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Kathleen Wynne rejects parents’ plea to withdraw sex-ed curriculum
The Ontario premier says she met with parents who asked her government to withdraw the updated sex education curriculum.
Rob Beintema / Toronto Star Order this photo
Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne braves protestors of the new sex education curriculum in Malton on March 26. Today she is meeting parents opposed to it at Queen's Park.
By: Richard J. Brennan Provincial Politics, Published on Wed Apr 29 2015
Premier Kathleen Wynne met Wednesday with parents opposed to the Liberal government’s sex education curriculum but she says nothing has changed.
“The request in the room was to withdraw the curriculum. We are not going to do that,” Wynne told reporters after the meeting, which was supposed to be a quiet affair until word leaked out.
“I think in some case we are going to have to agree to disagree but my hope is once we clarify some of the issues around how parents can withdraw their kids . . . that will make it easier for parents,” she said.
The controversial curriculum takes affect this September with some parents threatening to pull their children out.
The Ontario premier says she met with parents who asked her government to withdraw the updated sex education curriculum.
Rob Beintema / Toronto Star Order this photo
Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne braves protestors of the new sex education curriculum in Malton on March 26. Today she is meeting parents opposed to it at Queen's Park.
By: Richard J. Brennan Provincial Politics, Published on Wed Apr 29 2015
Premier Kathleen Wynne met Wednesday with parents opposed to the Liberal government’s sex education curriculum but she says nothing has changed.
“The request in the room was to withdraw the curriculum. We are not going to do that,” Wynne told reporters after the meeting, which was supposed to be a quiet affair until word leaked out.
“I think in some case we are going to have to agree to disagree but my hope is once we clarify some of the issues around how parents can withdraw their kids . . . that will make it easier for parents,” she said.
The controversial curriculum takes affect this September with some parents threatening to pull their children out.