Lynda di Armani
In June 2023, Lynda di Armani attended a public school board meeting in Chilliwack, British Columbia. A grandmother and former school employee, she went to the meeting to express her concerns about a potential conflict of interest at the board. It had come to light that the board member who was seeking school funding to promote Pride events in schools was also the marketing director for the local Pride society. Ms. di Armani’s remarks were brief and calm.
The school board Chair, Willow Reichelt, along with the Vice-Chair, Carin Bondar, immediately interrupted and muted Ms. di Armani’s presentation, baselessly claiming that her remarks were somehow “discriminatory” and that “[t]here is no conflict of interest when you’re talking about basic human rights.”
After being interrupted four times in rapid succession, Ms. di Armani was ordered to sit down before she had finished. The Chair then muted the livestream of the public meeting. The viewing audience could not then hear Ms. di Armani’s response or the statements of the Chair. Unfortunately, this is part of a pattern of censorship at this school board.
The Board’s message has been clear: if we dislike your expression, we will silence you. We will strike your voice from the public record in the name of “human rights” and preventing “discrimination.”
Fortunately, the Supreme Court of Canada has been very clear: public schools are government bodies subject to the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms. Section 2(b) of the Charter protects the freedoms of thought, belief, opinion, and expression of all Canadians, including at school board meetings.
School board censorship silences debate. It violates the right of speakers to express themselves. It violates the right of board members and the listening public to access a diversity of perspectives. It disrupts democracy and undermines democratic accountability.
Unfortunately, the problem of “school board censorship” is not unique to British Columbia.
It happened to Trustee Mike Ramsay in Waterloo, Ontario. It happened to former elementary school teacher Carolyn Burjoski in the same district. Increasingly, school boards across the country are neglecting their Charter obligations to protect expression. Instead, they are disciplining trustees, silencing dissent, and depriving the public of necessary debate on critical issues.
Ms. di Armani knows that school boards should not mute disagreement. On the contrary, disagreement and debate are part of a healthy democracy.
Thanks to your donations, JCCF lawyers helped Lynda di Armani file a constitutional challenge against the school board in the Supreme Court of British Columbia.
She is asking the Court to declare that the school board violated her Charter rights and the Charter rights of the listening public. She seeks a Court Order that allows the public to record school board meetings themselves as a measure that would prevent school board censorship in the future.
We, alongside the JCCF, will continue to help Lynda di Armani fight censorship in Chilliwack through her constitutional challenge in the Supreme Court of British Columbia. Will you join us in this fight for our basic rights?
Attn: Lynda Di Armani
c/o Rights and Freedoms Fundraising Society
P.O. Box 21004
Chilliwack, BC V2P 8A9
CHILLIWACK — The Calgary-based Justice Centre for Constitutional Freedoms (JCCF) announced Wednesday (Oct. 18) that a lawsuit has been filed against the Chilliwack School District after its board chair and vice-chair allegedly censored and ultimately ended the public remarks of a Chilliwack resident back in June 2023.
JCCF says the lawsuit was filed on October 6, 2023 in the Supreme Court of British Columbia, with a court file number of CHI-S-S-40035.
According to the JCCF, Lynda di Armani drew attention to a video that shows the board’s chair, Willow Reichelt, and vice-chair, Carin Bondar, repeatedly interrupting her and muting her microphone as she stood at the podium during a public meeting. Armani’s remarks begin at the 24-minute mark of the school board meeting.
On June 13, 2023, Ms. di Armani, a former SD33 employee of 10 years and grandmother of two children enrolled in the BC school system, attended the meeting of the school board to express her concerns about a potential conflict of interest involving an elected board member. The JCCF says she began her remarks by saying that trustee Teri Westerby had brought forward a motion that the board support pride month in June and raise a pole to fly the pride flag. As di Armani began to point out that Westerby was also the director of marketing for the Chilliwack Pride Society, she was interrupted by the chair, Willow Reichelt, in conjunction with vice-chair Carin Bondar claiming that di Armani’s remarks were “discriminatory” to a board member.
Before the public participation period begins in the video, Reichelt reminds the public not to be disparaging or discriminatory in their remarks and not to mention any individuals by name.
According to the JCCF, chair Reichelt also told Ms. di Armani that trustee’s names are not to be used during meetings and that there could be no conflict of interest because there was “no pecuniary interest.” Chair Reichelt further stated, “When you are talking about a human right, there is no conflict of interest,” the JCCF said.
Over the course of the next two minutes, JCCF says di Armani was interrupted four times and had her microphone cut off. At times, the audio for the entire meeting was muted, and there is simply silence on the public record. A full-length video of the proceedings, including the muted segments, is available on the District’s YouTube Channel.
According to the court filing, di Armani says she was advised by chair Reichelt that she could speak to her own feelings about pride, but if she called out a trustee by name she would have to take a seat. After being silenced repeatedly, di Armani argues that Bondar told her, “Basic human rights include reflection of human rights [sic].”
In addition to this alleged violation of her own charter-protected freedom of expression, JCCF says Armani also objects to the school board’s policy of not allowing members of the public to make their own recordings of these public meetings. As she entered the meeting, she was required to sign an undertaking stating she would not record anything. With the school board controlling the only recording of the meeting, and choosing to mute the recording, di Armani alleges that the school board is violating the charter-protected right of other people to hear, listen and consider alternative viewpoints.
The board was created by British Columbia’s School Act, which requires the Board to hold public meetings and to create bylaws to regulate those meetings. While the chair is authorized to cut off the remarks of speakers who don’t comply with their bylaw, the chair is not allowed to silence people simply because the chair disagrees with what someone is saying, JCCF argues.
Di Armani seeks a court declaration that the board exceeded its authority and infringed on her charter rights. JCCF says she is also asking for court orders that would prevent the board from acting in a similar censorious manner in the future, and that would allow members of the public to make their own recordings of these public meetings.
“Elected officials exercising government power must respect Canadians’ Charter freedoms,” states Marty Moore, counsel for di Armani. “The Chilliwack School Board’s actions in this case show complete disregard for the freedom of expression, not only of my client, but also of the listening public, who have a right to hear the views of others at Board meetings. Unfortunately, this kind of censorship is a regular occurrence at Chilliwack School Board meetings. We will be seeking court orders to put an end to these violations of Charter rights and freedoms.”
Fraser Valley Today has reached out to SD33 Superintendent Rohan Arul-pragasam for comment. This story will be updated to include any remarks from Arul-pragasam.
by Mike Vanden Bosch, Fraser Valley Today
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