The Ontario government has formally placed the York Catholic District School Board (YCDSB) on notice, escalating scrutiny over the board’s finances and governance and setting a two-week deadline for corrective action.
Education Minister Paul Calandra made the announcement on Wednesday, January 28th, 2026. According to a report by Mike Adler in YorkRegion.com on January 30th, the province cited a projected $10.5 million deficit and ongoing governance concerns. If the board fails to appropriately respond within 14 days, it could be placed under provincial supervision, a significant intervention that would transfer authority from elected trustees to a provincially appointed supervisor.
The YCDSB responded before the deadline. On February 11th, it announced a plan outlining steps to address both financial management and governance practices. The board framed the plan as evidence of its willingness to work with the province and restore stability.
In a public statement, the board said it is developing “A plan outlining how we will provide effective governance and financial management.” Jennifer Sarna, Interim Director of Education, added that “The board of trustees and the senior teams are working together to create a plan that best serves our students, staff and families.”
The board also sought to reassure parents and employees that daily operations would continue uninterrupted. “Please rest assured that the York Catholic District School Board day-to-day operation will continue as usual,” the statement read.
The Ontario Secondary School Teachers’ Federation (OSSTF/FEESO) has pushed back strongly against the province’s move. In a written statement, the union called the threat of supervision “unprecedented” and questioned the government’s motives.
“This level of government interference in Ontario’s education system is unprecedented and raises serious questions about the government’s real motives,” the union said. “For years, education unions and school boards have warned about province-wide underfunding and staffing shortages. It’s not clear how supervision addresses these issues. In fact, it distracts from them.”
Anna DaCosta Martini, OSSTF unit president for Professional Student Services, described the situation as destabilizing. “It’s very frustrating, it’s very confusing for everyone,” she said, adding that while dysfunction may be evident, clear solutions have yet to emerge.
Minister Calandra, who represents York Region as a Progressive Conservative MPP, has been firm in his position. He has called on trustees to end internal conflict and address what he characterizes as financial mismanagement. The YCDSB is the third-largest school board in Ontario. The minister has previously placed both the Toronto District School Board and the Peel District School Board under supervision, citing similar concerns about governance and fiscal responsibility.
The stakes are high. Provincial supervision is not symbolic; it effectively sidelines locally elected trustees and centralizes authority under a provincial appointee. For supporters, it signals decisive action. For critics, it raises concerns about democratic oversight and the broader funding context facing public education in Ontario.
At a recent board meeting at the YCDSB’s offices on Bloomington Road West, trustees discussed contingency planning. The meeting was livestreamed on the board’s YouTube channel, reflecting the public interest surrounding the issue.
What remains unclear is whether the province will accept the board’s remediation plan or move ahead with supervision. The coming days will determine whether the YCDSB retains control of its governance or becomes the latest Ontario board to lose local authority.
For now, families, staff and students are left navigating uncertainty, reassured that classrooms will remain open, but aware that leadership and accountability questions are far from resolved.