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‘Parents’ Bill of Rights’ officially introduced in Sask. legislature, beginning pronoun policy’s push into law

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The provincial government’s “Parents’ Bill of Rights” was introduced and is being read a first time in the Saskatchewan Legislature on Thursday.


Also known as Bill 137, the province said in a release the legislation “outlines a number of rights that parents have to be involved in in their children’s education and invokes the notwithstanding clause of the Canadian constitution to ensure parents must provide consent if a child wants to change their gender identification in school.”


The introduction of the bill was given unanimous support by Saskatchewan Party MLAs and Saskatchewan United Party Leader Nadine Wilson. It was also unanimously opposed by all 14 Saskatchewan NDP MLAs.


Premier Scott Moe vowed to invoke the notwithstanding clause that would allow the legislation to become law shortly after a Court of King’s Bench judge granted an injunction of the policy to UR Pride in September.


The injunction put a hold on the policy which then prompted Moe to call the legislature back two weeks ahead of the start of the scheduled fall session in order to introduce the legislation sooner.


In the release, the province said the legislation and invocation of the notwithstanding clause is in direct response to the injunction being granted.


The province said the bill outlines a number of different rights that parents have regarding their children’s education and included 15 different points in the release.


The points included that parents will: provide consent before the student’s teachers and other employees of the school use a desired gender identity or gender-related preferred name if the student is under the age of 16.


The bill will also see that the principal of a school informs parents two weeks before sexual health content is presented to students.


Parents and guardians will be informed of the subject matter of the sexual health content, the dates on which the content will be provided and given the opportunity to not allow their child to participate in the presentation of the sexual health content.


“Parents should always be involved in important decisions involving their children,” Education Minister Jeremy Cockrill said in the release.


“The Parental Inclusion and Consent policy introduced in August and now this new legislation we are introducing today will ensure that continues to be the case.”


NDP say Sask Party is avoiding accountability


The opposition NDP said the introduction of the bill is a “smokescreen” to avoid taking accountability for its past failures.


“There are very real crises in this province – facing very real people – but instead of dealing with the crises in health care, in mental health and addictions, and the cost of living, we’ve been called back to the legislature for an emergency sitting to debate pronouns in schools,” NDP leader Carla Beck said in a release.


Before the introduction of Bill 137, the NDP introduced Sarah Mackenzie, who lost her 14-year-old daughter to suicide. Beck, NDP MLA and health critic Vicki Mowat and Mackenzie called on the province to “work on issues that matter most.”


Some of those issues the NDP pointed out were the number of counsellors in Saskatchewan, the loss of psychologists and a reduction of teachers by more than 66 positions, which corresponds with an enrollment increase of more than 3,800 students.


More details to come…

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