Saturday, March 21, 2026
ADVT 
National

Quebec's Biggest French School Board Postpones Applying Religious Symbols Law

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 20 Jun, 2019 08:43 PM

    MONTREAL — Quebec's largest school board has voted to delay application of Quebec's controversial new secularism law for at least a year to allow for consultations with parents, unions and other stakeholders.

     

    However the Quebec government has said the law passed Sunday banning religious symbols for teachers, police officers and other public servants in positions of authority takes effect immediately.


    In a motion passed Wednesday, the Commission scolaire de Montreal outlines plans for consultations with governing boards, parents' committees, unions and various associations to determine what changes need to be made to board policies.


    Catherine Harel-Bourdon, the board chair and an outspoken critic of the new law, says the board will also need to train hundreds of managers to enforce the law and to avoid having it applied unevenly in different schools.


    Teachers and principals hired after March 28 — the date the bill was tabled — are prohibited from wearing religious symbols on the job.


    A spokesman for the English Montreal School Board noted that before the bill was even tabled the board voted not to implement the planned restrictions on religious symbols. He said the board will likely discuss the matter at a meeting next week.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Inuit plan says climate change can't be separated from social issues

    The Arctic is warming twice as quickly as the rest of the planet and that means the Inuit need their own plan to deal with it

    Inuit plan says climate change can't be separated from social issues

    Senators reject chance to immediately kill tanker ban but bill not safe yet

    Senators voted 53-38 to reject a committee report that recommended that Bill C-48 be scrapped; one senator abstained.

    Senators reject chance to immediately kill tanker ban but bill not safe yet

    Documents show federal push for infrastructure bank to back Via project

    The rail company wants to build a multibillion-dollar new network of dedicated passenger-rail lines in Ontario and Quebec

    Documents show federal push for infrastructure bank to back Via project

    Cabinet docs detail Mulroney challenges on China after Tiananmen Square massacre

    The big question for the Canadian Progressive Conservative government of the day was: what do we do about China now?

    Cabinet docs detail Mulroney challenges on China after Tiananmen Square massacre

    Raptors fans risk ridicule to cheer team deep in Golden State Warriors territory

    Toronto Raptors fan Raj Singh Ghuman can't help but release a boisterous cheer as his car — bedecked with a Raptors flag — passes another vehicle with Ontario plates on the approach to the Golden Gate Bridge, deep in Golden State Warriors territory.

    Raptors fans risk ridicule to cheer team deep in Golden State Warriors territory

    'It's not about popularity': Trudeau, Macron meet in Paris

    The two leaders acknowledged that many people in Canada, France and elsewhere are nervous about their future.

    'It's not about popularity': Trudeau, Macron meet in Paris