Wednesday, July 8, 2026
ADVT 
National

Toronto School Board Puts Program That Puts Cops In Schools On Hold

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 31 Aug, 2017 11:38 AM
    TORONTO — Canada's largest school board has suspended a controversial program that placed Toronto police officers in certain schools in the city.
     
    Trustees with the Toronto District School Board voted Wednesday night to put the School Resource Officer program on hold for the upcoming school year and put off a permanent decision until more data is collected and a report is prepared.
     
    The decision comes after Toronto's police services board voted last week to have the program reviewed, with the assessment to be carried out by Ryerson University.
     
    The School Resource Officer program saw police officers deployed at 36 of the TDSB's 75 schools in an effort to improve safety and perceptions of police.
     
    It was implemented in 2008 after 15-year-old Jordan Manners was shot and killed at C. W. Jefferys Collegiate Institute the previous year.
     
    Critics of the program have argued that armed officers in schools intimidate students. They have also raised concerns about racial and anti-immigrant bias.
     
    Rodney Diverlus, co-founder of Black Lives Matter Toronto, applauded the TDSB's decision to suspend the program.
     
    "While this is not a full victory, this is an important step forward," he wrote in statement posted on Facebook.
     
     
    Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne said she is a fan of community policing and was glad the program wasn't shut down entirely.
     
    "Having a police officer in a school to get to know kids so that kids get to understand that that's a relationship that can actually be helpful, I think that's a good thing," Wynne said during a panel discussion on Toronto radio station CFRB Thursday morning.
     
    "I think it's a good thing that the TDSB didn't cancel this program ... I think that if they need to look at it, fair enough."
     
    Toronto Mayor John Tory said he was surprised to hear of the program's suspension and said he hoped the board would look at the results of the review being conducted by Ryerson.
     
    "The school board has made their own decision on this and that's fine. They're entitled to do that," Tory said.
     
    An interim report on review of the program being conducted by Ryerson is expected to be released in January.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Oldest Known Member Of Southern B.C. Killer Whale Pod Believed Dead

    Oldest Known Member Of Southern B.C. Killer Whale Pod Believed Dead
    VANCOUVER — The death of a whale considered the oldest in the West Coast's southern resident population could particularly affect one animal who may have lost yet another adoptive mother, a wildlife biologist says.

    Oldest Known Member Of Southern B.C. Killer Whale Pod Believed Dead

    RCMP Investigating Body Found In Parking Lot Of Nanaimo Business

    RCMP Investigating Body Found In Parking Lot Of Nanaimo Business
    NANAIMO, B.C. — RCMP says its investigating the death of a man in Nanaimo, B.C.

    RCMP Investigating Body Found In Parking Lot Of Nanaimo Business

    Family Of Lion Dancers Ready To Roar At Vancouver's Chinatown Spring Festival

    Family Of Lion Dancers Ready To Roar At Vancouver's Chinatown Spring Festival
    VANCOUVER — After Jun Ing performed as a lion dancer for the first time in Vancouver's Chinese New Year parade in the 1980s, he remembers wishing it had lasted longer.

    Family Of Lion Dancers Ready To Roar At Vancouver's Chinatown Spring Festival

    Snow Causes Problems In Manitoba, Extreme Cold Warning Lifted In Saskatchewan

    The main highway from Winnipeg to the U-S border has reopened in southern Manitoba.

    Snow Causes Problems In Manitoba, Extreme Cold Warning Lifted In Saskatchewan

    Former Four-Term Victoria Mayor Peter Pollen Dies Peacefully At Home

    Former Four-Term Victoria Mayor Peter Pollen Dies Peacefully At Home
    VICTORIA — Former Victoria mayor Peter Pollen has died at the age of 89.

    Former Four-Term Victoria Mayor Peter Pollen Dies Peacefully At Home

    Home Sales In Vancouver Dropped 5.6 Per Cent Last Year, Real Estate Board Says

    Home Sales In Vancouver Dropped 5.6 Per Cent Last Year, Real Estate Board Says
    The composite benchmark price for all residential properties in Metro Vancouver, as measured by the Multiple Listing Service home price index, hit $897,600 in December.

    Home Sales In Vancouver Dropped 5.6 Per Cent Last Year, Real Estate Board Says