From the Timmins Daily Press ...
Kash plan addresses classroom shortage - New school to house all students
Scott Paradis - August 09, 2007
Kashechewan could have enough classrooms to accommodate all of its children this fall - a luxury the First Nation hasn't enjoyed in two years.
The $200-million federal government deal for Kashechewan will provide it with a new school.
In the meantime, Indian and Northern Affairs Canada (INAC) intends to provide the First Nation with space to address its current classroom shortage.
"We are working with the community to provide it with portables," said Joe Young, a director of funding services for INAC.
Those portables would be serving a community that hasn't produced a high school graduate on its own soil in about two years.
INAC officials elaborated on details about the school, among other things, in Kashechewan Wednesday afternoon during a special media phone briefing.
That briefing intended to give reporters - who have long tracked the plight of Kashechewan's "historical background" - information along with any possible "next steps," said INAC representative Bob Howsam.
One of those next steps is to build an all-in-one elementary and high school for the community.
More than two years ago, Kashechewan's elementary school was condemned due to toxic mould, among other issues. Any belief that the school would be re-opened went up in smoke, literally, when a fire ripped through the building in late June.
Since the originally condemning of that school, elementary students have been sharing the high school facilities.
The students now go to school in shifts - elementary school students hit the books in the morning while high school students attend later in the afternoon and into the evening.
INAC said it is working with the community to ensure that when the school is built, it will be a size that can "accommodate" all the First Nation's children.
But INAC, while it hopes to provide the remote First Nation with portables come this fall, cannot guarantee that timeline.
"We're taking steps forward," said Young. "We're hopeful for fall." There are numerous challenges when bringing infrastructure to an isolated community, he said.
For Kashechewan, the new school can't come soon enough.
The community's school has not produced a graduate for nearly two entire years.
That fact was highlighted in a recent report, which took an in-depth look at Kashechewan, its problems and potential solutions.
Former cabinet minister Alan Pope conducted that report.
During an one-on-one interview with The Daily Press last week, Pope revealed that he had "a lot of problems" with Kashechewan's school. "The school system is $9 million-a-year of public expenditure and they haven't had a graduate in two years," he said.
"And they don't teach math or sciences. So no one coming out of there could possibly advance their education."
Pope doesn't conclude what has caused the First Nation's education system to fail so badly, however, he does suggest that the multiple community evacuations could be at play.
Three times in the span of a year Kashechewan had been partially or fully evacuated - twice because of spring-time floods and once because of concerns over the quality of the community's drinking water.
MP Charlie Angus (NDP - Timmins-James Bay) said he hopes INAC is serious not only when it says it will provide a new school, but portables in the meantime as well.
"They can't miss another year," he said.
"These years lost are years these kids can't get back."
Angus admits that he hasn't thoroughly went through the details of this promised school.
He said talk of a new school sounds promising, but he hopes the community will get it without having to fight for it.
"If the government is moving at a good speed on this, than it will be very good news," Angus said.