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Ministry stalls as Black education crisis deepens in Ontario

“Silence communicates refusal, not neutrality.”

Photographer: Patrick Venegas

Parents of Black Children (PoBC) didn’t hesitate when the Ontario Human Rights Commission released Dreams Delayed in early 2025. The organization said the report confirmed what Black families already lived and felt every day: anti-Black racism saturates Ontario’s education system and strips students of safety, dignity, and opportunity. PoBC welcomed the report’s urgency but stressed that acknowledgement means little without action.

PoBC’s message stayed sharp and uncompromising. Dreams Delayed marks a beginning, not a fix. More than six months passed since the release, yet the Ministry of Education produced no plan, no timeline, and no commitment to act. The ministry’s silence as a choice; silence that rejects accountability and reinforces harm.

When PoBC responded to the report’s 29 recommendations, it grounded its position in lived experience, years of advocacy, and a long record of community consultation. The organization pushed for five essential demands that shape any real reform:

Accountability: Education duty-holders must make clear, public commitments supported by timelines, transparent reporting, and independent oversight. Equity statements without action have no place in a system that continues to harm Black students.

Data transparency: The Ministry must enforce standardized, disaggregated race-based data collection and reporting that exposes systemic barriers instead of hiding them.

Representation: Schools need Black educators and leaders at every level. Recruitment, retention, and advancement require clear targets and fair hiring practices backed by measurable accountability.

Community voice: Black students, families, and Black-led organizations deserve to be centered in every decision. Policies and frameworks must be co-created with the community, not delivered top-down.

Policy reform: The Ontario Human Rights Code, Anti-Racism Act, and education policy memoranda must guide governance across the system to guarantee enforceable protections for Black students.

On September 30th, 2025, PoBC’s CEO and Chief Advocacy Officer Charline Grant emailed partners to request support for the organization’s upcoming public response. Grant outlined three direct asks that build a united front for change:

Amplify the response: Share PoBC’s message across your networks to strengthen visibility and public pressure.

Advocate together: Push for accountability, transparency, and decisive action from the Ministry and all responsible education bodies.

Stand publicly with PoBC: Show Black students and families they’re backed by a community that refuses to leave them isolated in this fight.

PoBC reinforced its call to action in the clearest terms. It urged partners to help press the Ministry to convene duty-holders and define what full compliance with the OHRC recommendations requires. After reviewing the executive summary and letter, PoBC asked each partner to confirm whether they’ll support a collective campaign for accountability and systemic change. The organization stressed that transformation takes courage, unity, and persistence, and communities can only win this together.

PoBC now prepares for its Annual General Meeting and the community launch of the Sankofa Framework for Dismantling Anti-Racism in Ontario on November 25th, 2025, at the North York Memorial Community Hall. At that gathering, PoBC plans to deliver expanded analysis and more detailed recommendations responding to Dreams Delayed. The event will signal the next phase of organized pressure, community leadership, and unwavering advocacy for Black students across the province.

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Written By

With a last name that means “Faithful and loyal,” it is no wonder that Paul Junor has become a welcomed addition to the Toronto Caribbean Newspaper Team. Since 1992, Paul has dedicated his life to become what you call a great teacher. Throughout the years, he has formed strong relationships with his students and continues to show them that he cares about them as people. Paul is a warm, accessible, enthusiastic and caring individual who not only makes himself available for his students, but for his community as well.

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