
Red Deer Catholic school trustee says Holy Spirit told her to post meme that prompted discipline
CBC
A Red Deer Catholic School Board trustee says the Holy Spirit told her to "go for it" and post a meme that likened LGBTQ pride to Nazi Germany.
The details became public in a 15-page document released by the school board noting discussions between the board, trustee Monique LaGrange and her lawyer, James Kitchen, between Sept. 25 and 26.
LaGrange took to Facebook toward the end of August to share a now-deleted meme that featured a picture of children waving Nazi flags above a picture of children waving Pride flags.
The board found LaGrange violated the Trustee Code of Conduct and Alberta's Education Act but ruled she would not be removed as a trustee.
The board said LaGrange's post violated the act, which requires students to be entitled to welcoming, caring, respectful and safe learning environments that respect diversity and nurture a sense of belonging and a positive sense of self.
Kitchen said the details in the document would have become public eventually because a judicial review would be pursued in an attempt to have the decision overturned.
"They're going to become public, in any event, if we judicially review it, which I already had instructions to do," Kitchen said in an interview.
"So I said, we might as well just immediately jump to that point, issue the reasons, and then make them public, which is just good for basic accountability and transparency and public scrutiny."
LaGrange is censured from attending or participating in committee meetings, including those held by the Alberta School Boards Association and the Alberta Catholic School Trustees' Association, which has already removed LaGrange from her role as a director.
She also can't officially publicly represent the board or school division or make statements about the LGBTQ community and the Holocaust.
The board had initially passed a motion asking the minister of education to dismiss LaGrange from her role after she refused their request for an apology.
"There has to be specific allegations. There wasn't any because, at this point, no trustee had filed an official complaint, so they really jumped the gun," Kitchen said.
LaGrange argued that the proceedings were tainted by procedural unfairness and bias and should be stayed, the document stated.
The document further notes the process was undertaken based on the board's initial misunderstanding that the minister was responsible for reviewing and assessing the trustee's conduct.

Health Minister Adriana LaGrange is alleging the former CEO of Alberta Health Services was unwilling and unable to implement the government's plan to break up the health authority, became "infatuated" with her internal investigation into private surgical contracts and made "incendiary and inaccurate allegations about political intrigue and impropriety" before she was fired in January.