English Montreal school board sues after it’s forced to communicate in French
MONTREAL — Quebec’s largest English-language school board says it is taking the provincial government to court over strict language rules requiring almost all of the board’s written communications to be in French.
Joe Ortona, chair of the English Montreal School Board, said it’s absurd that employees of an English-language institution have to write to each other in French. He said Wednesday that the board will file a motion this week in Quebec Superior Court to suspend certain elements of the language law.
“If a teacher is addressing parents about an issue with their child, they’re expected to write in French; if a principal is writing to their staff, they have to write in French; if (board members) are writing to each other about anything — an upcoming meeting, agenda items — they’re expected to do that in French,” he said.
While the use of English — in addition to French — remains allowed, Ortona said the rules will force employees to waste time writing emails in two languages. Some teachers and board employees might not speak French, he added.


