So then let's renegotiate the Constitution. Unless it's infallible of course.because, the same as Ontario, it was a condition of joining confederation.
So then let's renegotiate the Constitution. Unless it's infallible of course.because, the same as Ontario, it was a condition of joining confederation.
That would be up to the government to decide. I could see two options:
1. To qualify to accept vouchers, the school would need to accept all applicants even if they cannot afford to pay beyond the cost of the voucher. or
2. Any school could accept the vouchers.
I don't know for sure how it works in Sweden, but personally, I'd lean in favour of 1 above myself.
Right now, the Catholic systems in both Ontario and Alberta must accept any and all, why would it be different if there was a fully funded Jewish school...or Muslim school? Would they also restrict religious teaching like the Catholic schools do? Would they restrict the sciences and sicial studies to ONLY the government mandated curiculum?
Let's put it this way, is it worth living in a country on condition that we discriminate unfairly against a particular group?
Should the feds refuse to renegotiate the constitution to make it more just, then their real colours would come out. At that stage, defederation might be preferable for the sake of justice.
SOrry, I don't see any descrimination, at all. What I do see is one whiner in Ontario that has decided to make a big deal out of nothing and go to the UN. If he wants to send his kid to a jewish school....then do it.... if he can't afford it, ask his local synygogue for financial help. If they are unwilling to help him.....then that say's a lot about that synygogue and the jewish faith.
No discrimination at all? If a Catholic in ontario wants to send his child to a Catholic school, the taxpayer pays for it. If a jew wants to send his child to a Jewish school, he still pays his taxes but then has to pay again for private tuition. How is that fair?
The "private" Jewish school has the ability to recieve somewhere in the neighbourhood of 70% of it's funding from the province, and that's still retaining the ability to pick and choose who they allow in.
well.... it appears I have been wrong about the Ontario system. It looks like it doesn't fund ANY private schools period, faith based or otherwise, unlike the Alberta government which does partialy fund private schools, depending on their curriculum.
what appears to be the stumbling block in Ontario is the fact that the electorate is unwilling to even partially fund private schools.
I didn't know the details, but I did know that the Alberta government had somehow skirted around the discrimination problem, unlike Ontario.
For me, how we establish justice (all secular, funding for all religions, or free market through vouchers) is secondary to the priority of eliminating discrimination in the system. it's actually embarrassing for Ontario as a democracy.
Well, as a democracy, the electorate in Ontario have spoken when it comes to funding of private or faith based schools in the last election. The Tory's had their plan for funding Faith based schools, while McGuinty prefered he status quo. The people of Ontario chose McGuinty's view.