the explicit right to union repre­sen­tation.

      Again, I want to thank Manitoba's public school teachers for the work they do. I don't think it was ever in question before, but I'm sure the value of your work was high­lighted for many parents during the last few years. And I'd also like to thank MTS for their leadership on this and other issues that affect teachers in our province, and a thank you to all the presenters tonight and last night, and those coming up, who speak from their direct ex­per­ience in working with students.

      From the MFL's perspective, it'd be a lot better to have a prov­incial gov­ern­ment that works with teachers and other public sector workers on improving the public resources and services that we all count on. Consulting with them in advance of intro­ducing legis­lation would be best; adopting the amend­ments they're suggesting would be a step in the right direction.

      Thank you for your time.

Mr. Chairperson: Thank you, Mr. Rebeck, for your pre­sen­ta­tion. We do ap­pre­ciate it. We're going to move to five minutes of questions, and I'm going to start by recog­nizing the minister.

      Minister Ewasko, please go ahead.

Mr. Ewasko: Thank you, Mr. Rebeck, for joining us here this evening and bringing forward your pre­sen­ta­tion.

      Again, you know, you sort of ended off on the con­sul­ta­tions piece, and as you obviously don't know, we've consulted actually with many of our edu­ca­tion partners across this great province of ours on this bill.

      Quick question for you: you mentioned mis­conduct, you mentioned competency; what is the current process for teacher misconduct in the province today? [interjection]

Mr. Chairperson: Mr. Rebeck, please go ahead.

K. Rebeck: Sorry about that, thank you.

      I'm not an expert in the current process, I–and I don't think that MTS is saying that the current process is perfect. The issue that I'm really raising a concern with, and I think I'm echoing concerns raised by teachers, is that this new bill would have a third party–not the employer, not someone who necessarily has the skills and knowledge or back­ground in edu­ca­tion–playing the role where they're going to make judgment calls on the competency of teachers performing their role.

      I think that should be done by your employer; that's why people have employers, and that's part of their primary duties and respon­si­bility. So, if we're creating a new law that's going to help address issues of child safety, then that's what that law should focus on: how do we deal with accusations of abuse or things that are putting children in danger. We shouldn't use that same excuse of a law to then say we're going to create a new third party method of evaluating how you do your job.

      We think that that's inappropriate, and that should be untangled from this bill and that the employer should be the one that does job performance evalu­ations and has those skills and knowledge to know what ex­pect­a­tions they have of teachers, and whether they're meeting them or not.

Mr. Altomare: Thank you, Mr. Rebeck, for your pre­sen­ta­tion and for your words this evening.   

      Can you talk to us a little bit about the importance of having repre­sen­tation whence it gets to the disciplinary portion of this parti­cular bill?

Mr. Chairperson: Mr. Rebeck, please go ahead.

K. Rebeck: Thanks for that question.

      Yes, union repre­sen­tation is critically im­por­tant. The reason people join a union and belong to a union is to make sure that they have an advocate who helps make sure the rules are being followed and are able to be there for them to help them understand the process and to help them navigate whatever steps are in place and to make sure that they're being treated fairly.

      And unions take that role seriously. Not only do we take it seriously, it's a legal obligation of ours. So we must represent our members and provide some guidance and support and voice for them when they're being dealt with in a way that could be negative.

      So, if it's a performance issue in the work­place, we deal with that there. But if there's an issue that may have a con­se­quence that causes a teacher to lose their job or to face some other penalty or issue, then we want to make sure that unions are there to be able to help them understand every­thing about that process, and to be able, there, to give them some advice and help them work through that process in a way that ensures folks who aren't experts in, necessarily, labour relations or in legis­lation–like new legis­lation like this–have someone who helps them along and is there to listen to their side of things and make sure that they have full under­standing of what's being–what they're being accused of and what the process is on how it's investigated and dealt with.

* (23:40)

      So, explicitly saying that they are entitled to that repre­sen­tation and that that third party, the union, is able to have access to infor­ma­tion to be able to do their job to help them understand the steps involved, and the possible out­comes and con­se­quences is a critically im­por­tant thing, and we think it should be clear in law that that's an entitlement that they have and can exercise it.

      Thank you very much.

Mr. Chairperson: Hon­our­able Mr. Gerrard, 45 seconds remaining.

Mr. Gerrard: This bill was intro­duced in part because of situations with people like Mr. Kelsey McKay, who was a teacher who abused kids. Do you think this bill will help to prevent situations like that in the future?

K. Rebeck: So, I think this bill, certainly, is at­tempting to provide some mechanisms to do that. I think it needs some work to be able to focus on the area that it would then address those types of com­plaints and issues, and it shouldn't be expanded in a way that deals with competency and regular em­ploy­ment issues that workers might have with their employer and how they might have to have those dealt with.

      It shouldn't create yet another mechanism and another party that gets involved when you're dealing with those types of things.

Mr. Chairperson: Mr. Rebeck, thank you for your pre­sen­ta­tion. Unfor­tunately, time for that has expired, but we do thank you for coming to the Legislature.

Committee Substitution

Mr. Chairperson: I'm just going to see if–order, please. I'd just like to inform the com­mit­tee on rule 85(2), the following membership substitution has been made for this com­mit­tee effectively–effective imme­diately: Mr. Bushie for Mr. Brar. Thank you.

* * *

Mr. Chairperson: Mr. Joel Blain, are you with us?

      Mr. Joel Blain appears not to be with us.

      Mr. Tait Palsson–[interjection]

      Okay, Mr. Joel Blain will be struck from the list.

      Mr. Tait Palsson is not here. Mr. David Harack is not here. [interjection]

      Okay. Mr. Tait Palsson has been sent to the bottom of the list. Mr. David Harack is next on the list. He's not present; also sent to the bottom of the list. Okay.

      Okay, we're just going to review the people who were sent to the bottom of the list from–through­out the evening.

      Mr. Adam Hildebrandt, is he with us?

      Mr. Adam Hildebrandt is not with us. That's his second calling, and he's removed from the list.

      Ms. Gina Cerqueira. Also not with us.

      Ms. Jacqueline Ross. Okay.

      Ms. Clare Burns. [interjection]

      Yes, Ms. Jacqueline Ross is removed from the list.

      Ms. Clare Burns?

      Is not with us, and removed from the list. 

      Ms. Rebecca Sulkers?

      Is not with us, and removed from the list

      Terri Willard?

      Is not with us, and removed from the list.

      Ms. Jordana Etkin?

      Is not with us, and removed from the list.

      Mr. Chance Henderson?

      Is not with us, and removed from the list.

      Mrs. Breanne Kanaski?

      Is not with us, and removed from the list.

      Mrs. Bobbi-Lynn Geekie?

      Is not with us, and is removed from the list.

      Ms.–we have just two more people.

      Mr. Tait Palsson, called for a second time tonight, is not with us and is removed from the list.

      Mr. David Harack, second time tonight, is not with us and is removed from the list.

      Okay, there's one last presenter that we just need to review: Ms. Nicole Lafrenière.

      As previously agreed, Nicole was unable to join us earlier tonight and it was agreed that, if we finished presenters this evening, which we are doing, and Nicole is unable to come, that she would unfor­tunately be struck from the list. So, we're going to follow through with that previous agree­ment, and I just state that for the record.

Mr. Altomare: I ask for leave for five-minute recess.

Mr. Chairperson: Mr. Altomare is asking leave for a five-minute recess.

Mr. Blaine Pedersen (Midland): Just a question.

      If we're approaching midnight, are we going to recess at midnight? Or if we're going to have a leave to discuss whether we're going to go after midnight? Is that what–that the purpose of the leave?

Mr. Chairperson: Mr. Altomare, go ahead.

Mr. Altomare: Yes, the purpose of the leave is to speak with the minister and staff just to get–just next steps around amend­ments and that kind of thing. Okay?

Mr. Chairperson: Okay, is there leave to have a five-minute recess?

      Mr.–I'm getting tired–Gerrard.

Mr. Gerrard: What–just, I mean, is this com­mit­tee going to continue tomorrow to finish its work or is it–

Mr. Chairperson: I believe that's the question under con­sid­era­tion in the recess.

      Is there leave to have a five-minute recess? Yes? Okay. [Agreed]

      We are recessed for five minutes.

The committee recessed at 11:47 p.m.

____________

The committee resumed at 11:54 p.m.

Mr. Chairperson: Will the com­mit­tee–will the standing com­mit­tee of Social and Economic Development please come to order.

      That concludes the list of presenters I have before me.

* * *

Mr. Chairperson: We will now proceed with clause by clause of Bill 35.

      I see a question from the hon­our­able minister.

Mr. Ewasko: Can we canvass the com­mit­tee to see that the–we see the clock as midnight?

Mr. Chairperson: Is it the will of the com­mit­tee to call it midnight? [Agreed]

      As previously announced, the Standing Com­mit­tee on Social and Economic Dev­elop­ment will meet again at 6 p.m., April 26th, to continue clause-by-clause con­sid­era­tion of Bill 35.

      The hour being 12 midnight, com­mit­tee rise.

COMMITTEE ROSE AT: 11:55 p.m.

WRITTEN SUBMISSIONS

Hello,

My name is Beth Burrows, and I have been a teacher for around 10 years in multiple divisions throughout the province, including Kelsey School Division, Lord Selkirk, 7 Oaks, Marymound, and currently Winnipeg School Division.

I am also the current chair of the Winnipeg Teacher's Association Equity and Social Justice Committee.

I am writing because I have some concerns about Bill 35 – The Education Admin Amendment Act.

To be clear, I am in full support of laws that improve child safety. In fact, the first point of the teacher code of professional practice is that our primary professional responsibility is to our students, and it is something we live every day. It is our duty to ensure that schools are always safe places in multiple ways.

What does "safe places" mean to me? It means they are places in which making mistakes or asking difficult questions can occur without our students feeling scared or concerned that they'll face repercussions as they learn and grow as humans. It means students know that the spaces they come into every day will be free from harm and any form of abuse for every child. That we are all working and striving together to ensure their safety as well as our own on physical, mental, emotional, and spiritual levels.

So, you will get no argument from me about supporting laws to enhance child protection.

My most prominent concern is about the inclusion of teacher competence in this bill because I fail to understand how investigating and adjudicating complaints related to a teacher's knowledge and skills or their ability to instruct and assess learning of the Manitoba curriculum addresses the safety of children – which is the stated intention of this bill.

I am not opposed to standards and regulations, and in fact, embrace them as a way for myself and my colleagues to govern ourselves within the profession to ensure the safety of All people in the education system.

My colleagues and I want the best teachers in the classroom.

We also work hard to be the best teachers - to ensure that we are responsive to the growing and evolving needs of our students.

In fact, our Code of Professional Conduct requires us to continuously improve professionally.

But competence and conduct are two separate issues.

They are inappropriately linked in this bill.

I am also concerned because I am hired, supervised, and evaluated by my employer – Winnipeg School Division, which is as it should be. But under Bill 35 the commissioner has the power to address issues of competence, which is frankly, ridiculous when there are already steps in place to ensure teacher competence is upheld and enforced within our profession that already do this.

Why is a third party evaluating my ability to perform my job, and what makes them competent enough to evaluate the job I'm doing?

The hearing panel will also be made up mostly of non-teachers.

This is another example of why competence should not be part of this bill on misconduct. It creates a situation where individuals without expertise in education are now responsible for judging teacher competency.

To improve fairness, the panel composition should be consistent with other regulated professions in Manitoba, where most of the panel is from the profession.

Regarding "misconduct" in the wording...the broad definition of misconduct, which includes "significant emotional harm" is another red flag. Significant emotional harm or incompetency could be associated with anything from how a student is graded to classroom management practices to resources or teaching of topics considered "sensitive".

I once had a parent complain that my teaching about Indigenous history was causing their kid emotional harm…because they felt that "teaching that stuff about Residential schools was just dragging garbage up from the past, and trying to make us white people guilty of stuff we never did."

The reassurance that frivolous, vexatious, or malicious complaints will be weeded out by the commissioner offers little comfort.

Because the impact on the teacher could be significant depending on whether - or how far - the investigation proceeds before it is deemed unfounded.

Qualifying "significant emotional harm" more narrowly would help to minimize this vulnerability for teachers, while ensuring protections are in place for students.

Finally, the bill is silent on whether teachers can have union representation at public hearings. Other regu­lated professions specifically have wording that makes the right to representation clear. Why is this missing from Bill 35?

I would like to propose the following amendments:

1. Remove competence from the Bill.

2. Ensure hearing panels are composed of a majority of teachers, in line with the composition of disciplinary panels of other professional bodies in Manitoba.

3. Include the expressed right to representation for a teacher being investigated.

4. Limit reports by employers to suspensions and terminations, as opposed to any and all discipline for professional misconduct or incompetence.

5. Define "significant emotional harm". This includes specific language related to psychological harm to the pupil or child, where the act is based on a characteristic protected by The Human Rights Code, repeated conduct that could reasonably cause a pupil or child to be humiliated or intimidated, or a single occurrence that could reasonably be expected to and has a lasting, harmful effect on the pupil or child.

6. Protect the privacy of teachers who are determined not to have the capacity to carry out the professional responsibilities of a teacher because of a physical or mental disability.

Thank you for your time.

Beth Burrows

____________

As a private citizen and holder of a Manitoba Teaching Certificate for over 20 years, who chose this city, this province, this country to live in for its rights based values I want you to hear that Bill 35 exercises those values and should be passed as is written.

Bill 35 protects teachers from frivolous complaints.

Bill 35 protects teachers from School Divisional Administrations.

Bill 35 protects teachers from Manitoba Teachers Society.

First and foremost, Bill 35 Protects our most vulnerable citizens, our children.

Bill 35's definition of misconduct is quite specific and focuses on sexual abuse and causing physical or significant emotional harm to a child. The Panel reviewing any complaints will be able to determine if a complaint is frivolous or not. Bill 35 clearly lays out the make-up of the panel as representative of professionally designated individuals to ensure transparency.

It is integral to not have time limits on reporting - I repeat - it is integral to not have time limits on the reporting of complaints. This must be coupled with an in-school solution to allow students to submit complaints anonymously. Survivors of sexual assault, bullying and abuse often do not report allegations until years later, and people fear reprisals for doing so.

Competency is directly linked to long term predatory behaviours. These behaviours are sustained over time and with a recorded history will support the identification of sexual predators within the education community. Cultures of silence, exclusion and gaslighting only serve to put the lives of students at risk.

As Cameron Haussmann from University of Manitoba stated "right now we do not know how many teachers are involved in misconduct types of situations on a yearly basis. Right now we do not know what disciplinary procedures look like, let alone what the consequences of substantiated misconduct look like"

Manitoba Teachers Society knows!

School Division's know!

How might it be referred to when an organization actively suppresses information that may conceal and active abuser or abusers as protecting policy and procedure?

What is the number of complaints that Manitoba Teachers Society determines is the correct number of complaints against an individual that indicate the individual should be disciplined for gross sexual misconduct, bullying or abuse?

We need to think about it - has the fox been managing the chicken coop?

Suggested amendments:

1.  A teacher under investigation must be supported by an appropriate independent, third party organi­zation.

2.  Provisions must be made for an in-school solution to allow students to submit complaints anonymously.

3.  The commissioner must be fully conversant with all Manitoba education policies including Appropriate Educational Programming, Mamàhtawisiwin, and all curriculum to understand the breadth of content and innovative engaging teaching styles afforded to all learners.

Bill 35 must pass as it is written to protect all teachers and most importantly protect all students.

David Wall

____________

I would like to see Bill 35 amended from how it is currently written.

I agree with the Manitoba Teachers' Society in that I support "child protection, as well as fair processes for managing teacher misconduct." However, I am concerned as well of "the inclusion of teacher competence in the legislation."

As the Manitoba Teachers' Society points out, "investigating and adjudicating complaints related to competence (such as professional practices and the teacher's knowledge, skills, and ability to deliver, instruct, and assess learning of the Manitoba curriculum) do not address the safety of children or enhance child protection laws."

There is definitely commitment to teacher competence in every division, and certainly my division, the Louis Riel School Division, and from the Manitoba Teachers' Society. Conduct is different than competency, and this legislation is mixing the two of them together.

I will outline MTS' issues with the Bill as it is currently written, as I completely agree:

I object "the inclusion of competence in a professional misconduct framework." "The Bill provides the commissioner with powers to address competency issues in accordance with the professional standards." The view I share with MTS is that "this is the purview of the employer." They go on to write what I believe as well, which is "at no time has the purpose of professional standards been connected to child safety and suspension or cancellation of a teaching certificate. Introducing it as part of a misconduct framework is problematic because supervision and evaluation of teacher performance are the respon­sibility of the employer."

"Pursuing professional excellence is how MTS safeguards the status of the profession and supports a robust public education system. The Society has promoted the development of teaching standards to foster a shared understanding of what it means to skillfully teach.

Standards also support teacher education, career long learning and identification of professional develop­ment needs. In fact, our Code of Professional Practice obligates teachers to continuously improve profes­sionally." We must follow the Code of Professional Practice.

They go on to share that "in the Excellence in Teaching and Leadership pillar of Manitoba's K to 12 Education Action Plan (April 2022), the esta­blish­ment of "professional standards that guide educator development, practice and evaluation" was identified as a future action to be initiated by April, 2024. Not only does MTS support this, but the Society also recommended it in its submission to the K‑12 Education Review Commission." I support MTS' view here.

The fact that the "hearing panels composed of a majority of non-teachers" is problematic:

"Public representation is vital, however, the balance of individuals judging the conduct of a professional should hold that professional designation themselves. This is the case with disciplinary panels of other professional bodies, such as The Regulated Health Professions Act."

There is "the unqualified inclusion of a teacher causing a student "significant emotional harm" in the definition of professional misconduct."

I agree with MTS that "the broadness of this definition leaves teachers vulnerable to value-laden and biased perspectives which could prompt frivolous, vexatious, or trivial complaints. It is true that under the legislation a commissioner has the authority to take no further action on a complaint deemed to be frivolous, vexatious, or trivial. However, the impact on the teacher could nonetheless be significant, depending on whether–or how far–the review and/or investi­gation proceeds and if a summary to the public is provided, even if it is without identifying infor­mation." This is very concerning for me.

I am very concerned as well about the "deficits in procedural fairness, such as:

◦  The acceptance of anonymous complaints.

◦  No requirement to provide a teacher with a copy of a complaint.

◦  No clear time limit for making a complaint.

◦  No expressed right for an investigated teacher to be represented by counsel.

◦  The obligation on employers to report any and all discipline for professional misconduct or incompe­tence as opposed to limiting reporting to suspensions and terminations.

◦  A lack of assurance that–given the commissioner will be governed by regulations, which are subject to change–investigations and hearings will be conducted fairly and under the principles of natural justice." This is very troublesome and worrying parts of this Bill. There is already a teacher shortage. This will completely exacerbate the situation.

As MTS says, please "remove competence from the Bill. This is a separate matter." As well, please:

◦  "Ensure hearing panels are composed of a majority of teachers, in line with the

composition of disciplinary panels of other profes­sional bodies.

◦  Include the expressed right to representation for a teacher being investigated.

◦  Limit reports by employers to suspensions and terminations, as opposed to any and all discipline for professional misconduct or incompetence.

◦  Define "significant emotional harm". This requires specific language related to psychological harm to the pupil or child where the act is based on a characteristic protected by The Human Rights Code, repeated conduct that could reasonably cause a pupil or child to be humiliated or intimidated, or a single occurrence that could reasonably be expected to, and has a lasting harmful effect on, the pupil or child.

◦  Protect the privacy of teachers who are determined not to have the capacity to carry out the professional responsibilities of a teacher because of a physical or mental disability."

Respectfully,

Jennifer Engbrecht
Teacher
Louis Riel School Division


 

TIME – 6 p.m.

LOCATION – Winnipeg, Manitoba

CHAIRPERSON –
Mr. Andrew Micklefield (Rossmere)

VICE-CHAIRPERSON –
Mr. Blaine Pedersen (Midland)

ATTENDANCE – 6     QUORUM – 4

Members of the committee present:

Hon. Messrs. Ewasko, Khan

Messrs. Altomare, Brar, Micklefield, Pedersen

Substitutions:

Mr. Bushie for Mr. Brar
at 11:42 p.m.

APPEARING:

Hon. Jon Gerrard, MLA for River Heights

PUBLIC PRESENTERS:

Arianne Cloutier, private citizen

Joy Smith, The Joy Smith Foundation

Joel Swaan, Garden Valley Teachers' Association

Scott Durling, private citizen

Amy Warriner, private citizen

Gabriel Hurley, private citizen

Sam Zurzolo, private citizen

Augustine Watanabe, private citizen

Rachelle Dunlop, private citizen

Jay Ewert, Evergreen Teachers' Association

Sean Giesbrecht, private citizen

Elizabeth Bourbonniere, private citizen

Gregory Walker, private citizen

Cameron Watson, private citizen

Sonja Blank, private citizen

Nicole Bobick, Swan Valley Teachers' Association

Karla Rootsaert, private citizen

Mike Urichuk, private citizen

Jon Bettner, private citizen

Shelagh McGregor, private citizen

Kevin Rebeck, Manitoba Federation of Labour

WRITTEN SUBMISSIONS:

Beth Burrows, private citizen

David Wall, private citizen

Jennifer Engbrecht, private citizen

MATTERS UNDER CONSIDERATION:

Bill 35–The Edu­ca­tion Admin­is­tra­tion Amend­ment Act (Teacher Certification and Pro­fes­sional Conduct)

* * *