Education minister orders review into allegations of Toronto principal who died
Ontario’s education minister says his staff will review the allegations of a principal who died by suicide months after launching a lawsuit against the Toronto District School Board for allegedly failing to support him when he was accused of racism during a professional training session.
Minister Stephen Lecce calls the allegations raised by Richard Bilkszto "serious and disturbing" and says he's asked his staff to review what happened and bring him “options to reform professional training and strengthen accountability on school boards so this never happens again."
A lawyer for Bilkszto says her client, who worked on contract with the TDSB after his retirement in 2019, died by suicide earlier this month.
The TDSB issued a statement acknowledging his death and saying it shared the ministry's desire to learn what happened and make necessary changes, calling Bilkszto a strong student advocate over his 24-year career.
Bilkszto filed a lawsuit against the TDSB earlier this year, related to a 2021 online anti-racism training session where he claims to have been implicitly referred to as a white supremacist by the trainer and berated in front of his colleagues when he disagreed that Canada was more racist than the United States.
He alleged the TDSB failed to investigate his workplace harassment claim and then retaliated by disinviting him from a graduation for a program he helped create and revoking a temporary contract offer.
The claim alleges he started a sick leave after the training session and was diagnosed with anxiety secondary to a traumatic workplace event.
The consulting firm hired to conduct the training session did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published July 25, 2023.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
'It's not realistic': Former PM Chretien thinks Trump will back off trade war
Former prime minister Jean Chretien says U.S. president-elect Donald Trump is likely to walk back his threat of punishing tariffs and the resulting trade war with Canada, because the Americans are too reliant on a number of Canadian exports, namely in the energy sector.
This Canadian teen lost her hands and feet to an infection. She's on a mission to share her story
A Canadian teen is reaching audiences around the world with powerful social media videos showing life without hands and feet – the price she paid after developing sepsis.
The implications for Canada if Trump goes through with his punishing Tariffs
A trillion dollars worth of Canadian goods and services are exported out of the country annually with a third of it going to the United States. One economist says if Trump imposes a 25 per cent tariff on those goods, it will be detrimental to the Canadian economy.
opinion Financial survival tips for the sandwich generation
The so-called 'sandwich generation' finds itself in a unique and challenging position as its members balance providing financial support for both aging parents and children, all while managing their own financial goals.
Trudeau asked Trump for California, Vermont to curb annexation talks
Justin Trudeau says U.S. president-elect Donald Trump kicked the tires on the potential annexation of Canada during their recent meeting in Florida, but the topic was quickly dropped when the prime minister countered with a request for two states.
Man dies after falling into sink hole at Fernie Alpine Resort
An investigation is underway by Elk Valley RCMP after a man died Wednesday after falling into a sink hole at Fernie Alpine Resort.
One Alberta man gets jail, another community time for 2022 Coutts border protest
Two Alberta men have been sentenced for their roles in the illegal Coutts border blockade in 2022.
Liberal leadership: Carney expected to launch bid next week, Clark organizing heavily, Gould considers entering
While longtime cabinet ministers Dominic LeBlanc and Melanie Joly have officially announced they have no plans to run for the Liberal leadership, several well-known faces are organizing behind the scenes to launch bids of their own.
Amid tense backdrop, Canadian warship gets friendly message from Chinese vessel tracking movements
Daybreak on HMCS Ottawa began with a call over the marine radio from a Chinese warship. The call is coming from a Chinese Frigate known as the Yuncheng, the warship has been shadowing HMCS Ottawa through the South China Sea for two days and counting.