A B.C. advocacy group says the government needs to take a closer look at how school districts are spending funds designated for children with special and complex needs.
Armstrong, B.C., resident Michael Reynolds’ family had to fund more than $3,000 to send the Grade 10 student on a trip to England with a support worker.
His family already had to pay more than $5,000 for his trip but because Michael was born with a rare condition called panhypopituitarism, he wasn’t able to travel without help.
Advocates are now questioning why the family should have had to raise funds themselves when the government sends hundreds of millions of dollars per year to school districts for special education.
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“Although there’s funding allocated to school districts from the Ministry of Education to support inclusion, it’s hard to really track,” Karla Verschoor, the executive …