Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Thanks to Barrie for great support

Thank you to the many people who asked me to run, then provided volunteer & financial support, hosted signs, and cast ballots.

Our incumbent Sue Ley will return as area 1 Trustee. The fight to save Central and our other schools continues, you must all keep the pressure on. The final decisions rest with the Board, and with 2 new Barrie trustees, perhaps the winds can shift.

I will keep this site open for a few more days to post the information that the Board will provide me today in response to my Freedom of Information request.

Special congratulations to our Mayor-elect Jeff Lehman for his powerful showing at the polls. He now has a strong mandate to craft a real plan for Barrie, and for his already clearly-expressed support for Central and our other schools. I hope the new Council recognize this, and that the Board's arms are truly open to partnership offers.

Saturday, October 16, 2010

Elect Erich to Help Save Central - and ALL our Schools

Bob Bruton, senior reporter at the Barrie Examiner, made a clear request today to voters: pay attention to the candidates for public school board trustee, and support those who are commited to saving Barrie Central and have a plan to do so.

If you agree with Bob, then I am your choice for Area 1. I am committed to saving Barrie Central, and beyond that, to changing the direction of the board which has seen a series of closures of older schools and seems headed further down that same road, with Barrie North and Eastview the next targets.

Of course, this is not something that one trustee, or even three Barrie trustees, can accomplish alone. It will take a wide range of partnerships. The opportunities are there, but our Board and our current Area 1 trustee are not taking full advantage of them. This is, in fact, why I am seeking election as your Area 1 representative. My first goal will be to form strategic alliances with other voting trustees, and follow-up on the many ideas and opportunities which have been pouring in from the wider community.

The City of Barrie has clearly expressed interest and even commitment to helping keep our downtown schools open - first Prince of Wales, and more recently Barrie Central. We are in an election now, and many of the candidates who will form the next council have reiterated those same promises of support. So that potential partnership is already primed, just waiting for the Board to respond.

Our MP Patrick Brown has repeatedly expressed willingness to help with whatever federal funding or initiatives he can find. Last week he phoned me personally to express willingness to work with me to save Central.

Our MPP Aileen Carroll has gone on record that she will support whatever capital priorities the Board establishes. However, that will depend on what the current trustees decide (which is beyond my influence), and what those elected next week follow up with.

There have also been many expressions of interest from businesses, social agencies, and other organizations in possible partnerships, but the Board has yet to explore these fully.

Barrie is a swing riding provincially, and with a provincial election next year there is a great opportunity for Barrie voters to put pressure on the McGuinty government to provide needed funding. However, that will require outreach to the public. For the past year, I have already been working to keep this issue in the public eye through my Root Issues column at the Barrie Examiner. Our previous elected Trustee, the late Mary Anne Wilson, was also very vocal on this issue. We need a Trustee who will follow in her footsteps.

There is also the serious issue of the conflicting statements about their intention for Barrie Central that have come from the board. Because our current trustees do not seem to have acted to clarify this issue, I have filed official requests to try and bring the facts to light. As your Trustee I will ensure that decisions about Barrie Central (and other schools) are always transparent.

Finally, I will ensure that our schools are no longer unfairly starved of funds for upkeep and repair. Over the past 6 years, the amount of funding provided to each of Barrie's 5 high schools tells a damning story. Since 2005, here is how much has been spent at each secondary school on refit or upgrade projects: Innisdale $1.6 million, Barrie North $3.3 million, Bear Creek $6.2 million, and Eastview $7.2 million! How much was spent in this period at Barrie Central? Less than one million dollars. (Figures available here, under the "Value to the Board" section).

Although the train seems to be racing down the track towards closing Central, the final decision rests with the Board. Opportunities exist to save BCC and prevent the extra strain that will fall on Barrie's other high schools (espeically North and Eastview) if it closes. I will work hard to help the Board capitalize on those opportunities and follow the community's clearly expressed desire to preserve and maintain, rather than close, our excellent schools.

Sunday, October 10, 2010

Issue: Contradictory Statements

NEW: My initiative on this issue has been reported in the Barrie Advance. Twice.

Update: Laurie Watt's new Barrie Advance article notes that the 2008 and 2009 capital plans are very inconsistent when it comes to their statements about and predictions for Barrie Central Collegiate student population and repair situation. Compare page 12 of this document with page 20 of this one. A lot seems to have changed in just one year!

Right now there is a major unresolved issue which speaks the transparency, or rather lack of it, amongst our elected officials.

In 2008, the Ministry of Education asked each School Board to create and present a list of their capital priorities - existing schools which needed to be refurbished or rebuilt, or new schools that needed to be built. The Simcoe County board created such a list, and the top listed priority was to rebuild Barrie Central Collegiate (BCC).

However, instead of funding that, the Ministry funded a new high school in Essa township, which was number 5 on our priority list.

Our MPP, Aileen Carroll, has repeatedly stated that she met with top members of the Board and they conveyed to her that their top priority was the Essa school, so she advocated successfully for that funding.

Since then, trustees and the Associate Director have continued to state that the Board's top priority was then, and for the year after, to rebuild BCC.

Something doesn't add up. Assuming our MPP is telling the truth (and that's what I believe), then there must have been mixed messages coming to her from the Board. How did this happen? As a trustee, I would demand an answer to this question.

When our MPP Aileen Carroll recently published a letter citing specific meetings with top board officials, I filed a Freedom of Information request to access whatever minutes, notes, or reports might exist pertaining to those meetings. If messages the Board are giving behind closed doors don't match those they are giving in public, then there is a serious problem and we are not being fairly represented.

This is not an issue about Barrie Central, it's an issue about transparency, honesty, and consistency - all of which we have a right to expect from our Board, and which you will receive from me as your Trustee. Until then, if the FOI request provides documentation to shed light on this discrepancy, I will report it here.

Endorsement a Recognition of Dedication to Community

The Barrie Advance has recognized my dedication to the community and my accomplishments at building successful alliances by endorsing me for Trustee of Area 1.

As they note, "[Erich] is eager to get to work and is already looking at the issues regarding the closure of Barrie Central Collegiate."

I thank them for their consideration and wish the best to all other candidates in all races, endorsed or not.