Critics say the move is like something out of George Orwell’s 1984

Kenney Government Orders Alberta Public Schools to Remove the Word ‘Public’ From Their Name

Kenney Government Orders Alberta Public Schools to Remove the Word ‘Public’ From Their Name

Jason Kenney’s United Conservative Party government has quietly ordered Alberta school boards to remove the word “public” from their formal names.

The odd move, impacting eight of the province’s public school divisions, effectively makes it less clear that public school boards are “public.” No changes were made to the names of any of the province’s Catholic school boards.

Education Minister Adriana LaGrange made the name changes in a ministerial order signed on August 15.

The Ministry of Education released no press release or public statement mentioning or explaining the reasons for the name changes.

Colin Aitchison, spokesperson for Alberta’s Ministry of Education, did not respond to questions from PressProgress asking for the rationale behind the change.

But in a statement to Postmedia, Aitchison suggested the move was merely intended to simplify naming conventions.

However, one of Alberta’s former Education Ministers, suggested Kenney is trying to undermine support for public schools.

“Removing the word ‘public’ from school boards’ name serves a great purpose,” tweeted Thomas Lukaszuk. “It divorces our perception of education from being a public good.”

“Notice how the (Conservative Party of Canada) deliberately, over time, replaced ‘citizen’ with ‘taxpayer’,” the former PC cabinet minister noted.

Calgary radio host Charles Adler went further, describing the Kenney government’s “Newspeak” as something straight out of George Orwell’s 1984:

Fmr #Alberta education min @Lukaszuk is correct. Removing the word “public” is insidious. #Kenney education dept #Newspeak goes to the heart of #GeorgeOrwell‘s warnings to those who take liberal democracy for granted. #ableg https://t.co/yR19qvNpEk — Charles Adler (@charlesadler) September 3, 2019

The Premier of Alberta has a well-documented history of articulating strongly-held and, at times, eccentric views about education.

Kenney, who attended a private religious boarding school run by his own father, has long aligned himself with groups that promote private religious schools and the evangelical homeschooling movement.

In opposition, Kenney accused Rachel Notley of pushing a secret “ideological agenda in the education system,” one that he claimed involved “social engineering and pedagogical fads in our schools.”

Kenney falsely claimed Alberta teachers were being ordered to force schoolchildren to call one another “comrade,” thanks to the “unscientific gender theory” lessons in Alberta’s public school system.

“I believe the NDP actually wants to change our political culture – who we are and what we value as Albertans,” Kenney said. “And do you now how they intend to do that? Through the education system.”

In 2016, Kenney told Rebel Media’s Ezra Levant he believes schoolchildren are being “hard-wired” with anti-conservative ideas by Canadian public schools, describing it as a “cultural challenge” Conservatives need to overcome.

“We’ve got to figure out how to break that nut,” Kenney said.

One of Kenney’s first acts as Premier was to name Adriana LaGrange, a former president of an anti-abortion group who secretly worked with an anti-abortion group to secure her nomination, as his education minister.

Here is the full copy of LaGrange’s ministerial order: