The intensity of feeling among the PCVS community has perhaps never been stronger than over the past two weeks, as the 2011-12 school year draws to its conclusion.
The PCVS student film
festival, awards ceremony, and dance performances have focused the
emotional charge of the community through the prism of student achievement. The
sentiments expressed in documentaries, speeches, music, dance, and animation
have at times been overwhelming. Wondering whether this will be the last such
series of June events celebrating the work of PCVS students has brought even more
tears than usual in response to these artistic and rhetorical expressions of
love for PCVS and respect for one another. You can watch one documentary, “PCVS Then, Now and Forever,” here, and an animated piece, "Ode to PCVS," here.
The shared pride
in what has been accomplished at PCVS to date as a nurturing, stimulating
environment in which to come of age has become dramatically intensified in the
past year in response to attacks by a corporately-influenced school board. The
possibility of losing our community cornerstone has made almost everyone
appreciate it that much more, and the response of students to the attack has
only added to their reputation for maturity,
civic awareness, and collective
creativity.
While students and parents have been sharing moments of
overflowing joy, sorrow and pride in the venerable PCVS auditorium, judges and
lawyers at Osgoode Hall in downtown Toronto have been mulling over reams of
legal documentation in an effort to reach a decision whose implications outweigh the substance
of the case a hundredfold.
Anxiety built rapidly among Peterborough Needs PCVS supporters as the case was taken up in the
courtroom last Wednesday and Thursday. The suspense of not knowing what the
outcome of the judicial review will be, when it will be released, or on what basis
decisions will be made, has resulted in a unique, pervasive sense of sitting in
limbo.
The previous post outlined the terrible precedent a decision in favour of KPR would set for the
expectations of publicly-funded bodies in adhering to public policy and responding
to the needs of the public. If KPR is allowed to get away with their egregious
conduct, the standards to which Ontario
school boards are held will degenerate, and the accountability and responsiveness
of administrators to the people they serve will continue to diminish.
Posts made this past spring regarding social and economic
disasters in Welland and Sault Ste. Marie following the closure of historic, central public
high schools offer a glimpse of what the impact of a judicial decision in
favour of KPR might have on Peterborough.
Those posts show the key role played by central,
public schools as anchors of
urban communities. The deterioration of central Peterborough following the loss of PCVS would
take the form of a downward spiral
of increasing residential vacancies, falling land values, empty storefronts,
the closure of the Freshco grocery store on Brock Street, more residential vacancies,
and so on.
Such a downward spiral would mean decreasing standard of living and community disintegration for citizens of central Peterborough. It would also mean headaches and expenses for city hall
as municipal authorities are forced to combat the deterioration as best they
can. It would also mean headaches for Queen’s
Park, as the plan to make Peterborough a population growth node will be much
less feasible if the center of the city becomes anything like Welland or Sault Ste. Marie.
A decision in favour of
KPR would also have negative impacts on the reputation and popularity
of our MPP Jeff Leal, Premier Dalton McGuinty, and the Liberal party, among a
great number of Peterborough
citizens. While Progressive Conservative candidate Alan Wilson has demonstrated
that he’s keen to capitalize on dwindling public confidence in Leal, the
increasing appeal of NDP leader Andrea Horwath and the initiative her party has
taken in the legislature regarding education issues this past year suggest that
a good local NDP candidate would stand an equal chance of sending Leal into retirement.
NDP MPP Rosario Marchese (Trinity-Spadina) has introduced
another bill in the legislature to include school
boards among the public bodies falling under the purview of the Ontario Ombudsman’s office. The NDP is also
responsible for amending the government’s anti-bullying
bill, passed last week, to oblige Catholic schools to allow students to
create Gay-Straight Alliance clubs.
A decision in favour of KPR would undermine the government’s expressed
commitment to reducing sexuality-based bullying in schools.
Given the evidence showing how integral central public high schools are to their communities across the
province, the questions recently raised about Ontario’s full funding of
Catholic school boards, and the fact that McGuinty, Horwath, PC leader Tim
Hudak, and Education Minister Laurel Broten were all raised Catholic, it would seem a good political choice for
almost any candidate or party in the next provincial election to come out
strongly in favour of investing in those downtown public high schools, rather than encouraging school boards to
attack them, as the Liberal government has done.
McGuinty created his “education premier” persona by
appealing to young parents in
capping elementary class sizes and expanding kindergarten. As the children of
those parents grow and move into high school, will their families remain on the
Liberal bandwagon if high school consolidation and community disintegration
becomes the order of the day across Ontario?
For KPR’s current Director of Education and Chairperson of
the Board, a decision in the board’s favour would vindicate their stubborn refusal to co-operate with the
Peterborough
public in any way at all. It would also make the recommendations for policy
revisions made by Joan Green moot,
since it will have been made plain that school boards are in effect free to
manipulate policy however they like while ignoring the public and their
municipal representatives. KPR bean-counters will be free to move quickly onto
their next targets, likely to include Adam
Scott, Armour Heights,
Keith Wightman, the Cobourg high
schools, and South
Monaghan elementary.
As PCVS Foundation
president Jay Amer remarked at the close of the Peterborough Needs PCVS event
at Market Hall this past Sunday evening, however, the next school board election is less than two-and-a-half years away. Amer, who unsuccessfully sought a Peterborough seat on the
board of trustees in the last election, would likely receive much more support if he chose to run for the
position again. Given the terrible performance of the obviously inept current
collection of trustees, their lack of credentials, and the deterioration of
their reputations, one would hope there would be a concerted attempt to find a slate of potential replacements for
them. As Amer observed, there’s nothing to stop a new board of trustees from
making a motion to re-open PCVS a
few years from now.
Event MC Dan Fewings managed to make a little magic by
turning Don McLean’s “Starry, Starry
Night” into a poignant song about PCVS without changing a word, capping a
night where every piece of music was carefully chosen and powerfully presented
to bring out its relevance to PCVS and the siege under which the school board
has put it. Evangeline Gentle’s beautiful love to song to PCVS, "184," with its “coming out” suggestions, made a perfect complement to Tara Urabe’s reprise of the “Change in Me” number from the Beauty and the Beast musical recently
performed by the Grade 11 musical theater class. Belle’s epiphany, the realization that good
can come from bad, was never so richly and immediately evident as it was in
the context of speeches by student leaders Matthew Finlan, Colin Chepeka and
Kirsten Bruce (who seemed to have been channeling Harry, Ron and
Hermione) as they reflected eloquently on the school year.
Peterborough Needs PCVS organizer, former principal Shirl
Delarue, was the subject of a richly-deserved standing ovation and gifts. Her
speech, focused on the amazing community
effort over the course of the campaign, also for a moment expressed
indignation at a statement from KPR’s court case which spoke volumes of the disconnection of Fisher Drive from both PCVS and central Peterborough.
KPR referred to PCVS as an “academic luxury” the board could “no longer afford.” That this claim could be made in spite of the
countless testimonies of recent immigrants
just learning English, students living in shelters or other low-income circumstances, students who’ve been bullied at other schools, and students
who wouldn’t have finished school at all
if PCVS hadn’t been an option, added insult to injury, and further diminished
the reputation of school board officials, if such was possible.
To the contrary of KPR’s dismissive attitude, the events of
the past week have shown that the spirit
of the PCVS community has only been made stronger by KPR’s political power play.
As Evangeline’s song says,
it’s not time for this beauty to sleep.
Here's another PCVS doc from the film festival. I think the students capture what is special about PCVS:
ReplyDeletehttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UtytBcZmzOA