Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - November 13, 2025, Winnipeg, Manitoba
Under the authority of The City of Winnipeg Charter, the Community Committees listed below will conduct PUBLIC HEARINGS for the purpose of allowing interested persons to make submissions, ask questions or
register objections in respect of the application(s) listed below. Information or documents concerning the applications and a description of the procedure to be followed at the public hearings are available for inspection
by calling 204-986-2636 to make an appointment at Unit 15-30 Fort Street, or by visiting the City Clerk’s Department, Susan A. Thompson Building, 510 Main Street between 8:30 a.m. and 4:30 p.m., Monday-Friday,
excluding holidays; or on-line at http://www.winnipeg.ca
CITY CENTRE
COMMUNITY COMMITTEE
PUBLIC HEARING
Date: Monday, November 24, 2025
Time: 10:30 A.M.
Location: City Hall
To participate in the hearing, register online at
winnipeg.ca/publichearings or by phoning 204-986-8270 by
12:00 noon the business day preceding the meeting. You
may also participate in the process by submitting your
comments in writing.
THIS HEARING CAN BE VIEWED ON LINE AT:
https://winnipeg.ca/council/video.asp
CITY CENTRE
COMMUNITY COMMITTEE
PUBLIC HEARING
Date: Monday, November 24, 2025
Time: 10:30 A.M.
Location: City Hall
To participate in the hearing, register online at
winnipeg.ca/publichearings or by phoning 204-986-8270 by
12:00 noon the business day preceding the meeting. You
may also participate in the process by submitting your
comments in writing.
THIS HEARING CAN BE VIEWED ON LINE AT:
https://winnipeg.ca/council/video.asp
LORD SELKIRK-WEST
KILDONAN
COMMUNITY COMMITTEE
PUBLIC HEARING
Date: Monday, November 24, 2025
Time: 10:30 A.M.
Location: City Hall
To participate in the hearing,
register online at
winnipeg.ca/publichearings or by
phoning 204-986-2974 by 12:00
noon the business day preceding
the meeting. You may also
participate in the process by
submitting your comments in writing.
THIS HEARING CAN BE VIEWED
ON LINE AT:
https://winnipeg.ca/council/video.asp
peg.
A4
● WINNIPEGFREEPRESS.COM
NEWS I TOP NEWS
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2025
THERE were 13 disclosures about
teacher-related misconduct — with an
“almost even” split between employer
and public tipsters — during the first
quarter of the year.
Four of the 13 initial cases flagged
to Bobbi Taillefer, Manitoba’s commis-
sioner of teacher professional conduct,
were dismissed, according to a new 16-
page report.
“Remember, it’s only certified teach-
ers that are covered,” said Taillefer,
whose office fields and investigates
complaints.
“This is hypothetical — if a person
made a complaint about a teacher that
was uncertified and not covered by the
legislation, then I would be required to
let them know that this process does
not cover that (teacher) and why.”
Concerns about limited-teaching
certificate holders, such as uncerti-
fied substitute teachers, are dealt with
through the education department’s
professional certification unit, she said.
Uncertified teachers — oftentimes
internationally trained educators in
the process of upgrading their creden-
tials or substitutes without an educa-
tion degree — work in schools across
Manitoba and are in demand in rural
areas with shortages.
While Taillefer
confirmed each
dismissal was
connected to a
complaint made
by a member of
the public, she
declined to share
details because of
the small amount
of data compiled.
She refused to
say whether an
uncertified teacher’s conduct was flag-
ged at any point this year.
Taillefer cited concerns about identi-
fying individuals, including witnesses
and respondents who have a right to
due process. She did, however, pledge
to include information about her first
15 months on the job in her 2025-26
report.
The francophone teacher has served
in various union leadership roles
throughout her 39-year career. She
began her position as the province’s
independent education commissioner
in January.
Taillefer said she’s spent much of
2025 doing presentations to raise
awareness about Manitoba’s new teach-
er registry. She’s met with trustees and
human resources professionals to ex-
plain the online tool, which lists disci-
plinary records of certified kinder-
garten to Grade 12 teachers throughout
the province.
The commissioner said she’s come
to the realization educational outreach
will always be a critical part of her job.
“My office is committed to transpar-
ency and will share more detailed data
in future reports, once a larger volume
of data is available to better inform
stakeholders, partners and the public,”
she wrote in the report.
“However, we are equally committed
to protecting the privacy of individuals
(including students and witnesses).”
Of the nine remaining cases, two
were under investigation and seven
were in the preliminary review stage
as of March 31.
Taillefer is required by law to pub-
lish a report on teacher complaints an-
nually. Subsequent summaries will in-
clude a roundup of findings throughout
the fiscal year of April to March.
The first of its kind report includes
incidents between Jan. 6 and March 31,
as the new disciplinary protocols came
into effect at the beginning of the year.
She has published two “consent
resolution agreements” on the teacher
registry since the report was released.
She has the discretion to call a public
hearing if any allegations are particu-
larly egregious.
These contracts, commonly known
as CRAs, include agreed-upon facts in
a teacher misconduct case and conse-
quences.
The latest one — the first agreement
published entirely in French — de-
scribes a winter incident when a child’s
mouth was taped shut in response to
their disruptive behaviour.
It said music teacher Julien Ho-
chman-Bérard, who signed the agree-
ment on Oct. 22, applied painter’s tape
to a child’s mouth for multiple minutes
after other classroom-management
techniques proved unsuccessful in
January.
The six-page document indicates the
educator had previously used painter’s
tape on his own lips in a humorous way
to encourage students to remain silent
and follow instructions.
Superintendent Alain Laberge said
a “prompt” internal investigation took
place. He confirmed Monday that the
teacher met all conditions required to
return to work in the Division scolaire
franco-manitobaine.
Hochman-Bérard was placed on
administrative leave on Jan. 14. He
served a three-day unpaid suspension
and was required to develop a class-
room management plan with another
teacher in the division. His classroom
was also subject to “regular observa-
tion” earlier this year.
Hochman-Bérard is no longer em-
ployed by the francophone school div-
ision. He now teaches at a different
Winnipeg school division and his teach-
ing certificate is currently in good
standing.
“Let (the registry’s contents) be cau-
tionary tales,” Taillefer said.
The commissioner said her hope is
that faculties of education are showing
pre-certified teachers her new report
and the online database.
She travelled to Calgary earlier this
fall to attend a national conference that
brought together professional regula-
tory body registrars of all kinds.
One of her takeaways was the im-
portance of using “trauma-informed
practice” to assist people who are mak-
ing disclosures, she said.
maggie.macintosh@freepress.mb.ca
MAGGIE MACINTOSH
LOCAL JOURNALISM INITIATIVE REPORTER
Thirteen teacher complaints made in three months: report
RUTH BONNEVILLE / FREE PRESS FILES
Bobbi Taillefer
In one case, teacher taped
student’s mouth shut
;