Premier says sex education group will be banned from giving school presentations
CBC
Premier Blaine Higgs says he will ban a Quebec-based sex education group from presenting at schools in New Brunswick after a presentation he believes was "clearly inappropriate."
The premier took to X, formerly Twitter, to express his displeasure with a presentation given at several New Brunswick high schools.
"To say I am furious would be a gross understatement," he said. "This presentation was not part of the New Brunswick curriculum and the content was not flagged for parents in advance.
"The fact that this was shared shows either improper vetting was done, the group misrepresented the content they would share ... or both."
Higgs said the Department of Education told his office the presentation was supposed to be about the sexually transmitted infection human papillomavirus – but it went beyond that.
He shared and criticized a presentation slide that includes questions like "do girls masturbate" and "is it good or bad to do anal?"
Teresa Norris, who delivered the presentation to several New Brunswick schools last week, denied that schools were misled about what the presentation would cover.
The president and founder of the charity HPV Global Action, which also operates a youth sexual education resource called Thirsty for the Talk, said she was surprised and disappointed at Higgs's reaction.
She said the slide Higgs shared was the presentation's cover slide. She said it reflects actual questions her group receives from students.
"That excerpt that was taken is an extraction of something that's very grossly misrepresenting what this presentation is about," Norris said.
"All of the topics that we cover are supporting the learning areas. This is something that your province has decided ... We're not creating something that the province hasn't already put in place."
Norris said she has been giving presentations at New Brunswick schools for several years. All schools receive an outline of the topics to be covered and the school must give its consent prior to the presentation, she said.
The presentation is called Healthy Relationships 101. Norris said it is an "A to Z" about relationships and sexuality.
"We are not promoting any of these sexual behaviours ... we talk about abstinence in the presentation, we empower students to help them make decisions about their relationships," she said.