Brandon school board reprimands members for conduct, bylaw breaches following library book debate
CBC
The Brandon School Division's board of trustees voted to reprimand five of its seven members on Monday for breaching the board's code of conduct and bylaws in recent weeks, including accusations of treating community members with disrespect.
The formal reprimands, which were delivered during an in camera session following the board's regular public meeting on Monday night, come following a May 23 board meeting attended by hundreds of people in Manitoba's second-largest city, where the board rejected a call to remove books dealing with sexuality and gender identity from libraries.
During Monday's in camera session, trustees Linda Ross, Jim Murray and Kim Fallis were reprimanded for breaching a section of the board's code of conduct that says all community members must be treated "in a respectful and courteous manner," the division said in a Tuesday news release.
Trustees Breanna Sieklicki and Calistus Ekenna were reprimanded for breaching a board bylaw that says trustees can only ask delegations at meetings questions for the purpose of clarification.
Though the board's news release did not refer specifically to the May 23 meeting, it did say that "over the past weeks, multiple trustees have been accused of violating the trustee code of conduct policy" and the board bylaw regarding delegations.
The trustees "have been issued reprimands by the board as a whole, and each member of the board has been reminded of the importance of following proper board conduct," the board's news release said, and all have agreed to follow division policies and bylaws going forward.
During Monday's public board meeting, Kathy Smitzniuk, a Brandon resident, said she found the May 23 board meeting at Vincent Massey High School — where a 6-1 board vote rejected a proposal to create a committee of trustees and parents to review books available in division schools — "very disturbing."
"The presence of signs, drums, co-ordinated clothing, and the public yelling profanities is not normal board meeting etiquette," Smitzniuk said.
The proposal was initially brought forward by a delegation at a May 8 board meeting, who called for a committee to review library titles and remove any deemed inappropriate, including "any books that caused our kids to question whether they are in the wrong body."
Before the vote at the May 23 meeting, board chair Linda Ross said there were many "errors and untruths" in a presentation by one of the delegation's members.
At Monday's board meeting, Smitzniuk asked for a freedom of information request to produce communications leading up to the May 23 meeting to show how the board arrived at its decision to reject the book review committee.
"It appears to me that you already made up your mind before the meeting at Vincent Massey, and the meeting itself was just a political show," she told the board.
However, board chair Linda Ross says the decision has been made and there will not be a review committee.
"We're not going to do that," she told CBC, adding the ongoing push to review books is distracting from the board's primary mission — the education of students.