Proposed class-action lawsuit filed over alleged use of holds, seclusion at a Whitehorse school
CBC
A new proposed class-action lawsuit alleges a number of students at Whitehorse's Jack Hulland Elementary School were repeatedly subject to holds and seclusion — sometimes for hours on end.
The incidents are alleged to have happened between 2002 and last school year, and to have been to the point where some students developed post-traumatic stress disorder.
Two representative plaintiffs, still children, and their guardians are suing both the Yukon Department of Education and Jack Hulland Elementary School Council.
A statement of claim filed to the Yukon Supreme Court on Monday morning alleges both children, who are only identified by their initials, were "subjected to holds and involuntary seclusion on a frequent and repeated basis" by school staff beginning in 2015.
However, the document also alleges a series of policies at Jack Hulland allowed the widespread use of holds and seclusion on students, including equipping a staff team with hand-held radios so they could be called for help and the construction of four "isolation cells" in a classroom.
"I have never seen anything like this in my life," lawyer James Tucker, who's representing the plaintiffs, said in an interview. "And I'm from another generation where what might be considered corporal punishment was occasionally employed."
The lawsuit is seeking to be certified as a class-action on behalf of all students "who were subject to holds and restraints and who were locked in a room and/or placed in seclusion" at the school between Jan. 1, 2002, and June 30, 2022.
No statements of defence have been filed yet and the allegations have yet to be tested at trial.
A spokesperson for the Yukon's Justice Department, which handles the government's legal affairs, declined the CBC's request for comment.
According to the statement of claim, staff at Jack Hulland including administration, teachers and educational assistants used holds to "confine, transport or restrict the movement" of students from around September 2002 to October 2021.
While the Department of Education and Jack Hulland School Council were responsible for ensuring the safety and wellbeing of students at the school, the lawsuit alleges they knew about the use of holds and seclusion from the beginning but didn't stop it.
According to the statement of claim, the council "adopted and implemented policies which authorized and/or, in particular circumstances, directed the use of holds, restraints and seclusion on students as a means of controlling and modifying student behaviour."
Those "forcible confinement policies," the lawsuit claims, were approved by the department and used to enforce the "Hawk Rules" at Jack Hulland, a series of directives meant to apply to both adults and children.
The rules, contained in a parent handbook, are listed under the heading, "behaviour management and building self discipline" and include "have respect for yourself and others" and "will follow instructions (the 1st time)."