Dress Code for Halton Teachers
Tuesday Jan 10th, 2023
Oakville Trafalgar High School
Oakville Trafalgar High School
After five months of controversy around the enormous fake breasts that an Oakville Trafalgar High School (OTHS) shop teacher has been wearing to class, Halton school board trustees have ordered a “professionalism policy” to be developed.
The policy, to be delivered by Mar. 1, will outline “the HDSB’s expectations of all staff members, including the requirement to maintain appropriate and professional standards of dress and decorum in the classroom.”
Following a three-hour closed-door special meeting on Jan. 3, trustees unanimously approved the motion directing Director of Education Curtis Ennis to develop the professionalism policy and provide an interim report in February.
Bomb threats, protests and media attention have disrupted the east Oakville high school since September when a gender-transitioning shop teacher began coming to class wearing oversized prosthetic breasts with protruding nipples.
Celina Close, an OTHS parent and spokesperson for the parent group Students First Ontario, says the group is “optimistic that this is a positive step in the right direction.”
Students First Ontario was founded in November by parents frustrated with the school board’s unwillingness to discuss their concerns about the teacher’s attire.
Read more: Put students first urges OT high school parent group
After banding together to hire a local lawyer, they’ve been pressuring the board to address establish a dress code for teachers.
As a minimum, says Close, the group wants to see staff required to abide by the dress code parameters applied to students.
Oakville Trafalgar High School
Oakville Trafalgar High School
After five months of controversy around the enormous fake breasts that an Oakville Trafalgar High School (OTHS) shop teacher has been wearing to class, Halton school board trustees have ordered a “professionalism policy” to be developed.
The policy, to be delivered by Mar. 1, will outline “the HDSB’s expectations of all staff members, including the requirement to maintain appropriate and professional standards of dress and decorum in the classroom.”
Following a three-hour closed-door special meeting on Jan. 3, trustees unanimously approved the motion directing Director of Education Curtis Ennis to develop the professionalism policy and provide an interim report in February.
Bomb threats, protests and media attention have disrupted the east Oakville high school since September when a gender-transitioning shop teacher began coming to class wearing oversized prosthetic breasts with protruding nipples.
Celina Close, an OTHS parent and spokesperson for the parent group Students First Ontario, says the group is “optimistic that this is a positive step in the right direction.”
Students First Ontario was founded in November by parents frustrated with the school board’s unwillingness to discuss their concerns about the teacher’s attire.
Read more: Put students first urges OT high school parent group
After banding together to hire a local lawyer, they’ve been pressuring the board to address establish a dress code for teachers.
As a minimum, says Close, the group wants to see staff required to abide by the dress code parameters applied to students.

Post a comment