TDSB says 323 students suspended amid school violence this year

The Toronto District School Board (TDSB) building at 5050 Yonge Street on February 1, 2023. (Michael Wilson/CBC - image credit)
The Toronto District School Board (TDSB) building at 5050 Yonge Street on February 1, 2023. (Michael Wilson/CBC - image credit)

The Toronto District School Board says more than 300 students have been suspended due to their involvement in violence on school property so far this academic year.

In a report on school safety, the TDSB says a total of 323 students were suspended due to violent incidents on school premises from September to April.

The board — which is sharing the report with trustees at a committee meeting on Wednesday — says the number of students suspended for violence is the highest since at least 2018-19.

It says that figure is on track to reach a new high since the data started being collected in 2000 if the current trend continues.

Ryan Bird, spokesperson for the TDSB, said on Wednesday that the 323 students are not the only students to be suspended this school year, but are students who have been suspended due to violent incidents as defined by the Ontario education ministry.

The ministry defines violent incidents as:

  • Possessing a weapon, including a firearm (this includes any object used as a weapon and replicas).

  • Physical assault causing bodily harm requiring medical attention.

  • Sexual assault.

  • Robbery.

  • Using a weapon to cause or to threaten to cause bodily harm to another person.

  • Extortion.

  • Hate and/or bias-motivated occurrences.

Board implementing plan to tackle violence

The board said it is implementing a plan to address school violence that includes working with community partners and hiring more safety monitors, youth counsellors and school workers.

"This implementation highlights the fact that school and community safety is the collective responsibility of all levels of
government, community agencies and other organizations, faith-based groups and all Greater Toronto Area School Boards," the TDSB report said.

"Schools are a reflection of the communities within which they exist, and as such there has also been an increase in violent incidents in TDSB schools."

Keith Burgess/CBC
Keith Burgess/CBC

The TDSB said about 85 per cent of its school administrators and superintendents have completed new training on school safety and 20 of its staff members received special training to assess violence threats.

The board said it is also introducing a new audit process for all of its schools "to heighten system and school accountability and to create the safest possible schools."

The TDSB has been working with community partners to expand learning and recreational program offerings outside school hours including tutoring, mentoring and the provision of nutrition services, it said.

"The selection of these groups has been made with input from parents/guardians/caregivers, students, school leaders, local trustees and community members."

ETFO says 75% of members faced or witnessed violence

The Ontario government said last month it would allocate $1.8 million to the TDSB to support its work with community organizations to address school violence.

Earlier this week, the Elementary Teachers' Federation of Ontario said three-quarters of its members reported experiencing or witnessing violence against staff members.

The union commissioned a survey of its members earlier this year and found that 42 per cent of its members have had a physical injury, illness or psychological injury or illness as a result of workplace violence against them this school year.

CBC
CBC

Several high schools in Toronto have experienced violence this academic year.

On Oct. 31, a shooting outside Woburn Collegiate Institute left one student dead and another injured. Toronto police have since charged a 17-year-old suspect with second-degree murder.

In November, a stabbing inside Birchmount Park Collegiate left a 17-year-old student with life-threatening injuries. Police said later they had charged two 14-year-olds and one 17-year-old with aggravated assault and possession of a weapon.

Stephen Mensah, executive director of the Toronto Youth Cabinet — the city's official youth advisory body — said the rise in violence in Toronto schools shows a need for stronger social supports to address root causes.

He said many young people in Toronto are suffering from poverty, violence and crime and they need support through programs that help them find employment.

"We need to make sure young people have access to community hubs where they can get access to support services," he said, adding that more funding was needed for programs to prevent young people from getting involved in crime.

"We need to make sure we just double our efforts to lift young people out of their conditions when we talk about poverty."