Waterloo Catholic school board provides progress update after police called to remove 4-year-old
An incident that sparked a flurry of controversy just over a year ago is back in the spotlight.
At Monday night’s Waterloo Catholic District School Board (WCDSB) meeting, trustees received an update on the board’s progress on recommendations outlined in a review of a November 2021 incident that saw a four-year-old Black child removed from a Kitchener school by police.
WCDSB director of education Tyrone Dowling says they've achieved some of the recommended targets following a provincial review. This includes making a plan to communicate with families when students when incidents occur as well as working to attract more diverse applicants for open positions.
"I would say this is a process that's going to take time," said Dowling. "It's something that we are committed to."
The recommendations from the province include hiring Black consultants and professionals and amending staff policies to ensure racism and forms of discrimination are subject to disciplinary measures.
"It's high time that there's fair and true representation in all areas of our lives," said Fadhilah Balogun of the African Women's Alliance of Waterloo Region. "For us, it's not just about hiring Blacks, but making sure teachers have the right mindset to deal with our young ones, because they can either make or break these children."
The province recommended the steps be completed within a year.
"In a year, it's hard to see that turnaround in terms of those physical bodies in our schools," said Dowling. "The [province's] assistant deputy minister was aware of that and has said to me they're willing to work with us on this."
The board expects to see another report from the province in Apirl of 2023. At that time, they'll determine if it will become an annual report or if they will need to look at their equity practices on a larger scale.
The Monday meeting was the first full board meeting since its delayed election results were confirmed.
FALLOUT FROM POLICE BEING CALLED ON FOUR-YEAR-OLD
Community advocates spoke out about the incident in February.
“Mom is traumatized. Mom is heartbroken. Not only has the school failed the boy, it has failed the mom,” Fidelia Ukueje, president of the group Nigerians in the Region of Waterloo, told media, standing in front of the school board office on Feb. 23.
Ukueje said the family was devastated after police were called to John Sweeney Elementary School in Kitchener to remove their four-year-old son who was said to be “in crisis.”
“In their own language, he was just too active,” Ukueje said.
Two days later, Lecce called it “unacceptable” and launched a review.
“No child in this province or country should have police called on them,” Lecce told CTV News on Feb. 25.
At first, the then director of education Loretta Notten said sometimes calling the police is a necessary course of action.
“I will take umbrage to the allegation that there is systemic racism in our board,” Notten told reporters following a Feb. 28 board meeting.
Notten took that statement back a week later and issued an apology, but some advocacy groups weren’t impressed.
“Right now, this is lip service, and we don’t want that,” Lena Thibeh co-founder of the Black Parent Council KW said.
In April, the school board said it would immediately begin implementing some of the 14 recommendations that came from the provincial review, despite continued criticism from some who said they spoke to the family involved.
“They went above and beyond to satisfy the narrative that they have in their minds about this little child – a four-year-old, a toddler – and criminalized this child,” said Charline Grant, co-founder of the group Parents of Black Children.
In the summer, the family filed a lawsuit against the school board seeking $1 million in damages plus court costs. The suits statement of claim alleges the board discriminated against the student because of his race and cognitive impairment and failed in its duty to properly care for him.
“He was told that he was not allowed to play with the other children, and he was routinely segregated from the class in a separate isolation room,” the suit alleges.
With reporting from CTV Kitchener's Hannah Schmidt
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
2 children dead, 6 injured after city bus crashes into daycare in Montreal suburb Laval, driver arrested
Two children are dead and six others were injured after a Laval city bus crashed into a daycare Wednesday morning. The driver of the bus, a 51-year-old man, has been arrested and faces charges of homicide and dangerous driving, police say.

How much Canadians have fallen behind amid high inflation and who's hurting the most
Inflation has eroded purchasing power for many Canadians, but the experience with rapidly rising prices has been far from uniform.
Awkward moment or conscious message? Political experts weigh in on Danielle Smith-Justin Trudeau handshake
An 'awkward' attempt at a handshake between Alberta Premier Danielle Smith and the prime minister Tuesday is another example of leaders from the western province hesitating before shaking Justin Trudeau's hand, say political experts.
China says it was smeared in Biden State of the Union speech
China says it was smeared in U.S. President Joe Biden's State of the Union address that repeatedly mentioned competition between the two countries.
Turkiye, Syria quake death toll surpasses 11,000
With the hope of finding survivors fading, stretched rescue teams in Turkiye and Syria searched Wednesday for signs of life in the rubble of thousands of buildings toppled by a catastrophic earthquake. The confirmed death toll from the world's deadliest quake in more than a decade passed 11,000.
'Crypto king' associate operated parallel Ponzi scheme while living lavish lifestyle, court documents allege
An associate of Ontario’s self-described “crypto king” was operating his own fraud scam parallel to the multi-million dollar Ponzi scheme, court documents allege.
opinion | Tom Mulcair: This is why the federal health-care proposal is so disappointing
Justin Trudeau has thrown in the towel in the fight to maintain the federal role as gatekeeper of a public, universal, accessible and fair health-care system in Canada, writes former NDP leader Tom Mulcair in an exclusive column for CTVNews.ca. 'That could have tragic consequences for folks on the lower rungs of the social and economic ladder.'
opinion | Before you do your taxes, take note of these tax credits and deductions you may not have known about
Many Canadians are experiencing strains caused by the increased cost of living and inflation. In his exclusive column for CTVNews.ca, contributor Christopher Liew shares some of the top credits and deductions that you may be able to claim on your income tax return to help you save money.
A Conservative government would uphold federal-provincial health-care funding deals: Poilievre
Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre says that if he becomes prime minister he would uphold the 10-year deals Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is looking to ink with provinces and territories that would inject $46.2 billion in new funding into Canada's strained health-care systems.