4 DEC policies mandate respecting all students’ chosen names and pronouns, regardless of parental consent
The minister of education has not yet read gender-identity policies passed by education councils that undo changes he made, and it’s still not clear which version of the policy will be in effect when the school year starts next month.
In the spring, New Brunswick’s Minister of Education Bill Hogan introduced changes to Policy 713 on sexual orientation and gender identity. Hogan said the policy now bans teachers and staff from using a child under 16’s chosen name and pronoun unless a parent consents.
A few weeks later, two anglophone and two francophone district education councils passed motions to revert to the old policy, mandating that staff must respect all children’s chosen names and pronouns regardless of age and parental consent status.
Council chairs said the old policy is meant to protect children whose only safe space is school, and school psychologists say denying a child’s request for a certain name or pronoun causes more harm than using it.
The union of school psychologists and social workers is grieving the minister’s changes, alleging they contradict the collective agreement by forcing them to do harm.
Hogan said the goal of his changes is to protect “parents’ rights” to be consulted if their child requests an informal name or pronoun change.
The policy has always made it mandatory to get parental consent for official name and pronoun changes for kids under 16.
Hogan said he’s received “hundreds” of complaints about the policy, though very few have been made public, none of them mentioning the policy specifically.
Who has the power?
The original 2020 version of Policy 713 and the updated version allow district education councils to “develop policies and procedures that are consistent with, or more comprehensive than, this provincial policy.”
Anglophone East, Anglophone South, Francophone South and Francophone Northeast are the districts that reverted to the old policy in late June
Hogan did not provide interviews on this topic at the time. A spokesperson said the department will review the policies created by the councils.
- Parental complaints alleging schools kept pronouns secret ‘do not exist’: Department of Education
- 5 questions answered about the LGBTQ school policy debate
This week, Hogan said he has not yet read the policies, but has read about them in news reports and believes the provincial policy supercedes the council ones.
“District [councils] have the authority to improve or strengthen a provincial policy, but they can’t do anything that is contrary to the provincial policy,” he said.
When asked whether he thinks the council policies are contrary, Hogan said he hasn’t read them, and he’s waiting for the results of a review by the child and youth advocate Kelly Lamrock, expected next week.
Anglophone West and Francophone Northwest councils say they will listen to input from parents before making a decision. Anglophone West has previously said it supports the original policy and any changes made by the province should only strengthen it.
Hogan also said he approves of councils that are still gathering input and more information.
He said the other councils did not send him the policies, and he did not ask for them.

Anglophone East council chair Harry Doyle said he believes the council policy is consistent with 713 because the provincial policy’s entire purpose is to protect LGBTQ children, not parents.
“I respect the parents too,” he said. “But nevertheless, if a kid says that ‘if I go home and tell them about this, I’m maybe not welcomed at home anymore’ … Our first responsibility is to the person sitting in front of us, the kids.”
WATCH | Why this member of the district education council put forward the motion:

Anglophone East council adopts own policy for LGBTQ students
2 months ago
Duration0:54The district education council voted unanimously to ensure students in Anglophone East are consulted before staff talk to parents about names or pronouns.
Doyle, who has been a guidance counsellor, teacher and school principal during his 35-year career, said the council unanimously passed the motion to revert to the old policy because it was 10 years in the making and was done with consultations with experts and school staff on the ground.
“And if [Hogan] says ‘well, it’s the parents,’ I guess that’s where we disagree, really.”
Doyle said when council passed policies that add to provincial policies, the council policies are the ones that must be followed.
Anglophone North council chair Joseph Petersen said his council is meeting later this month. While he can’t say the council will also vote in a different policy, he said all councillors agree that the original policy should not have been changed.
Both Petersen and Doyle said they were “disappointed” that Hogan hasn’t yet read their policies. Hogan said the councils did not send him their new policies, but he also did not ask for them. The Education Act does not explicitly require minister approval for all council policies.
Story and videos can be found on CBC’s website
( https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/new-brunswick/new-brunswick-gender-identity-policy-this-year-1.6933539 )
I think at the beginning of the school year a form should be sent home to the parents of children under the age 16 , that states
The name of Chikd and dies the parent agree on the child changing pronouns while at school .
I thought that once, but quickly realized that the school has no right to know my family affairs. How would a kid feel if trying to come out of his shell, and being denied a fundamental right.