Southeast Kootenay teacher suspended for duct-taping student to a chair

A principal from a Southeast Kootenay School District (SD5) elementary school in Sparwood has been suspended for five days after duct-taping a student to their chair.

According to a document from the B.C. Commissioner for Teacher Regulation, Principal Renee Dawn MacCormack gave an employee permission to tape the student to a chair, allegedly to help them focus on school work.

The document alleges that MacCormack was also involved in putting duct tape on the student to attach them to their seat during the 2023/24 school year.

“MacCormack came by some time later and took a picture of the Student’s work, helped to remove the duct tape, and gave the Student a prize for completing the assigned work,” said the Commissioner’s report.

The Commissioner’s report says MacCormack did not initially admit to any wrongdoing.

“After this incident, when the District started an investigation, MacCormack did not say that she was involved, that she told the employee that it was okay to duct-tape the Student to the chair, or that she also participated in duct-taping the Student,” said the report.

Initially, MacCormack was to be suspended for 20 days without pay and re-assigned to a different school, however, she later signed a consent resolution agreement to admit they her actions constituted professional misconduct.

“In the consent resolution agreement, MacCormack agreed to a five-day suspension of her certificate of qualification and to successfully complete the course Creating a Positive Learning Environment through the Justice Institute of British Columbia by March 31, 2025,” said the Commissioner’s report.

The Commissioner considered several factors when determining disciplinary actions against MacCormack.

“MacCormack did not act in the student’s best interests nor treat the student with dignity and respect. MacCormack had a leadership role as a principal and she ought to have known that duct-taping a student to a chair was inappropriate; other staff at the school were aware that it was inappropriate,” said the report.

“MacCormack did not act with integrity when she did not disclose to the District in a timely manner her participation in the duct taping of the Student. This conduct undermines the perception of the profession as a whole.”

Ben Postmus, Diverse Family Roots Society Executive Director, says he was shocked and bewildered to learn of this incident.

“It’s 2025, this should not be happening to our children. We’re talking about the most vulnerable people, and we hand them off to people we’re supposed to trust to look after their needs throughout the day,” said Postmus.

“In this case, they failed miserably.”

Postmus says incidents of abuse undermine trust in schools.

“As a parent and as an organization that supports families that have kids with disabilities, it makes you think: who else is doing this? How many more instances or cases are going on that we’re not hearing about,” said Postmus.

“That points families in the direction of not sending their kids to that environment. This is just another horror story.”


Be the first to know! Don’t miss out on breaking news and daily updates in your area. Sign up to MyKootenayNow News Alerts.

Continue Reading

cjat Now playing play

ckqr Now playing play

- Advertisement -

Related Articles

- Advertisement -

Latest News

Heavy smoke expected across B.C. as wildfire season rages on

British Columbia wildfire officials say late-season heat waves and heavy smoke are signalling a longer and more challenging wildfire season extending into the fall.

Sinixt Confederacy sues BC government over lack of consultation

The Confederated Tribes of the Colville Reservation said it has filed two constitutional challenges in response to the way the province has treated them in the wake of a Supreme Court of Canada ruling.

No critical injuries after incident with B.C. Wildfire Service helicopter

Officials said there were no critical injuries after a B.C. Wildfire Service helicopter made a “forced landing” near Pemberton late Wednesday morning. 

Union, industry leaders push for Canadian-built ferries as summit wraps

The head of a union representing close to 5,000 ferry workers in British Columbia says he is optimistic about the future of shipbuilding in the province after attending this week’s “Made in Canada” summit.

RDKB to consider bringing Trail landfill in-house

At the moment, McKelvey Creek has a mix of staff: RDKB employees are the front-line folks you see when driving across the scales, but contractors do the behind-the-scenes work of compacting, moving waste around, and hauling to other facilities.
- Advertisement -