
Court orders B.C. to pass law giving French school board expropriation powers
VANCOUVER — The B.C. Supreme Court has ordered the provincial government to pass a law within six months providing the Francophone School Board with powers to expropriate private property to build new French-language schools.
The court found that, unlike other school boards in B.C., the Francophone School Board is the only one without expropriation powers despite it having the “greatest need” for new schools.
“Establishing a new school in British Columbia is expensive and surprisingly difficult. Land use is intricately regulated by a variety of public authorities. Suitable land is scarce and a web of institutions, procedures, laws and legal principles touches upon every aspect of the process,” the ruling says.
“Despite what one imagines was the case in the early days of this province’s modern history, in the 21st century, establishing a school is not at all a simple matter of acquiring a parcel of land and hiring contractors.”