Montreal Catholic School Commission

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Montreal Catholic School Commission (Commission des écoles catholiques de Montréal)
Location
3737, Sherbrooke Street East, Montreal, Quebec H1X 3B3
Montreal
Canada
District information
Chair of the boardYves Archambault (at the time the board was abolished)
Schools275 (in 1996)
Students and staff
Students131,000 (in 1996)
Other information
Websitewww.cecm.qc.ca

The Montreal Catholic School Commission (Commission des écoles catholiques de Montréal, CECM) was a Roman Catholic school district in Montreal, Quebec, Canada which operated both French-language and English-language schools. It was the largest school board in Quebec, and was created on June 9, 1846, at the same time as a Protestant school commission, which became the Protestant School Board of Greater Montreal. When Quebec's religious "confessional" school boards were replaced by linguistic ones in 1998, the French-language schools and the board's headquarters were turned over to the Commission scolaire de Montréal and its English-language schools to the English Montreal School Board. In 1847, the board had 377 pupils. By 1917, this number increased to 75,000 students. The first kindergarten was established in 1914. An alliance of Catholic teachers was founded in 1919. Primary education is established during the 1920s. During the 1930s, the MCSC began to distribute milk to students and the first school for the disabled opened.

Teachers threatened to strike in 1945. Union activist Léo Guindon was dismissed by the commission in 1948. In January 1949, a long strike paralyzed the board. The English sector of the MCSC became independent in 1963. In 1964, the Ministry of Education of Quebec was established, reducing the authority of boards and religious leaders in the school system. The school population reached a peak in 1970 with 229,000 pupils and 400 schools. The commissioners were originally appointed, but were elected for the first time in 1973. In 1981, the Levesque government of René Lévesque restricted access of the clergy to the schools. In 1982, the commissioners introduced a program of sexuality education. In 1990, the committee adopted a policy to promote the use of French.

In 1996, when the district celebrated its 150th anniversary, it had a total of 130,000 students; of them 90,000, including 80,000 in the French-language schools and 10,000 in the English-language schools, were in the public school system. The district served Montreal, Côte Saint-Luc, Hampstead, Montréal-Nord, and Westmount.[1]

As of 1996, the district had 229 French-language schools, including 150 elementary schools, 35 secondary schools, and 28 special schools (some operated adult education programmes, some operated vocational and technical programmes). The English-language schools included 20 elementary schools, 8 secondary schools, and five special schools. The district had 13 special schools for students with handicaps, disabilities, and behavioral problems. The district classified 40% of its enrollment as "multiethnic."[1]

The end of the MCSC

Groups such as the Committee for Neutral Schools opposed religious schools and religious school boards. In the 1990s, a secular group called the Mouvement laïque québécois began a class action lawsuit against the board, and two political parties competed for power within the MCSC: the religious Regroupement scolaire confessionnel led by Michel Pallascio (RSM) et the secular Mouvement pour une école moderne et ouverte laïciste (MEMO) headed by Diane De Courcy.

The MCSC and the other confessional school boards were abolished on July 1, 1998 by the Marois reform which secularized the public schools in Montreal and created linguistic school boards. The MCSC's last chairperson was Yves Archambault.

Most schools in the French-speaking sector went to the Commission scolaire de Montréal and those in the English-speaking sector went to the English Montreal School Board. Some schools in the eastern portion of the MCSC were transferred to the Commission scolaire de la Pointe-de-l'Île (CSPÎ), which had replaced the Commission scolaire Jérôme-Le Royer.[2]

Schools

Elections for school trustees

1973

Electoral District Position Total valid votes Candidates
Mouvement scolaire confessionnel Les parents solidaires Mouvement pour la démocratisation scolaire Comité des parents responsables Independents
District One Trustee 7,711 Benoît Hubert (combined endorsement)
2,318 (30.06%)
Donat J. Taddeo
3,052 (39.58%)

Robert Lajeunesse
1,509 (19.57%)

Anita Bourget
548 (7.11%)

Carlo Gatti
284 (3.68%)
District Two Trustee 5,008 Rollande Pelletier (combined endorsement)
2,337 (46.67%)
Francis Calabretta
701 (14.00%)
Réjean Dugas
148 (2.96%)
Frank Hanley
1,512 (30.19%)

Cléophas Saint-Aubin
310 (6.19%)
District Three Trustee 7,538 Michael J. McDonald (incumbent)
5,432 (72.06%)
Pierre Gauthier
418 (5.55%)
Gérard Nolot
1,036 (13.74%)

André Forget
652 (8.65%)
District Four Trustee 5,910 Gerald J. Long (combined endorsement)
2,090 (35.36%)
Pierre Carignan
2,432 (41.15%)
Jacqueline Clermont
457 (7.73%)
Stella Ohan
582 (9.85%)

Gérard Raymond
349 (5.91%)
District Five Trustee 4,087 J-Réjean Charron
900 (22.02%)
Denis Brisebois
1,151 (28.16%)
Bernard Stockli
522 (12.77%)
Damase Leclerc
589 (14.41%)

Guy Primeau
517 (12.65%)

Denis Tremblay
258 (6.31%)

Edgar Frechette
84 (2.06%)

Manuel Teixeira
66 (1.61%)
District Six Trustee 4,745 Louisia Poirier
1,385 (29.19%)
Gaston Michaud
1,409 (29.69%)
Joseph L. Page (incumbent)
1,198 (25.25%)

Jean-Baptiste Landry
500 (10.54%)

Jean-Paul Gill
167 (3.52%)

Aldéo Forest
86 (1.81%)
District Seven Trustee 6,491 Norbert Lacoste
2,902 (44.71%)
Gaston Teasdale
1,138 (17.53%)
Adrien Simard
1,949 (30.03%)
Raymond Gosselin
502 (7.73%)
District Eight Trustee 5,332 Luc Larivée
1,916 (35.93%)
André Lorange
1,735 (32.54%)
Fernand Daoust (incumbent)
1,431 (26.84%)
Léonard Chevalier
124 (2.33%)

Edner Berlus
78 (1.46%)

Gérard Cabana
48 (0.90%)
District Nine Trustee 5,130 Paul-Émile Riverin (combined endorsement)
1,025 (19.98%)
Pierre Legare
2,224 (43.35%)

Yolande Millette-Roux
1,644 (32.05%)

Rolland Roy
237 (4.62%)
District Ten Trustee 6,196 Pauline Morissette
524 (8.46%)
Robert Masse
1,435 (23.16%)
Lucien Boily
1,750 (28.24%)

Pierrette Brunet
1,200 (19.37%)

Gaëtan Lavoie
515 (8.31%)

Lucien Deschamps
450 (7.26%)

Ernest Cyr
192 (3.10%)

Zotique Duchaine
130 (2.10%)
District Eleven Trustee 7,211 André Bailey
1,356 (18.80%)
Gilbert Cinq-Mars
1,058 (14.57%)
Jean-Paul Cloutier
813 (11.27%)
Pierre Des Ruisseaux
3,018 (41.85%)

Jean Jodoin
966 (13.40%)
District Twelve Trustee 6,468 Léo Aubry
1,386 (21.43%)
André Milot
736 (11.38%)
Cécile Poissant
2,662 (41.16%)

Jean Bonetto
872 (13.48%)

Robert Patenaude
466 (7.20%)

Isidore Robichaud
346 (5.35%)
District Thirteen Trustee 7,977 Antoinette Paris
704 (8.83%)
Lise Sarrazin
3,088 (38.71%)
Aline Brun
176 (2.21%)
Oscar Damiani
1,849 (23.18%)

Philippe Lafortune
1,396 (17.50%)

Agostino Gaudelli
764 (9.58%)
District Fourteen Trustee 5,962 Gilles Plante
1,294 (21.70%)
Thérèse Lavoie-Roux (incumbent)
3,186 (53.44%)

Umberto di Genova
706 (11.84%)

Roger Gauthier
484 (8.12%)

Henri Paquet
292 (4.90%)
District Fifteen Trustee 7,384 Claudette Sauvé
1,469 (19.89%)
Louis Bouchard
2,064 (27.95%)

Clément Lemelin
1,982 (26.84%)

Gilles Desjardins
1,390 (18.82%)

Evasio Vellone
479 (6.49%)
District Sixteen Trustee 7,604 Thérèse Killens (combined endorsement)
3,358 (44.16%)
Raymond Marcotte
575 (7.56%)
Aline St-Onge
565 (7.43%)
Norma Legault
1,627 (21.40%)

Tarcisio Donnini
1,479 (19.45%)
District Seventeen Trustee 11,404 André Morais
1,171 (10.27%)
Colette Biche
6,627 (58.11%)
Jude-Alexandre Dumas
70 (0.61%)
Hugues Poulin
1,510 (13.24%)

Jean-Marc Chevrier
879 (7.71%)

André Steenhaut
619 (5.43%)

Pierre Corbeil
353 (3.10%)

Nicole Aubry
93 (0.82%)

Victor Beauchemin
82 (0.72%)
District Eighteen Trustee 9,282 Joseph Savard
2,638 (28.42%)
Guy Messier
2,139 (23.04%)
Paul-Félix Baillargeon
254 (2.74%)
Patrice Laplante
3,188 (34.35%)

Giuseppe G. Delvasto
769 (8.28%)

Sid A. Zitouni
294 (3.17%)
District Nineteen Trustee 7,365 Marcel Parent (combined endorsement)
1,937 (26.30%)
Paul Daigneault
3,829 (51.99%)

Gilles St-Onge
1,109 (15.06%)

J-Léopold Gagnier
490 (6.65%)
Sources: Le Devoir, 19 June 1973, p. 6; Le Devoir, 20 June 1973, p. 6 [District Ten].
Party Elected members
Independent 9
Mouvement scolaire confessionnel 3
Les parents solidaires 3
Mouvement scolaire confessionnel–Les parents solidaires 2
Mouvement pour la démocratisation scolaire 2

1977

Electoral District Position Total valid votes Candidates
Mouvement scolaire confessionnel Regroupement scolaire progressiste Independents
District One Trustee Benoît Hubert (elected) Lucille Morel
District Two Trustee Rollande Pelletier (incumbent; elected) Viviane Caron
District Three Trustee 7,947 Donat Taddeo (incumbent)
7,227 (90.94%)
Jacques Desjardins
720 (9.06%)
District Four Trustee Robert Sauvé (elected) Pierre Normandeau
District Five Trustee J.-Réjean Charron Yves Archambault Denise Brizard (elected)
District Six Trustee Jimmy di Genova (elected) Gaston Michaud (incumbent) Raymond Gosselin
District Seven Trustee Norbert Lacoste (incumbent; elected) Irène Poupart J-Albert Rouleau

Marcel Thibault
District Eight Trustee Luc Larivée (incumbent; elected) André LeBlanc Robert Aubin
District Nine Trustee Rodrigue Tourville (elected) Pierre Legare (incumbent) André Laquinte
District Ten Trustee Jean-Guy Deschamps (elected) André Côté

John Galipeau
District Eleven Trustee Pierre Des Ruisseaux (incumbent; elected) Yolande Paquette Auguste Mollica
District Twelve Trustee Madeleine Neron (elected) Cécile Poissant (incumbent) Alain Paquette
District Thirteen Trustee Angelo Montini (elected) Lise Sarrazin (incumbent) Daniel Rizard
District Fourteen Trustee Jeannette Milot (elected) Umberto di Genova

Gilbert Rouleau
District Fifteen Trustee Louis Bouchard (incumbent; elected) Clément Lemelin Robert Desrochers

Evasio Vellone
District Sixteen Trustee Thérèse Killens (incumbent; elected) Norma Legault
District Seventeen Trustee Colette Biche (incumbent; elected) Hélène Savard-Jacob
District Eighteen Trustee Éric Renaud (elected) Jacqueline Arcand-Beauchemin (incumbent) Guy-Maurice Lalonde
District Nineteen Trustee André Corbeil (elected) Jacques Bergeron Thérèse Desroches
Sources: Le Devoir, 7 June 1977, p. 3 (party affiliations); Montreal Star, 14 June 1977, A10.
Party Elected members
Mouvement scolaire confessionnel 18
Independent 1

1980

Electoral District Position Total valid votes Candidates
Mouvement scolaire confessionnel Independents endorsed by the Association provincial des enseignants catholiques Other independents
District One Trustee - Benoît Hubert (incumbent; acclaimed)
District Two Trustee - Rollande Pelletier (incumbent; acclaimed)
District Three Trustee 7,947 Mireille Paquin
941 (28.12%)
Hugh Quinlan
1,289 (38.52%)
Danielle Laberge-Amyote
937 (28.00%)

Paul E. Fortin
179 (5.35%)
District Four Trustee 3,030 Francine Synnott
1,858 (61.32%)
Robert Sauvé (incumbent)
1,172 (38.68%)
District Five Trustee - Denise Brizard (incumbent; acclaimed)
District Six Trustee 2,539 Michel Pallascio
1,330 (52.38%)
Jimmy di Genova (incumbent)
1,209 (47.62%)
District Seven Trustee 2,937 Norbert Lacoste (incumbent)
1,801 (61.32%)
Daniel Bouffard
660 (22.47%)
Armand Baron
476 (16.21%)
District Eight Trustee 3,182 Luc Larivée (incumbent)
1,597 (50.19%)
Lise Leblanc
1,585 (49.81%)
District Nine Trustee 3,472 Rodrigue Tourville (incumbent)
1,889 (54.41%)
Jean Miller
459 (13.22%)
Marguerite Fortin
1,124 (32.37%)
District Ten Trustee 3,559 Jean-Guy Deschamps (incumbent)
2,435 (68.42%)
Albert Berardinucci
1,124 (31.58%)
District Eleven Trustee 4,413 Carmen G. Millette
3,349 (75.89%)
Claudette Bélanger
1,064 (24.11%)
District Twelve Trustee 3,350 André Mathurin
1,432 (42.75%)
Madeleine Neron (incumbent)
840 (25.07%)
Gilles Longtin
704 (21.01%)

Gilles Paré
374 (11.16%)
District Thirteen Trustee 4,451 Umberto di Genova (combined endorsement)
2,305 (51.79%)
Lise Sarrazin
2,146 (48.21%)
District Fourteen Trustee 2,933 Jeannette Milot (incumbent)
2,103 (71.70%)
Henriette Couture
830 (28.30%)
District Fifteen Trustee 4,607 Louis Bouchard (incumbent))
2,554 (55.44%)
Lucille Lapierre-Morotti
1,366 (29.65%)
Gise le Gelineau
687 (14.91%)
District Sixteen Trustee - Marcel Parent (acclaimed)
District Seventeen Trustee - Bernard Grégoire (acclaimed)
District Eighteen Trustee 5,286 Éric Renaud (incumbent)
3,202 (60.58%)
Harold White
188 (3.56%)
Victor Pierre Elbert
1,221 (23.10%)

Santino Cordileone
675 (12.77%)
District Nineteen Trustee 4,018 André Corbeil (incumbent)
2,448 (60.93%)
Florent Gagnon
1,570 (39.07%)
Sources: Le Devoir, 6 June 1980, p. 2; Le Devoir, 10 June 1980, p. 1; Montreal Gazette, 11 June 1980, p. 118.
Party Elected members
Mouvement scolaire confessionnel 18
Independent 1

1983

Electoral District Position Total valid votes Candidates
Mouvement scolaire confessionnel Regroupement scolaire de l'île de Montréal Independents
District One Trustee 3,817 Benoît Hubert (incumbent)
2,954 (77.39%)
Nicole Gagnon
863 (22.61%)
District Two Trustee 2,988 Rollande Pelletier (incumbent)
2,642 (88.42%)
Romeo Godin
346 (11.58%)
District Three Trustee 4,687 Ray Doucet
2,690 (57.39%)
Teresa Kennedy
1,235 (26.35%)

Richard Godin
465 (9.92%)

William Siemienski
210 (4.48%)

William Anjo
87 (1.86%)
District Four Trustee 2,560 Estelle Trudel
1,838 (71.80%)
Roger Bourbonnais
395 (15.43%)

Christiane Gervais
327 (12.77%)
District Five Trustee 2,060 Denise Brizard (incumbent)
1,548 (75.15%)
André Roberge
343 (16.65%)

Lucie Chabot
169 (8.20%)
District Six Trustee 1,985 Michel Pallascio (incumbent)
1,511 (76.12%)
Jean-G. Oliver
474 (23.88%)
District Seven Trustee 2,371 Norbert Lacoste (incumbent)
1,814 (76.51%)
Jean-Pierre Hétu
557 (23.49%)
District Eight Trustee 2,460 Nicole Pace-Lalumière
1,147 (46.63%)
Paul Portugais
782 (31.79%)

Jean-Guy Chaput
531 (21.59%)
District Nine Trustee 3,254 Rodrigue Tourville (incumbent)
1,306 (40.14%)
Bernard Lajeunesse
1,091 (33.53%)

Margo Fortin
857 (26.34%)
District Ten Trustee 3,161 Jean-Guy Deschamps (incumbent)
2,417 (76.46%)
Scott McKay
400 (12.65%)

Jean-Pierre Vincelette
344 (10.88%)
District Eleven Trustee 4,744 Carmen G. Millette (incumbent)
3,350 (70.62%)
Robert Martin
1,152 (24.28%)

Louis-Philippe Mailly
242 (5.10%)
District Twelve Trustee 3,048 André Mathurin (incumbent)
1,331 (43.67%)
Jean Brouillette
1,461 (47.93%)

Gilles Paré
256 (8.40%)
District Thirteen Trustee 3,777 Umberto di Genova (incumbent)
2,191 (58.01%)
Gino Fortini
1,586 (41.99%)
District Fourteen Trustee 2,872 Jeannette Milot (incumbent)
1,929 (67.17%)
Jocelyne Perreault
674 (23.47%)

André Querry
269 (9.37%)
District Fifteen Trustee 3,881 Louis Bouchard (incumbent))
2,977 (76.71%)
Jenny Labelle
904 (23.29%)
District Sixteen Trustee 4,577 Marcel Parent (incumbent)
3,646 (79.66%)
Lise Coderre-Ducharme
931 (20.34%)
District Seventeen Trustee 5,737 Bernard Grégoire (incumbent)
4,444 (77.46%)
Michel Charbonneau
1,293 (22.54%)
District Eighteen Trustee 5,004 Éric Renaud (incumbent)
3,378 (67.51%)
Anna Campagna
1,007 (20.12%)

Adrienne Labelle-Savard
619 (12.37%)
District Nineteen Trustee 4,047 André Corbeil (incumbent)
2,459 (60.76%)
Louise di Claudio
1,050 (25.95%)

Pierre-S. Marchand
298 (7.36%)

Raymond Belair
240 (5.93%)
Sources: Montreal Gazette, 14 June 1983, p. 6; Le Devoir, 14 June 1983, p. 1.
Party Elected members
Mouvement scolaire confessionnel 18
Independent 1

See also

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References

  1. ^ a b "Presentation of the CECM." Montreal Catholic School Commission. October 31, 1996. Retrieved on March 20, 2011.
  2. ^ Lagacé, Roger. "L’école Calixa Lavallée: depuis plus de 40 ans à Montréal-Nord." Métro (Canadian newspaper). 14 January 2015. Retrieved on 4 August 2016.

External links

45°32′59″N 73°33′21″W / 45.54972°N 73.55583°W / 45.54972; -73.55583