Sudbury Catholic District School Board

Sudbury Catholic Board Re-affirms Decision To Consolidate Our Lady of Fatima School

Trustees for the Sudbury Catholic District School Board voted four to one in favour of consolidating Our Lady of Fatima School in Naughton with St. James School in Lively, effective September 2004, at Tuesday night’s meeting of the Board. This decision came on the heels of a presentation from representatives of Our Lady of Fatima School Council who asked the Board to reconsider its decision to close the school. Trustees listened intently to the thirty minute presentation by Leah Lepage and Kerrie St. Jean who were the spokespersons for Our Lady of Fatima Catholic School council, and for the parents and stakeholders who were present at the meeting. However, after reviewing the information the Trustees voted four to one in favour of consolidation. The initial vote on December 17, 2002 placed the Trustees in a three to two decision to consolidate the school. Trustee Jody Cameron abstained from voting in both cases citing conflict of interest.


Ray Vincent, Chair of the Sudbury Catholic District School Board, stated that the decision to close Our Lady of Fatima School and consolidate it with the newer St. James school was the only viable solution given the economic reality of the situation. “We recognize that there is regret in the hearts of parents and staff over the closing of a school. The entire Walden community however, can take pride in the expansion of St. James Catholic school which will offer Junior Kindergarten to grade eight in Regular French Immersion and Native Studies programs under one roof in a newly enhanced learning environment,” stated Vincent.

Accommodation Review Meetings Set

Bishop Alexander Carter CSS, Valley East’s newest secondary school, will relocate to the current site of St. Anne School in Hanmer by September 2003. To plan for these changes, Board Trustees approved motions in relation to the review of boundaries for Bishop Alexander Carter CSS, St. Charles School in Chelmsford, St. Anne School and Immaculate Conception School at their January 7, 2003 meeting. An additional motion covering the review of programs and boundaries at St. Mark School was also passed. Public meetings at affected schools have been scheduled, and a final decision by trustees is due in April.


At the Board meeting of January 7, 2003, Trustees approved the following motions:


“THAT the Sudbury Catholic District School Board approves, according to Policy EL110 and Board Regulation BR10, that there be a review of boundaries for the Bishop Alexander Carter CSS as it relates to St. Charles Catholic School in Chelmsford.”


“THAT the Sudbury Catholic District School Board approves, according to Policy EL110 and Board Regulation BR10 with the advent of our Bishop Alexander Carter CSS, that there be a review of boundaries for St. Anne and Immaculate Conception Catholic Schools French Immersion and Regular programs.” and


“THAT the Sudbury Catholic District School Board approves, according to policy EL110 and Board Regulation BR10, that there be a review of programs and boundaries for St. Mark Catholic School.”


At the Principals’ meeting in October, the Director of Education outlined the process for the accommodation review process and provided copies of the information packages previously given to Trustees.


Over the last few weeks, the school superintendent and the Chairperson of the Board met with each Catholic school council executive to discuss the process. There will be public meetings for all parents, school staff and Catholic school ratepayers as follows:


St. Charles School

26 Charlotte Street, Chelmsford

March 3, 2003 7:00 p.m.


Bishop Alexander Carter CSS

3075 River Road, Val Caron

re: St. Anne and Immaculate Conception Schools

March 17, 2003 7:00 p.m.


St. Mark School

13 Church Street, Markstay

March 20, 2003 7:00 p.m.


The Board staff will present information and there will be an opportunity for questions and input from the audience. Each Catholic school council will also have an opportunity to make presentations to the Board at a meeting on April 1, 2003 at 7:00 p.m., and Trustees will make their final decision at a Board meeting on April 15, 2003 at 6:00 p.m.

New Auxiliary Bishop Visits SCDSB Education Centre and NOCCC

Newly appointed Auxiliary Bishop Robert Harris, of the Diocese of Sault Ste. Marie visited the Catholic Education Centre at the Sudbury Catholic District School Board for the first time recently. During his visit he met with the Board of Directors of the Northern Ontario Catholic Curriculum Cooperative.


Auxiliary Bishop Harris was born in Montreal on September 26, 1944. After completing his formation at Loyola College, he studied at the Grand Sèminaire de Montrèal, where he obtained his Licentiate in Theology. He was ordained to the priesthood in 1969 and served in various parishes as Assistant and Pastor on the island of Montreal. He completed post-graduate studies and obtained his Licentiate in Canon Law in 1975 at the Gregorian University in Rome.


In the Archdiocese of Montreal, he held simultaneously the following positions: Director of Pastoral Formation at the Grand Sèminaire de Montrèal; Director of Vocations (English Sector); Executive Director of the Diocesan Priesthood Guild; Collegial Judge of the Ecclesiastical Tribunal of Montreal; and until his appointment, Episcopal Vicar to the Anglophone Faithful and Director of the Office for English Pastoral Services.


Auxiliary Bishop Harris is bilingual in French and English and has a working knowledge of Spanish and Italian. He has also undertaken missionary work in Mexico and the Diocese of Moosonee and has acted as a conference Resource Person at a session for Seminary Formators of French-speaking Africa inYaoundè, Cameroun. On May 31, 2002 he was made a Chaplain to the Holy Father (C.S.S.). On December 12, 2002, Bishop Harris was ordained as Auxiliary Bishop of the Diocese of Sault Ste. Marie and Titular Bishop of Trofimiana at St. Patrick’s Basilica, Montreal.

SCDSB Announces Decision on International Trips For Students

With respect to escalating political unrest in the Middle East and its possible effects on the international scene, Trustees for the Sudbury Catholic District School Board passed a motion Tuesday night outlining in detail the Board’s position on this matter. Ray Vincent, Chair of the Sudbury Catholic Board stated that, “The Sudbury Catholic District School Board will allow the international student excursions to proceed in March 2003 but some conditions have to be met. Parents and participants who choose not to sign the waiver and withdraw from the trip will be reimbursed the amount prepaid to the traveling agency. For those participants who sign waivers, the planned trip will remain, however, the Board reserves the right to cancel the trip at any time prior to departure if international events so warrant it. Parents must decide to withdraw from the trip or sign a waiver to remain on the trip by February 27, 2003.”


Vincent went on to say that the Board’s decision was made from a moral standpoint in that, “there is a possible risk to the students who are going abroad and placing students in potential danger is not acceptable to this Board.”

Sister Pat Carter Visits St. David School

Sister Patricia Carter visited the Grade 6 class at St. David School recently, challenging the students to become people of prayer and service. For the past five years, Sister Pat Carter has been visiting Grade 6 classes in the three dioceses of Thunder Bay, Sault Ste. Marie and Timmins. Throughout the presentations Sister Pat speaks to the students about the vocations of single life, married life, religious life and priesthood. In November, she visited over 600 students in 20 schools in the Sudbury region – Pius XII, St. Theresa, St. Anthony, St. Francis, St. Christopher, St. Anne in Hanmer, Our Lady of Fatima in Naughton, St. Michael, St. John in Garson, St. Mary in Capreol, Corpus Christi, St. David, St. James in Lively, St. Charles in Chelmsford, Immaculate Conception in Val Caron, St. Paul in Coniston, St. Mark in Markstay, St. Raphael, and St. Joseph in Killarney.


According to research, there are three significant times in the lives of young people when they are preoccupied with vocational choices; at age 11, grade 11 and during the second-year of their post-secondary education young people ask: What would I like to be when I grow up? What contribution would I like to make to the world around me? How can my life have meaning? Sister Pat Carter and Sister Mary Jo Radey, vocation directors for the Sisters of St. Joseph of Sault Ste. Marie, meet with young people close to these times visiting elementary schools and secondary schools, universities and colleges to encourage students to become people of prayer and service and to deepen their relationship with God.


As a follow up to the Grade 6 classroom visits, the Sisters of St. Joseph of Sault Ste. Marie will be holding an essay and poster contest in February 2003. The students will be invited to reflect on who has been a good witness of the Gospel message to them. They will be asked to write their reflections in an essay or create a poster to give specific examples of how this person was an effective witness of Jesus’ love. The essay and poster theme fits in well with the Grade 6 religious education program entitled “You Shall Be My Witnesses”. For more information on the essay and poster contest, contact Sister Pat Carter at csjcvocn@onlink.net.

SCDSB Awards Tender For Construction of New Secondary School To Local Company

The Sudbury Catholic District School Board has awarded the contract for the construction of its new Secondary school in Valley East to J.N. Construction of Sudbury. The new school, named Bishop Alexander Carter Catholic Secondary School will move from its temporary River Road campus location in Val Caron to its permanent site at the former St Anne School in Hanmer. J.N. Construction Company was awarded the contract by the Sudbury Catholic Board as they submitted the lowest qualified tender in the amount of $5,512,640, winning out over four other local construction firms that also submitted tenders including; Tribury Construction,

R.M Belanger Limited, Kona Builders Limited, and TESC Contracting Company. Tenders were publicly opened on Tuesday, January 28, 2003, at 4:00 p.m. at 165A D’Youville Street Sudbury. Based on the prices submitted, the letter of recommendation from the project architect, Castellan Luciw James Architects, and past experience with the contractor, the Board recommended the contract in favour of J.N. Construction.


The construction of the new school coincides with phase two of the Board’s plan to transform for September 2003, the former St. Anne school into the most technologically advanced state of the art secondary school in Valley East. Ray Vincent, Chair of the Sudbury Catholic District School Board is elated with the creation of the new learning facility. “The Board has never wavered from its commitment to provide quality Catholic education to Catholic students in Valley East and Capreol. In establishing Bishop Alexander Carter Catholic Secondary School, the Board is following through on its mandate to offer equal educational opportunities for the students, parents and community partners in this region,”stated Vincent. Zandra Zubac, Director of Education for the Sudbury Catholic District School Board is also looking forward to the creation of the new state of the art secondary school. “After months of preparation, we are now ready to move forward with phase two of the Board’s plan,” stated Zubac. “The new Catholic school will build on the tradition of Catholic Secondary Education. Catholic supporters, parents and students will continue to be involved in determining and shaping the unique identity of the new Catholic Secondary School as it grows one grade at a time.”

SCDSB Shows Improvement in Grade 9 EQAO Provincial Testing

Results from the Education Quality and Accountability Office (EQAO) indicate Grade 9 students from the Sudbury Catholic District School Board scored high in recent testing. Of the 357 students that wrote the test in the Academic Program, 70 percent of them achieved a Level 3 or Level 4. This represents an 11 percent improvement over last year and is 6 percent higher than the provincial average. With respect to the 174 students that were tested in the Applied Program, 35 percent of them achieved a Level 3 or 4. This represents a gain of 16 percent over last year and is 12 percent higher than the provincial result.


Zandra Zubac, Director of the Sudbury Catholic Board is pleased with the excellent results of the Grade 9 tests. “The combined results of the secondary schools indicate a dramatic improvement over last year,” stated Zubac, “This is reflected by the fact that as a Board our results improved overall from 57 percent to 70 percent.”


Ray Vincent, Chair of the Sudbury Catholic Board is also very encouraged with the efforts of the students. “The recent EQAO results show an outstanding improvement for the Catholic Board and for each of its secondary schools. The Board’s score is significantly above the provincial average which indicates that the Board and school improvement plans are having the desired effect. We will continue to work hard to improve board results.”


St. Benedict Secondary School had the best results overall with 83 percent of its students in Level 3 or 4 in the Academic Program and 44 percent achieving a Level 3 or 4 in the Applied Program. Marymount Academy showed significant improvement in Level 4 moving from 6 percent to 19 percent while St. Charles College had the greatest increase in both the Academic and Applied categories, up to 68 percent from 45 percent in academic and up to 25 percent from 13 percent in the applied.

Bishop Alexander Carter CSS Grade 9 Information Night a Success

Valley East parents and students braved the cold Wednesday night to attend Bishop Alexander Carter Catholic Secondary School’s Grade 9 Information Night held in the St. Anne School Gymnasium. The St. Anne site is slated to undergo renovations and will be the new home of Bishop Alexander Carter CSS in September 2003. The school is currently accepting registrations for grades 9 and 10 for next year. Grade 9 registration packages can be picked up at the River Road Campus in Val Caron or at the following elementary schools: St. Anne in Hanmer, St. Mary in Capreol and St. Charles in Chelmsford. The grade 9 registration package can also be downloaded from the school website in the Courses section. Registrations for grade 10 are accepted in person at the River Road Campus or by telephone at 897-5722.


Attendees enjoyed a presentation detailing the plans for the new school and took in a uniform fashion show. Guidance representatives were on hand to explain grade 9 course selection and diploma requirements, and Bishop Alexander Carter principal Guy Matthieu was available to answer any questions about the new secondary school. Three lucky students got a jump on their wardrobes for next year with door prizes that featured school apparel by McCarthy’s.


Parents and students are always welcome to contact Bishop Alexander Carter Catholic Secondary School for more information.

SCDSB Holds Second Destination Conservation Inservice

The second in a series of Destination Conservation “inservices” took place at the Sudbury Catholic District School Board’s Education Centre recently involving both morning and afternoon training sessions. Destination Conservation is a three-year program designed for school boards to improve their energy use, water consumption and waste management practices.


A co-operative team of students, teachers, principals, custodians and parents work together with Destination Conservation partners to help schools conserve resources and protect the environment. In addition, DC implements and monitors conservation activities within schools which help reduce waste and save money. Mark Gervais, Energy Co-ordinator with the Sudbury Catholic Board stated that, “these in service workshops involving the contact teachers at each school were a follow-up to the previous session where students were asked to conduct a technical audit of their schools to examine how their school uses energy, consumes water and generates waste.” The audit also allowed students to measure the efficiency of their school and compare the results to the previous year. Gervais continued on to say that, “the focus of the workshop was to concentrate on the results of year one and at the same time underscore behavioural changes that would continue to assist in energy, water and waste reductions in the schools in year two.” In addition to the information gleaned from the workshop, Contact Teachers also received a rebate cheque for savings achieved in year one of the Destination Conservation Program.


The Sudbury Catholic District School Board continues to partnership with this international conservation program that has its roots in the classroom and provides a win-win solution for environmental organizations, utility companies and the entire community. For more information on Destination Conservation, contact Mark Gervais, Board Energy Co-ordinator, ph. 673-5620 (Ext. 424) or Pauline Therrien, Board Curriculum Contact, (Ext. 405)

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