Education Minister MacDiarmid had to spend $165,000 on a report to butress her war against the Vancouver School Board.
I’m a little behind the times on this story, although I notice that few (if any) outlets actually covered the cost of Margaret MacDiarmid’s loaded report against the Vancouver School Board.
That’s right folks – $165,000, including $15,000 on travel to and from Victoria.
Money well spent.
Now parents are obviously upset with the prospect of their local neighbourhood schools potentially closing. And NDP MLAs like Adrian Dix are working with the parents in his riding to ensure that their voices are heard.
Fair enough.
But why not direct their anger against the ones that pushed school closures in the first place?

The BC Government should remember that behind each of these students, there are two parents concerned, angry and confused by the budget shortfalls being encountered by school boards across the province.
With the vote on the Vancouver School Board (VSB) proposed $18.12 million in budget cuts for fiscal 2010-11, the heat is rising on a provincial government led by a rookie Minister being thrown to the wolves by Premier Gordon Campbell.
Yesterday, over 500 parents and kids packed the John Oliver high school gym to rant against a provincial government that so far doesn’t have the guts to be honest with the amount of funding AND EXPENSES that are being passed on to school board across BC.
Speaking about the politics of the situation for a second, I interpret the shifting of the messaging from the Minister as a sign that the BC Liberals are beginning to realize that it is them rather than the VSB, or any individual school board for that matter, that is going to bare the brunt of the fallout.

Scenes like this could disappear if the province has its way with the Vancouver School Board.
Last night on the news I saw coverage of band students playing a concert outside of the Vancouver School Board (VSB) offices, which for me really brought home the debate that is being waged right now between the BC Government and VSB.
Yes, I know that 190 full-time positions are on the chopping block. But as a former member of a school strings program, and someone who continues to play music today, the prospect of losing all of the strings and band programs in the city is extremely troubling.
The gift of a music education to a child has immeasurable benefits. Off the top of my head, I can name discipline, confidence, expansion of horizons, improved school performance, stress relief, fun, a sense of achievement, and improved self-esteem as some of the most tangible benefits that a child receives from learning music (although this list is much more comprehensive and has some amazing facts and figures).
I was fortunate enough to begin music outside of school, and enhanced my education through band in elementary and orchestra in high school. But to many families, these school programs are the only access they have to offer their children the opportunity to play a musical instrument.
Anyways, this issue is about much more than band and string programs, so I shouldn’t get to caught up on this particular point. I am willing to direct the full weight of my anger towards both Margaret MacDiarmid and lone NPA councillor Suzanne Anton, who in particular has shown how once again, politics trumps principle.
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“Perhaps it was my silk dress or the new perfume I’ve been wearing lately. When I asked Suzanne Anton what her New Year’s resolution was, she replied, “To kiss a pretty girl!” and pecked me on the cheek.” – Writer Emily Barca describing her encounter with the lone NPA City Councillor on New Year’s Eve.