By Robert Frank
The Nov. 2 election will be the first time voters get to choose directly by universal suffrage who will get the top job at the school board, whose $274 million in expenditure last year dwarfed West Island cities’ combined operating budgets.
In contrast, the two previous LBPSB heads, Marcus Tabachnick and Suanne Stein Day, were both acclaimed to represent a single school district after no one ran against them during the last school board election in 2007. They were, in turn, elected chair by a vote of just 21 fellow school commissioners—14 of whom were acclaimed.
Eustace, who has attended almost every LBPSB council meeting for the past 15 years, has persistently pressed for reform.
Stein Day told The Suburban that she also intends to run for election. As to her aspiring opponent, she wrote in an electronic mail message that “I have no response to Mr. Eustace’s candidacy. If he meets the criteria set out by the School Elections Act, like anyone else, he has every right to run.”
Quebec school board elections have suffered from voter apathy. Five out of six eligible voters an 13 out of 14 French voters didn’t voter to cast their ballot in 2007.
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