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Saturday, July 5, 2025

Alberta moves to bar teacher’s association from investigating its own members

After damning revelations about a former teacher, the Alberta government will be taking steps to remove teacher disciplinary actions from the Alberta Teachers’ Association (ATA), according to a statement issued by Alberta education minister Adriana LaGrange on Thursday. 

“It is now abundantly clear that the ATA can no longer act as the investigator and the prosecutor for complaints against its members,” said LaGrange. “This obvious conflict of interest has made Alberta an outlier. All other provinces and territories follow either an arm’s-length or government-operated model for teacher discipline.”  

The announcement comes after it was revealed that Calgary teacher Michael Gregory, who committed suicide after being charged with 17 counts of sexual assault against former students earlier this year, had admitted abusive behaviour in 2006, according to the ATA. 

This information was not forwarded to Calgary police because the ATA was not obligated to do so. 

Gregory made the admissions in an agreed statement of facts submitted during a two-day hearing held in 2006, which led to his teaching licence being suspended. 

LaGrange said she would bring forward an order-in-council to require the ATA to notify the registrar at Alberta Education of all complaints about their members when those complaints are received. 

At the moment, the ATA is only required to notify Alberta Education at the end of their disciplinary process if a matter goes to a hearing, including cases where recommendations are made to the minister to suspend or cancel a licence. 

LaGrange has directed the Ministry of Education to begin drafting legislation for the spring that will separate the teacher disciplinary process from the ATA’s mandate and functions. 

“I cannot change the past, nor can I take away the pain survivors live with every single day,” she said. “However, as the Minister of Education, I consider it my moral obligation to do everything in my power to fix the broken system that has let our children and their families down for so long.”

The Alberta government passed the Students First Act on Dec. 2, which enhanced teacher oversight to improve student safety and provide parents with more confidence in the education system. 

The Students First Act updated three pieces of legislation to ensure disciplinary matters are responded to more quickly. This bill created an online database of Alberta teacher certification information. 

According to the overview of the act, these updates “put students first by balancing individual teachers’ rights to privacy and procedural fairness with the public’s right to know when a teacher has been disciplined for a serious matter.”

Parents group warns conversion therapy bill could fast-track kids into sex-change surgery

A non-profit parents’ group concerned with the growing trend of children being medically transitioned into a different gender has written an open letter to the Canadian Senate about the recently passed conversion therapy bill, C4. 

The group, Canadian Gender Report, was founded by parent Pamela Buffone, who took the Ottawa-Carleton District School Board (OCDSB) to the Ontario Human Rights Tribunal after a teacher told her six-year-old daughter that “girls are not real.” 

In their letter to the Senate, the group states that while they oppose any forms of “forced, coercive or degrading therapy intended to result in a change to one’s sexual orientation or gender identity,” they were concerned the new law had serious implications for gender-confused adolescents. 

“Parents are concerned that Bill C4 will further cement an unproven and poorly understood model of care in the Canadian healthcare system,” the group wrote. 

Canadian Gender Report cites new standards of care released by the World Professional Association for Transgender Health (WPTAH) which states that there is little evidence to support medical treatment for gender-questioning adolescents and that psychological assessment is necessary. 

“The psychological assessments that WPATH advises are necessary are being phased out in Canada, and parents are concerned that co-occurring conditions are being overlooked in favour of fast-tracking children into hormonal and surgical interventions,” the group wrote. 

“Will Bill C4 allow healthcare clinicians to exercise professional autonomy and exercise caution when confronted with a possibly autistic teenager who desperately wants to change gender? Or is it more likely that the threat of jail time will severely restrict the care options that young Canadians and their parents are able to access such that unproven, yet invasive medical interventions become the new normal here?”

Bill C4 was unanimously passed by the House of Commons earlier this month after the Conservatives threw their support behind the law. On Tuesday, the Senate agreed to expedite passage of the bill. 

Experts including neuroscientist Dr. Debra Soh have raised similar concerns over the law’s expansive definition of conversion therapy. In an interview with True North, Dr. Soh warned that the bill could have a chilling effect on legitimate therapeutic services. 

“I always want to emphasize that I support transitioning in adults,” Soh said. “But the majority of children with gender dysphoria, who identify more with the opposite sex than their birth sex, will outgrow these feelings by puberty. So it isn’t helpful to outlaw therapeutic approaches that seek to understand why a person wants to transition instead of affirming the individual outright.” 

The bill received royal assent on Wednesday.

Toronto school board chair wears Palestinian-style scarf to meeting about anti-Semitism

Social media was on fire Wednesday night as the chair of Canada’s largest school board draped himself in a shawl resembling a keffiyeh to discuss a report censuring trustee Alexandra Lulka for drawing attention to anti-Semitism at the board.

The keffiyeh – which has become a symbol of Palestinian resistance – was prominently wrapped around Toronto District School Board (TDSB) chair Alexander Brown’s neck for almost 90 minutes before he replaced it with a sweater vest. 

The key item of the board meeting was a highly contentious 50-page report to censure Lulka for speaking out on Twitter in May against two anti-Israel manuals produced by TDSB equity employee Javier DaVila, a self-described “queer Latine transformer.”

Asked why he was wearing such a contentious article of clothing during a debate involving anti-Semitism, Brown responded that it was a “wool shawl” he’s worn before to board meetings.

“When I was made aware of concerns being shared online, I removed it immediately … to avoid any misconception,” Brown said. 

The report on Lulka, penned by integrity commissioner Suzanne Craig, conceded that while some of the materials in the manuals could be considered anti-Semitic, Lulka should be sanctioned because she did not note the “positive educational value” of DaVila’s work.

An outside investigator, Morgan Sim – who posted some troubling anti-Israel tweets in the months preceding her review of Lulka’s statement – claimed the trustee perpetuated several harmful and recurring “stereotypes” about Palestinians and/or Muslims.

Lulka never mentioned either group in her May 23 statement.

After hours of often foolish debate, trustee Shelley Laskin tabled a motion to reject the report. Her motion passed 10-7.

Those who opposed Laskin’s motion to reject included Brown, Zakir Patel, David Smith, Manna Wong, Christopher Mammolitti, Dan MacLean and Harpreet Gill.  

Laskin warned her colleagues that there is a “crisis of confidence in this board” and that all trustees have a “moral imperative” to call out hate in all forms.

“(Lulka) accurately described the material as hateful,” Laskin said. “Her tweets were not contentious.” 

Lulka told board members that as a Jewish trustee she has the right to “name and shame” anti-Semitism wherever she sees it.

“This complaint was intended to silence me and I will not be silenced,” she added, noting one of DaVila’s items justified the use of suicide bombings of Israelis as a form of resistance.

“Why is it that Jews are the only minority group that doesn’t get to define its own oppression?”

Before the report was considered, education director Colleen Russell-Rawlins made a weak attempt to undo the damage already done by trustees and TDSB top brass, who have virtually ignored incidents of anti-Semitism since September.

“To the Jewish community and students, I see your fear and anxiety that stems from incidents of anti-Semitism where our responses may have fallen short in the past,” Russell-Rawlins said. “The TDSB will recommit to creating a safe place for all of you and you never have reason to doubt our commitments to your safety again.

Russell-Rawlins repeated her promise to appoint an internal team for seven months that will offer “professional learning on anti-Semitism and Islamophobia.”

“We can develop a community of belonging…we must embrace and celebrate our differences,” the education director said. “This will be a long and difficult road to navigate.”

The internal team is still in the works.

The one group of people Canadians openly discriminate against: the unvaccinated

Thousands of Canadians have lost their jobs, their education, their livelihoods and their well-being as a result of vaccine mandates. 

They’re the one group of Canadians that our politicians openly degenerate, demean and scapegoat. And the legacy media insists on vilifying them rather than telling their stories. 

True North is different. Today on The Candice Malcolm Show, Candice is joined once again by a friend of the program, Samuel Sey.

Samuel has done a tremendous job telling the stories of the unvaccinated, and reporting on how heavy-handed vaccine policies have ruined so many lives. 

He also points out, as few in the media or in politics do, that many unvaccinated are black and Indigenous Canadians – the same people the political left claims to be helping.

SUBSCRIBE TO THE CANDICE MALCOLM SHOW

11,581 died after being put on healthcare waiting lists in 2020-2021

Source: Wikipedia

Over ten thousand Canadians died during delays and cancellations through the 2020-21 COVID-19 pandemic, a new SecondStreet.org report reveals. 

According to government data, an unsettling 11,581 patients died while waiting to receive potentially life-saving healthcare including surgeries, diagnostic visits and specialist appointments. 

“Waiting lists are at all-time highs due to governments postponing surgeries and diagnostic scans after the pandemic emerged,” said SecondStreet.org president Colin Craig. 

“But Canadians should note that waiting list deaths have been on the rise for years. Behind these statistics are patients spending their final years in pain, with cloudy vision and other problems. Worse, some are dying simply because the government took too long to provide surgery.”

In comparison to 2018-2019, there has been an 11.7% spike in waiting list deaths, the organization’s report notes. 

Data from Ontario showed a whopping 390% increase in deaths due to missed CT scans and a 370% spike in deaths as a result of missed MRI scans since 2015-2016. Meanwhile, deaths as a result of missed surgeries were up 11% over the same time period.

Secondstreet.org has released these numbers in the wake of a poll showing that a majority of Canadians support some kinds of private health options. 

“Some health reform options are difficult to implement in the middle of a pandemic, but there are options that are relatively easy to do,” Craig told True North. “For example, governments could allow private clinics to begin providing the same services as the public system. As some patients choose private options, that would reduce waiting lists in the public system.”

The latest figures shed light on a growing crisis in health care further accelerated by the downstream effects of lockdowns and other mitigation measures. 

“Most governments could be a lot more diligent about tracking data on this problem and disclosing it to the public. Shouldn’t ministers of health want to know how many of the patients they serve are dying or suffering due to long waiting lists?” Craig told True North.

In 2020 alone, the think tank reported that 2,367 died while waiting for surgeries. 

“The most unfortunate part about so many patients dying on waiting lists in our health care system is that many of these tragedies could have been prevented,” said Craig in July. 

He added that governments across Canada have done very little to alleviate the growing wait times in health care and have opted to continue axing “non-essential procedures” and focusing health care resources on handling COVID-19 cases. 

“We can’t forget, many surgeons have time on their hands right now because the government isn’t paying for enough surgeries. So those surgeons could work in both the public system and private system – ultimately reducing waiting lists.”

Former Canadian Space Agency engineer being investigated for work with Chinese firm

The RCMP has charged a former Canadian Space Agency (CSA) engineer with breach of trust and is continuing to investigate after discovering he had worked for a Chinese aerospace company. 

61-year-old Quebec resident Wanping Zheng was charged on Tuesday. 

“According to the facts, Mr. Zheng allegedly used his status as a CSA engineer to negotiate agreements for the installation of satellite station facilities in Iceland,” the RCMP said in a statement given to Global News. 

“He allegedly acted on behalf of a Chinese aerospace company. The Canadian Space Agency is part of Canada’s critical infrastructure and constitutes a strategic interest to be protected.”

Zheng was released upon his arrest and is expected to appear before a court in Longueuil, Quebec on Dec. 15. 

According to the facts, the alleged criminal activity took place between July 1, 2018 and May 30, 2019 in various locations. These included the CSA headquarters in Quebec and facilities in Toronto, Ottawa and elsewhere. 

In 2019, the CSA terminated its relationship with Zheng over his private activities. 

“The CSA takes the security of information and people very seriously,” a CSA spokesperson said. 

“(The CSA) continues to strengthen security measures to protect information, individuals and assets.”

Zheng is the latest in a string of Canadian government employees suspected of having cooperated with China. 

The RCMP is also investigating former federal scientists Xiangguo Qiu and Keding Cheng after it was alleged that they passed on highly sensitive information from the National Microbiology Laboratory in Winnipeg. 

Despite the Conservative opposition’s efforts, the government of Prime Minister Justin Trudeau refused to disclose documents relating to the pair’s arrest in 2020. 

Earlier this year, former president of the Public Health Agency of Canada Iain Stewart was censured by the House of Commons over the refusal to disclose the information. 

Federal testing requirement led to girls field hockey team being trapped in South Africa

The Canadian women’s field hockey Junior National Team is expected to return home today after being stranded in South Africa for nearly two weeks due to the Liberal government’s requirement for “third-country” COVID-19 testing. 

On November 30, 2021, the federal government announced it would require Canadians hoping to return to Canada to have a valid negative COVID-19 molecular test in a third country. 

No other country currently has this requirement. 

Since the cancellation of the field hockey world cup tournament due to the Omicron variant on Nov. 26, the young women –  who range from 18-21 years old – have been kept bubbled at a South African university. 

Patti Daum, mother of a 19-year-old player, told True North that the government’s burdensome testing requirements caused great distress to the girls. 

“There were lots of tears and let’s just say there’s been some semi-mental health issues going on with mental health support being provided because it’s just been a very stressful situation.” 

According to Daum, the team was told by their travel agency that because of the Canadian government’s measures they would likely not be able to board a flight out of the country via a layover in Frankfurt, Germany. 

“On December 3rd we got the news that it was not the German government but it’s due to our own country’s requirement to have third country testing in Frankfurt that caused this whole flight option to be out the window,” said Daum. 

At the time Daum stated that the girls and the travel agency received “no assistance from the federal government in any tangible way to find a way home.”

It wasn’t until Daum and other parents launched a pressure campaign by contacting the media and local MPs that the government acted to bring the young women home safely. 

“It has been an exceedingly stressful situation, and it really felt like lip service the whole way along (from the government),” Daum told True North. “I really firmly believe that without the pressure I just don’t get the sense that anything would happen.” 

On Saturday, the team was informed by the federal government that an exemption to the third-party testing had been granted for Canadians stuck in South Africa for a short period of time. 

“If the exemption is provided today, passengers will not be required to obtain another test in Frankfurt,” read the email from the Canadian government. “You will however be required to abide by the testing and quarantine procedures on arrival at the first port of entry in Canada.”

Many public health officials including the Director-General of the World Health Organization Dr. Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus have blasted the Canadian government for the third-party testing requirement. 

“The WHO was criticizing Canada for this asinine third-party testing rule that very few if any other countries are implementing. It caused a great deal of distress for these girls, my daughter included,” Daum told True North. 

The team, which is double-vaccinated, will undertake COVID-19 testing as well as abide by the current public health measures upon arriving back in Canada. This includes 14 days of quarantine, which will end just before Christmas. 

Communist China’s growing threat to the west

China is seeking to get their first military outpost in the Atlantic and is attempting to influence Caribbean countries, such as Barbados, by giving them large sums of money.

Anthony Furey says Canadians need to pay close attention to what’s happening in the Atlantic waters and be wary of China’s growing threat to the western world.

National Defence to hold “white fragility” ask me anything

The Department of National Defence will host a talk on the far-left concept of “white fragility” on December 15. 

The “ask me anything” (AMA) event, titled Turning White Fragility into White Humility: My Journey Through Change, will be presented by guest speaker and Global Affairs Canada (GAC) Senior Innovation and Risk Analyst Ryan Trudeau.

Public servants Faduno Ali and Samantha Moonsammy will be hosting the talk which also features opening remarks by Assistant Deputy Minister Rob Chambers. 

“Through his presentation, Ryan guides his audience through his struggles with his own white fragility using powerful personal experiences, practical change management principles, as well as material from leading antiracism scholars,” the event page describes. 

“He then shares pertinent information related to allyship, finishing-off with an inspiring but challenging message to all in embarking on our own respective journeys in dismantling systemic racism.”

“White fragility” is a term popularized by author Robin DiAngelo, who wrote a book with the same name. DiAngelo’s book has been criticized as being racially charged and is riddled with statements meant to paint all white people as racist. 

“White identity is inherently racist; white people do not exist outside the system of white supremacy,” DiAngelo writes in White Fragility.

“White people raised in Western society are conditioned into a white supremacist worldview because it is the bedrock of our society and its institutions … Entering the conversation with this understanding is freeing because it allows us to focus on how—rather than if—our racism is manifest.” 

According to Ryan Trudeau’s biography, he works at GAC’s “Peace and Stabilization Operations Program.”

The bio seems to include a rationale for his role at the AMA.  

“As a straight, able-bodied white man born in Canada – Ryan’s perspective on matters related to diversity and inclusion may not seem obvious or even logical at first glance,” it states. 

“However, the convergence of his experiences as a father, his personal journey with his partner, and professional background intricately illustrate how we are all capable of change; and that the systemic change we desire first begins at the individual level, one person at a time.”

True North reached out to Ryan Trudeau to confirm whether or not he was related to the prime minister but did not receive a response by the time this article was published. 

Protecting Prince Harry cost Canadians more than $334,000

Keeping Prince Harry and his family safe during visits to Canada cost taxpayers more than $334,000 over a period of about four years, according to CBC News.

Records show that security related to Prince Harry’s visits between April 2017 and March 2018 cost taxpayers $182,430. This amount covered expenditures such as overtime and travel costs, but it did not include the salaries of police officers. 

In January 2020, when Prince Harry and Princess Meghan were looking at living in Canada for part of the year, the RCMP estimated protecting them and their son could cost taxpayers about $33,000 per month. 

The Court Circular, which tracks the public activities of members of the Royal Family, stated Prince Harry had one public visit to Canada from 2017 to 2018. This trip was a week-long visit to attend events in Toronto such as the Invictus Games, a We Day celebration and a reception for young people who received Duke of Edinburgh gold awards. 

Prince Harry also made a secret visit to Toronto in April 2017, where paparazzi captured photos of him arriving at Meghan Markle’s residence. 

It remains unknown how many times Prince Harry came to Canada to visit Markle. The RCMP refused to provide a breakdown to explain how it spent $182,430 to protect him from 2017 to 2018. 

Prince Harry made a private trip to Toronto in December 2016, detouring to visit Markle on his way home from an official visit to the Caribbean. He travelled to Toronto on a public trip in May 2016, two months before he met her, to announce the 2017 Invictus Games. 

The additional costs to the RCMP for his security during this period totalled $52,978. 

The RCMP incurred $5,726 in costs to protect the Duke and Duchess of Sussex between April 2018 and March 2019. There were no costs from January 2014 to March 2016. 

RCMP assistant commissioner Bernadine Chapman headed the national division providing protections for VIPs. An email from January 2020 obtained by CBC News shows she warned the police force would need to be mindful of security costs. 

“Media is on this like a hot potato, so lots of coverage of the potential of the royals to spend half their time in Canada now, as an independent couple,” said Chapman. “Media spin is about the cost to Canadians. This has the potential to cost us huge!”

In the end, protecting the Sussexes during Christmas 2019 to February 2020 cost the RCMP more than $93,000. 

Canadian Taxpayers Federation (CTF) federal director Franco Terrazzano told True North on Wednesday that he is concerned about how much money was spent. 

“This is a big bill,” said Terrazzano. “Taxpayers need a full explanation and full transparency on what that money went to and whether that money was for official business or if it was for pleasure.” 

Terrazzano added that since the Sussexes are no longer in the monarchy, their security fees should not be paid for in the future “because when you quit your job, you don’t get to expense your former employer.” 

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