The provincial government’s takeover of five Ontario school boards has sparked: confusion, outrage, and deep concern about the future of public education. As the new school year begins, parents wonder how they can advocate for their children without trustees in place.
The takeover affects the: Toronto District School Board (TDSB), Toronto Catholic District School Board (TCDSB), Dufferin-Peel Catholic District School Board (DPCDSB), Thames Valley District School Board (TVDSB), and the Ottawa-Carleton District School Board (OCDSB). Four of these were stripped of their elected trustees on the last day of the 2024–25 school year. Since then, speculation has grown that Ontario could collapse its 72 school boards into just four, an unprecedented shift that would change the province’s governance model forever.
Ontario Education Minister Paul Calandra downplayed the importance of trustees in an interview with the Toronto Star. He argued that trustees rarely solve parent complaints directly, often redirecting issues to superintendents. “The fact that there might not be a trustee doesn’t matter,” he said.
On September 2nd, 2025, Calandra went further, hinting at eliminating trustees entirely. “The work they’re doing right now, they will not be doing in the future. There is absolutely no way. The model just has to be updated, one way or another.”
Calandra insisted that Catholic and French school boards would not be dismantled. Still, his repeated dismissal of trustees as irrelevant has intensified public unease.
The Elementary Teachers’ Federation of Ontario (ETFO), representing 84,000 educators, condemned the government’s proposal. In a September 5th, 2025, press release, President David Mastin called the plan: “reckless, undemocratic, and an outright attack on public education.”
Mastin warned that collapsing boards would:
- Silence parents by removing local representation
- Erase community voices that shape education policy
- Eliminate democratically elected trustees who hold boards accountable
- Cut families off from decision-makers
The statement painted the move as a power grab by Premier Doug Ford and Minister Calandra, one that risks destabilizing schools and harming student well-being.
ETFO’s language was unflinching, “It is not hyperbole to say this unprecedented power grab would decimate public education.” The release accused Ford of manufacturing another education crisis to “Tighten his grip on our schools.”
Educators argue that Ontario’s school system (though imperfect) remains a world-class model built on decades of collective effort. They fear that centralizing control in just four mega-boards would: erode accountability, weaken parental influence, and create confusion for families.
Right now, trustees’ future remains uncertain. Parents and educators alike are left waiting while the province delays clarity. Minister Calandra pledged to finalize governance changes before June 2026, but every month of uncertainty compounds frustration.
Ontario’s education system thrives on local accountability, parental engagement, and community voices. Removing trustees or collapsing boards risks silencing the very people schools are meant to serve. The government’s next move will determine whether Ontario strengthens its public education system or dismantles it.