After a tiring few months and years of work by anti-Black racism advocates, the Peel District School Board has agreed to hand over control of its governance to the provincial education ministry. A day after Wednesday’s large Black Lives Matter march, Education Minister Stephen Lecce said a supervisor will take over the embattled board.
With a provincial deadline looming, the Peel District School Board’s director has hired education specialist Dr. Avis Glaze to advise the board on its anti-Black racism work. However, the timing of the decision and description of the role have raised more questions, while calls grow louder for Director Peter Joshua to step down because of his failed leadership on equity and inclusion in one of the country's most diverse regions.
A recent report from the City’s building department highlights the ongoing problems home owners face when trying to create legal secondary units, or basement apartments. A lack of consistent guidelines, spotty inspections and no clear rules for the number of these ubiquitous units have created a dilemma that might be contributing to high rates of infection in the city.
Peel is now one of just three regions in the province that will not be allowed to progress to the second stage of reopening. While neighbouring York Region has been given the greenlight to reopen at the end of this week, ICU and acute care beds in Brampton, where testing has been woeful, and Mississauga remain filled while local rates of the novel coronavirus in parts of Peel continue to pose a major problem.
The Special Investigations Unit, which is conducting a probe into the fatal police shooting of 26-year-old D’Andre Campbell in April, is unable to get a statement or notes from the subject officer.
A recent amendment to the Police Services Act under the Ford government in 2019 shields officers who don’t want to cooperate with the police watchdog.
The Peel District School Board has a long history of looking the other way when it comes to systemic discrimination and bigotry, allowing racists like Paul Fromm to infest its ranks. By not facing up to the problem of its anti-Black bias, or having administrators and teachers who don’t reflect the demographic changes that have created a disconnect with communities served, the board has forced the hand of the provincial government. Now, it must protect students forsaken by the board.
Brampton City Councillor Harkirat Singh, a former PDSB trustee, says he witnessed firsthand the damaging actions of Director Peter Joshua. The elected official believes systemic anti-Black racism and other forms of discrimination plaguing the board and harming students will only be eradicated if Joshua quits.
More and more people are returning to work. Others continue to work from home. While nobody can say for certain how the structure of employment and labour will change, the reality could be a pleasant twist for many, including some of our largest corporations.
If you don’t pay your fare on a Toronto bus, you could land yourself a fine of more than $400, even if you’ve just forgotten your wallet. In Brampton, as the city moves on from free fares during the height of the pandemic, a different approach to police passengers shows there is a more human, more welcoming way. And it might help grow ridership.
Terms like abolish, defund and reform have been flying across social media and in conversations across North America since the killing of George Floyd by a Minneapolis police officer almost three weeks ago. What do these terms really mean and how can public officials best take care of both functions that police are supposed to provide: serve and protect?
Regional Council wants a more aggressive stand on the mental health crisis in Peel. An already desperate situation has worsened since the pandemic, with more demand for mental health support within a system already severely underfunded and overwhelmed.
While councillors blame the province, they too have ignored the increasingly dire reality for years.
In the wake of an independent investigation into Peel District School Board that found the director and trustees are not cooperating with provincial directives, Peel's diverse communities are coming together to demand transformational change.
The National Council of Canadian Muslims is the latest large organization to voice concerns after widespread reports of anti-Black racism and Islamophobia at the board.
While the need always existed, social and medical assistance for homeless people were topics not widely talked about before COVID-19. The failure to do so has led some organizations to provide assistance, with a hope our healthcare system and social service sector can work more collaboratively to protect the vulnerable in the future.
In February, Peel District School Board issued a trespass notice, banning a parent and vocal critic of the board’s record on discrimination from board property. It alleged Idris Orughu made “threatening” comments, but a police probe found that was not the case. Now, without admitting a mistake or the harm its allegation caused, and while the board faces widespread condemnation from the education ministry and the public for its unwillingness to confront anti-Black racism, PDSB has suddenly removed the ban with no explanation.
The problem is twofold for Chief Nishan Duraiappah who is facing issues of anti-Black racism inside his organization and a groundswell of anti-police sentiment fuelled by the horrific death of George Floyd at the hands of police in Minneapolis.
The progressive chief, just over six months on the job, promises community members they will soon witness changes as a result of work going on behind the scenes.
An independent investigation into the Peel District School Board has returned a damning verdict, finding the organization chronically ill-equipped to tackle discrimination, specifically anti-Black racism. The investigation was prompted by the board’s failure to support ministerial directives to fix its systemic problems with race. The new report lays the groundwork for the province to take over a dysfunctional public institution that has caused irreparable harm to Black students for decades.
Mayor Bonnie Crombie says the city is “not out of the woods yet” and is happy the province is reopening regions in phases, meaning Peel will not be following the same schedule as areas that have not been impacted as severely. Councillors have voted to cancel all summer festivals, restart some committees and are working on charging fares for MiWay again.
Mississauga no doubt has an incredibly diverse mix of citizens, but it also has a dark history of xenophobia. Over the weekend, the spirit of hate based on the colour of one’s skin was confronted during a rally sparked by the killing of George Floyd by a Minneapolis police officer. It was also a reflection on just how far Canada’s sixth largest city has actually come, since the days when racism was more openly displayed.
As ridership continues to grow in Brampton, the City is reaching capacity for the number of buses it can store. A badly needed new storage facility was originally scheduled for 2021 and then delayed to 2024, a timeline that could now be in jeopardy too, after news that staff failed to properly apply for assistance from higher levels of government.
Adrian Woolley’s four-word response to The Pointer after Mississauga’s and Brampton’s mayors, who sit on the police board, declared their intention to have the force’s officers wear cameras, leaves questions about support among the rank and file, as voices across North America grow louder, demanding police be held accountable by the technology.
Going to get a filling, eye exam or massage will take much longer than it did before as many medical-related practices try their best to accommodate strict guidelines and their patients in a completely different environment forced by the pandemic.
With children stuck inside, more and more are turning to the internet and social media to entertain themselves and stay connected with friends, unaware they’re being targeted.
The presence of child sexual abuse material is rising dramatically – triggering calls for popular sites like Pornhub to be shuttered for not doing enough to remove abusive content.
Has the pandemic reshaped our world and our buying habits? Will those brick and mortar stores and some of our biggest malls be laid to waste under a constant assault by e-commerce giants like Amazon and Rakuten? Just what is the future of the retail sector at both the local and national level?
From botched tests and a sad federal aid package to high infection rates and low testing counts, Mississauga has had a bad couple weeks. The ongoing COVID crisis had seemed like it was finally coming to an end, before the flurry of negative news.
North America has been rocked by explosive protests against ongoing anti-Black racism following the death of George Floyd who died after a police officer’s weight pressed down on the man’s neck for nearly ten minutes while he hopelessly pleaded for mercy.
Most of the boiling reaction, including rioting and looting, has occurred south of the border. But Peel has its own brutal legacy of anti-Black behaviour, which the new chief, Nishan Duraiappah, isn’t hiding from.
Brampton and Mississauga are in a holding pattern and people are beyond tired of circling around their homes, waiting for a return to normal life. The province’s new plan for testing is crucial to any future reopening timeline and will help Peel immensely as it continues to struggle with high rates of infection. But the unfolding approach to ramp up testing remains somewhat unclear for many waiting to return to work and normalcy.
Online petitions are gaining more traction as the anti-Black racism movement stretches across North America, helping amplify the complaints of systemic discrimination inside the Peel District School Board. Calls are growing louder for Director Peter Joshua to step down.
The federal government remained silent for weeks on how it will help foundering municipalities whose revenues dried up almost as fast as the spread of the novel coronavirus. But when Justin Trudeau broke that silence Monday, his commitment was nowhere near what cities were expecting.
William Osler failed to report hundreds of positive novel coronavirus tests after they were confirmed in provincial labs. Meanwhile, Peel Public Health did not notice a lack of results from Brampton’s only testing centre and failed to trace the cases. Now, neither organization is responding to questions, while the province and Health Minister Christine Elliott step in to take the blame.
The city is taking its own slow path to return residents and businesses to normal life, and has released a detailed list of what can and cannot be done within its borders.
Those desperate for a full scale reopening will have to wait for COVID-19 to retreat much further, while other parts of the region have been identified as a hot spot by the province.
The plan involves bringing mobile testing centres to workplaces experiencing outbreaks to ensure widespread testing can occur. While the province is working with regional health agencies to roll out the initiative, no information on when wide scale testing will begin is available. Meanwhile, Peel neighbourhood data has been released for the first time and the picture is not good in many parts of the region.
Media reports have revealed that the health network operating Brampton’s hospitals and the sole testing centre at Peel Memorial did not notify public health agencies of hundreds of positive test results due to a mix up, leaving officials scrambling to trace the possible spread of the novel coronavirus as a result of the communication error.
The star of Netflix’s new hit, Never Have I Ever, spoke to The Pointer about the growing diversity in TV and film and her home in Mississauga. She hopes to see more roles for South Asian actors in the future and would love her success to help put Mississauga, the place where she was shaped, on the map.
A group of white trustees at Peel District School Board has shared its concerns over the consequences of ending academic streaming. In March, the Ministry of Education instructed the board to end the practice, which has been shown to harm visible minority students, especially those who are Black.
May marked the first time the city experienced a heat wave this year. With temperatures reaching 30 degrees or more two days in a row, many vulnerable residents who rely on external cooling facilities had nowhere to go. Landlords are not required to keep temperatures below any specific level, which often leads to blistering indoor conditions that residents now have no relief from.
Even as the global COVID-19 pandemic continues, people are turning their eyes to the future.
The education sector, so often slow to adapt, is one area that could see radical changes and a move to effective online learning as the world slowly reopens.
The novel coronavirus still poses a catastrophic threat in Brampton and Mississauga, despite growing desires to ignore the pandemic. While people flock to outdoor spaces under the summer-like sunshine, local officials are warning the risk is far from over. The mounting dilemma comes as Peel Region’s public health authority waits on provincial testing instructions that could help both cities get a better handle on a local crisis that is still spreading.
The City has talked a lot about getting back to normal, but Mayor Patrick Brown appears to be speaking out of both sides of his mouth. Some information does not add up, with officials reassuring residents that the ongoing local COVID-19 risk, including news of outbreaks in the city, will dictate plans. But details of a unique Brampton approach have been few and far between.
With Toronto Pearson Airport near the heart of Peel and other settlement dynamics at play, immigrants from around the globe come to call Mississauga and Brampton home. However, data from Statistics Canada shows that many families and young professionals choose to decamp and move elsewhere in Ontario.
The principal of a Peel high school has been suspended pending an investigation into comments she made at a staff meeting last week. Multiple sources have told The Pointer those comments were Islamophobic and in response to the Ministry of Education’s directive to end the streaming of racialized students into pathways that are damaging to their future.
A letter to Peel District School Board from the Ministry of Education has drawn more attention to the board’s failure to deal with its widespread discriminatory practices including anti-Black racism. The scathing memo raises more questions about Director Peter Joshua's mishandling of the disturbing issue and reveals three of the board’s recent responses were inadequate, while a request for extensions to others was labelled “concerning”.
In an unprecedented move, the Canadian Armed Forces has chosen to publicly expose appalling conditions in Ontario’s long-term care sector after providing emergency assistance over the last month.
While many of the findings confirm the terrible reality many seniors have suffered for decades, the push from the military may finally bring sustained pressure to force decision makers into action.
Rules created at the turn of the century have seen Mississauga lose out on more than $15 million in payments from Toronto Pearson Airport. But a dramatic drop in passenger volume as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic could lead to tens of millions in losses for the City and illustrates how unfair the system is to taxpayers in Mississauga.
The Canadian Emergency Commercial Rent Assistance program aims to aid thousands of small businesses including those based in Peel. But the decision to provide help while thousands of owners struggle to stay afloat rests with landlords.
Canada has often led the world in the criminalization of family violence, but the problem has gotten “out of hand” says the federal ombudsman for victims of crime. The killer virus is delivering another deadly lesson, and this one is aimed directly at men.
With the overwhelming volume of COVID-19 news, and the uncertainty that has taken over daily life, many have been hunting for ways to escape.
Whether that’s through new hobbies or old passions, the Brampton Library system has seen a serious spike in people looking for books and materials to help keep them occupied at home.
Barely a step above stone tablets, Ontario’s court system has long been in need of an innovation upgrade to ensure timely access and get the wheels of justice moving properly.
The global pandemic could be the jolt it needs.
Leaders in both cities are grappling with an increasingly complex dilemma: infection rates are higher than in many parts of the province and most of the country, forcing officials to use localized data from public health officials and more caution when deciding when and how to reopen their communities. Meanwhile, frustration among many in the public, especially the business world, is mounting.
As the Province begins to ease measures under the state of emergency, the Region of Peel is not following suit, exactly. Officials are taking a more localized approach to reopening as new cases in Peel mirror a pattern similar to the start of the pandemic. The Region’s top public health official says more testing is needed if Peel expects to prevent continued transmission within local communities.
As Mississauga’s first light rail system moves closer to its launch in 2024, developers are flocking to the city. New proposals for six towers at Eglinton Avenue and Hurontario Street are among the boons the project has attracted.