Pubdate: Thu, 19 Jan 2012 Source: Nanaimo Daily News (CN BC) Copyright: 2012 Nanaimo Daily News Contact: http://www.canada.com/nanaimodailynews/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1608 Author: Robert Barron ALLEN PUSHES TRUSTEE CRIME CHECKS Civil Liberties Group Unaware of Any Such Policy in Canada, U.S. The Nanaimo-Ladysmith school district's new board of trustees will consider advocating for mandatory criminal record checks for trustee candidates. Trustee Donna Allen has made a motion on the issue for next month's annual general meeting of the B.C. School Trustees' Association. If the majority of the local trustees agree with Allen's recommendation, the board will ask the association to urge the provincial government to amend the Criminal Records Review Act to require all school board candidates in B.C. to submit a current criminal record check along with their nomination papers. David Eby, executive director of the B.C. Civil Liberties Association, said he is not aware of any policies in any jurisdiction in Canada or the U.S. that require election candidates to complete criminal record checks. Education Minister George Abbott has said he is will- ing to look at the issue but said that he currently has no plans to change the rules and didn't comment on what the consequences would be if the government did decide to change the legislation. Allen delayed taking her oath of office for several weeks after she was re-elected in November because she didn't think new trustee Bill Bard should be allowed to serve because of to his 2006 conviction for the cultivation of marijuana. He pleaded guilty to the charge and served a one-year conditional sentence. Allen said when she finally took her oath on Dec. 16 that she would continue to campaign for mandatory criminal record checks for trustees "both within the board structure and in the wider community." Bard said he intends to vote against Allen's motion because the issue is a provincial matter and the boardroom is "not the place to discuss it." But he said he would consider requiring trustee candidates to reveal their criminal records in some cases, including those who were convicted of violence against children and/or adults. Allen did not immediately return calls for comment. "There are privacy issues to consider here but, despite that, I expect there will be a group in place by the next school board election that will have a website dedicated solely to investigating and exposing the criminal pasts of all the trustee candidates in the district," Bard said. Many provinces, including B.C., require applicants for positions in high-risk professions, like teachers and health care workers, to undergo a criminal record check ensure public safety, but the policy doesn't extend to those seeking political office, even for school trustee positions. Board chairman Jamie Brennan said he will wait for Tuesday's board meeting to discuss his opinions on the issue. But he said that while it's ultimately up to the government to decide if criminal record checks should be mandatory during elections, the school board could develop a district policy requiring that successful candidates submit to criminal record checks after the election. "However, I don't know what the consequences would be if we found that one of the elected trustees did have a criminal record," Brennan said. Eby said mandatory criminal checks for those seeking public office could give police a tremendous amount of influence in the political system. He also said he thinks that any government that mandates criminal record checks for politicians could be leaving themselves open for a constitutional challenge. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom