Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
National

The B.C. ombudsperson investigates complaints that some students are being sent home

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 14 Jan, 2025 01:08 PM
  • The B.C. ombudsperson investigates complaints that some students are being sent home

The office of the B.C. ombudsperson says it is investigating complaints that some public schools are excluding students who are disruptive or who have disabilities. 

Ombudsperson Jay Chalke says his office will examine the complaints that those children from kindergarten to Grade 12 have received little to no instruction. 

Chalke says the roles of the Ministry of Education and the school districts will also be assessed.

While some complaints allege that school districts are excluding students due to unsafe behaviour, others point to inadequate resources needed to support a student's learning in school.

Chalke says he's concerned about the outcomes for those children who are left without instruction and aims to make recommendations to support inclusive education. 

Students and their families can contribute to the investigation by filling out a confidential questionnaire or speaking directly to an ombudsperson investigator by April 1.

MORE National ARTICLES

Poilievre hails B.C. byelection win for Conservatives as Liberal vote collapses

Poilievre hails B.C. byelection win for Conservatives as Liberal vote collapses
Monday's byelection in the Fraser Valley seat, which had been held by the Liberals and is traditionally closely contested, came on the day Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's ruling party was thrown into turmoil by finance minister Chrystia Freeland's resignation.

Poilievre hails B.C. byelection win for Conservatives as Liberal vote collapses

Postal employees head back to work as union challenges strike intervention

Postal employees head back to work as union challenges strike intervention
Canada Post trucks, conveyors and mail carriers are moving again after a month-long strike by more than 55,000 postal workers left letters and parcels in limbo. The Canada Industrial Relations Board ordered postal workers back on the job following hearings over the weekend to determine whether the two sides stood too far apart to reach a deal by year's end.

Postal employees head back to work as union challenges strike intervention

'Only viable path': Freeland quits cabinet, carves out new role on federal backbench

'Only viable path': Freeland quits cabinet, carves out new role on federal backbench
In a career filled with fresh milestones, Chrystia Freeland is taking up another new role: backbench member of the governing Liberal party. Freeland resigned from the federal cabinet Monday, the day she was set to present the government's fall economic statement. 

'Only viable path': Freeland quits cabinet, carves out new role on federal backbench

A list of Liberal cabinet ministers who have recently quit or don't plan to run again

A list of Liberal cabinet ministers who have recently quit or don't plan to run again
It is the latest in a string of small shuffles Trudeau has been forced to make in recent months to replace ministers who have made clear they won't be seeking re-election. Several others who indicated publicly in October that they won't run again have yet to be replaced.

A list of Liberal cabinet ministers who have recently quit or don't plan to run again

'Human error' caused spill of up to 8,000 litres of fuel off B.C.'s coast: government

'Human error' caused spill of up to 8,000 litres of fuel off B.C.'s coast: government
Human error during a fuel transfer at a fish farm off the west coast of British Columbia has resulted in a spill into the water of up to 8,000 litres of diesel. The B.C. government said in a report on its website that the spill happened Saturday at the Grieg Seafood fish farm near Zeballos, on the northwest side of Vancouver Island. 

'Human error' caused spill of up to 8,000 litres of fuel off B.C.'s coast: government

Family, friends, leaders gather at memorial for former B.C. premier John Horgan

Family, friends, leaders gather at memorial for former B.C. premier John Horgan
Up to three thousand people gathered at the Q Centre in the suburban Victoria community of Colwood for a memorial service for the former New Democrat premier and Canada's ambassador to Germany who died last month at age 65 following his third bout with cancer.

Family, friends, leaders gather at memorial for former B.C. premier John Horgan