NWT educators want GNWT to fully fund junior kindergarten

With junior kindergarten rolling out to every elementary school in the territory next year, there are still concerns about where funding is coming from.

RELATED: GNWT to invest near $8.5M for junior kindergarten in NWT

At a public meeting at the legislative assembly Thursday, a handful of educators brought up concerns about implementing new funding when existing programs in NWT schools are ‘historically underfunded’.

Almost $8.5 million in funding will go towards implementing junior kindergarten in the NWT for next year.

Of that, just under $5.1 million is a direct investment into junior kindergarten, while the remaining $3,375,000 will go towards purchasing classroom equipment and making renovations to existing classrooms.

But of that $5.1 million investment, only $2 million is new funding.

The rest comes from the reallocation of existing funds from school board budgets, meaning existing programs could face cutbacks.

“Let’s implement junior kindergarten, but let’s not do it at a cost to the other grades,” said John Stephenson, chair of the Yellowknife Education District No. 1.

“That’s where the additional $3 million would come from,” Stephenson said. “From the other K to 12 grade experience across the Northwest Territories.”

Stephenson says education authorities support implementing junior kindergarten in the territory, but only if the territorial government provides full funding.

“We believe it’s the responsibility of the government to pay for this additional grade of education,” Stephenson said. “And not cause reductions in funding in other aspects of the other grades.”

Scale back on other initiatives

Yvonne Careen also spoke at the meeting on behalf of the territory’s francophone school board.

She says if junior kindergarten isn’t fully funded by the territorial government, it would mean scaling back on some of the initiatives her school board has been working hard on.

“We’ll have to scale back on some of the cultural activities that we provide for our students,” Careen explained, adding that funding they put aside for professional development would also need to be reallocated.

NWT school boards have already incurred significant reductions according to Stephenson and Careen, most notably to the inclusive schooling program for children with special needs.

Careen says that junior kindergarten students are being removed from the funding formula for inclusive schooling.

This means that the GNWT is getting a smaller number of how many students need the program than what is a reality, which in turn means less funding is allocated for it.

“You cannot remove the junior kindergarten students from the funding formula for inclusive schooling because they will need inclusive services personnel,” said Careen.

She thinks the territorial government should wait until finances are in order before implementing more programs to fight over limited funds.

“We would prefer that the new initiatives that are being brought to the table that are costly be postponed to a few years from now when the fiscal situation may be better,” she said.

“We want the GNWT to realize that you can’t implement everything at the same time if you don’t have the resources to do so.”

Despite this, Careen is in favour of junior kindergarten programs moving forward.

“It’s a positive step,” she said. “Is there still room for improvement? Yes. But it’s a positive step in the right direction.”

Continue Reading

You may also like



cjcd Now playing play

- Advertisement -

Related Articles

- Advertisement -

Latest News

Joint Task Force North holding Prospector Challenge 2026

Joint Task Force (North) has announced that they will be conducting Prospector Challenge 2026 on Tuesday, June 16, from 8:30 am to 2:30 pm in Yellowknife.

Extended Health Benefits program open for applications

The Government of the Northwest Territories is reminding residents that the applications for the Extended Health Benefits program are now open for the benefits year beginning on September 1.

YK school’s love of books builds momentum winning $30 K grant for needed books

Students at Range Lake North School in Yellowknife will soon have access to hundreds of new books after the school received a $30,000 grant through Indigo's Love of Reading Foundation. The school was selected from thousands of applicants across Canada. The funding will be used to replace and expand a library collection that school staff say is about 25 years old on average.

Crews make containment progress on Wood Buffalo’s 52,000 ha wildfire

Three new fires were reported in the territory as the wildfire on the northeastern side of Wood Buffalo remains over 52,000 hectares in size. More than 200 personnel and 13 helicopters were deployed in response to the fire over the weekend. While the wildfire remains out of control, officials reported that containment efforts have progressed well on all sides of the wildfire.

Advocates, allies from across N.W.T. march for Frank Gruben and Pride in Ft Smith

The Fort Smith community was joined by allies from Aklavik, Inuvik and Yellowknife for Frank Gruben and Pride this weekend. Ryker Jaxson Lonehardt, who is the festival’s main organizer, began the event in Gruben’s name three years ago after hearing that he was missing. Gruben moved to Fort Smith for studies and was a member of the close-knit 2SLGBTQ1A+ community there. He was was last seen on May 6 2023 and was just 30 years old at the time of his disappearance.