Halton District School Board | |
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J.W. Singleton Education Centre 2050 Guelph Line Burlington, Ontario New Street Education Centre 3250 New Street Burlington, Ontario Burlington, Halton Hills, Milton and Oakville Canada |
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District information | |
Superintendent | David Boag Gerry Cullen Tricia Dyson Robert Eatough Stuart Miller Yaw Obeng Dane Tutton Lucy Veerman Mark Zonneveld |
Chair of the board | Kelly Amos |
Director of education | Stuart Miller |
Schools | 102; 84 elementary, 18 secondary |
Budget | CA$664 million |
Other information | |
Elected trustees | Kelly Amos Amy Collard Donna Danielli Tracey Ehl Harrison Kim Graves Jeanne Gray Andrea Grebenc Ann Harvey Hope Joanna Oliver Richelle Papin Leah Reynolds |
Student trustees | Dasha Metropolitansky Zaid Haj Ali |
Website | www |
The Halton District School Board serves public school students throughout Halton Region, including the municipalities of Burlington, Halton Hills, Milton and Oakville. Its administration area is to the southwest of the city of Toronto. In 2006-2007, it served almost 50,000 students, excluding those in adult, alternative, and Community Education programs.
Education in the former Halton County was previously governed by a framework of boards for various high school districts and public school districts associated with them. In 1967, as a result of initiatives undertaken by then Minister of Education Bill Davis, work was begun to amalgamate all boards on a county-wide level throughout the Province, and such a move was recommended to the Halton County Council that year for its approval. The move was opposed by the southern boards of education in Burlington and Oakville, but that was overruled upon passage of mandatory legislation by the Legislative Assembly of Ontario in 1968.
The Board was constituted as the Halton County Board of Education, which was established on January 1, 1969. When the County was replaced by the Regional Municipality of Halton, the Board became the Halton Board of Education.
As part of the province-wide restructuring of Ontario's school boards as a consequence of the passage of the Fewer School Boards Act, 1997, the English-language Public District School Board No. 20 was created to take over the Region's schools. It was merged with the former Board at the beginning of 1998, and was renamed as the "Halton District School Board" in 1999.
The Board operates 76 elementary schools, and 17 secondary schools, which are organized into the following areas:
Secondary school enrollment and Fraser Institute provincial rankings are as follows:
The Board also operates the following specialized facilities:
The Pathways programme encourages all post-secondary options, from apprenticeship, to college, to university, to the workplace. The Board has also introduced specialist high skills majors and other unique programs for students, including fully online high school credits.