they actually certified it.

if you’ve been following this issue since I started posting about it
the certification of the suit
shouldn’t surprise you one bit.

Judge certifies class action suit against Brantford school for the blind
The Canadian Press May 07, 2012 23:41:43 PM
TORONTO – The Ontario Superior Court has certified a class action lawsuit launched by former students of a school for the blind in Brantford.
Madam Justice Carolyn Horkins granted the certification for the class action against W. Ross MacDonald, a provincially run residential school for the visually impaired, blind and deaf-blind.
Students allege they suffered physical, emotional and sexual abuse as children and teenagers while living at the Brantford school.
None of the allegations has been proven in court.
The class action is composed of up to 1,000 students who were enrolled at the school between 1951 to the present day and who were alive as of Feb. 22, 2009.
Lawyer Kirk Baert of Koskie Minsky says the former students will now have the opportunity to tell the public about the alleged abuse they endured while enrolled at the school.
“The alleged abuse these former students were subjected to for years, many while as children, is unthinkable,” Baert said in a release.
“We want the government to do the right thing and ensure that former students of this school see justice and receive the reasonable compensation they rightly deserve.”
The case involves allegations that the Ontario government failed to operate or supervise the school to ensure the safety and well-being of its students.
The Ministry of Education declined to comment on the class action suit Monday.
The lawsuit was started by Robert Seed, a former student who attended the school from 1954 to 1965.
Seed alleges in his statement of claim that “students were frequently punished for minor or innocuous matters such as being homesick, wetting the bed, throwing up, having trouble reading or using too much toilet paper.”
Teachers and house parents used “physical violence, humiliation and bullying” for discipline, taking advantage of the students’ disabilities, “particularly those who were completely blind,” reads the statement.
“This included beating or shoving students, making students drink from urinals, slapping students with a bare hand or with classroom objects such as books, and grabbing students by the hair.”
The W. Ross MacDonald School opened in 1872 as the Ontario Institution for the Education of the Blind. It is one of two provincially run residential schools in Ontario for visually impaired, blind and deaf-blind stude

I’m still trying to wrap my mind around…. drinking from uranels? being slapped? being beatin?
I attended this school since the age of five, until 2007, and never experienced this.
Is this another ploy to rape the provincial government for money?
I’m asking myself, did these things actually happen?
For a full reading of the suit in question please
see this post from march 1st, 2012
that details the entire lawsuit.
You can also
see the post I put up that started it all from July 22, 2011.
and of course, you have
there’s this posting form april 21, 2012.
so believe me, there’s lots of material, and lots of comment worthy stuff for you all to make an informed decision on this issue at large.
More to come as I have it
Comment away, and don’t be shy, tell us how you really feel.

2 thoughts on “they actually certified it.”

  1. I went to WRMS from the mid-eighties to the late nineties. I did not experience abuse. However, I know many people who did, mostly in the previous decades. One former student told me a sad and terrifying story of physical abuse. A lot of changes were made when this abuse came to light in the early 90s (there was an inquiry of all Ontario ministry-run schools, which included court action), changes that you would have benefited from going to the school when you did. It wasn’t always as safe a place to be.
    In fact, and I probably shouldn’t say this, but I wouldn’t be surprised if there was some abuse going on behind closed doors even when I was there.

    Reply
  2. I went there though the 90’s. While I did not suffer outrigt abuse, I did have my charter rights violated many times. I also happened to know of abuse that went on there. Just because you didn’t experience it, doesn’t mean it doesn’t happen. Some students are more vulnerable than others.

    Reply

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