logo
Fenced off and shut out: Elizabeth Ziegler families continue to wait for engineering report

Fenced off and shut out: Elizabeth Ziegler families continue to wait for engineering report

CTV News09-06-2025
The Waterloo Region District School Board says it plans on sharing the findings of a structural engineering report on Elizabeth Ziegler Public School later this week.
Families have been waiting for the report, which they hope will shed some light on the future of the shuttered school.
'It's been three months since the original issue was found and there have been structural assessments that have been happening,' said Ian McDonald, whose daughter used to attend Elizabeth Ziegler. 'The challenge is, we're a few weeks past the deadline that the board set to report on what those findings are.'
Elizabeth Ziegler Public School in Waterloo façade damage
Part of the exterior of Elizabeth Ziegler Public School in Waterloo appeared to be missing on March 4, 2025. (Dave Pettit/CTV News)
His daughter now has to take the bus to Sandowne Public School.
'Sandowne is on the other side of the highway. So, the kids are busing across and will bus again next year,' McDonald explained.
Some of the students are still learning at Elizabeth Ziegler in portables behind the school.
But McDonald's daughter already knows she'll be going to Sandowne again next year, along with hundreds of other students, as the school board has extended the closure of Elizabeth Ziegler.
Elizabeth Ziegler Public School in Waterloo
A fence blocked off access to Elizabeth Ziegler Public School in Waterloo, Ont. on March 4, 2025 due to structural testing. (Dave Pettitt/CTV News)
'It's really the lack of information that's been a problem,' said McDonald. 'I'm worried there's a lack of urgency and accountability in the board and in the trustees at this phase of the process.'
That frustration comes from the fact that a structural engineering report has yet not been released, especially due to concerns about the safety of the building's façade.
McDonald praised the teachers and staff at both schools for making the transition as smooth as possible. The fact that the board missed self-imposed deadlines for releasing the report, he noted, also impacts staff and leaves them in limbo too.
Until Monday, the board had repeatedly said it had not yet received the report from the engineering firm, which was why nothing had been released.
'I think we're already thinking about 2026-27. That's 15 months away. When this originally happened, it was 18 months,' said McDonald. 'But if the issues here are more significant and the school needs to be torn down or otherwise, something that might take multiple years, I think we deserve to know so we can make better plans.'
He also worries about how much money may be spent in the assessment phase and any eventual repairs, and wonders what will be left to make his daughter's school experience a good one upon a return to Elizabeth Ziegler – if there even is one.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Do you speak Yukon English? These researchers want to hear it
Do you speak Yukon English? These researchers want to hear it

CBC

timea minute ago

  • CBC

Do you speak Yukon English? These researchers want to hear it

As research projects go, it sounds pretty skookum. Derek Denis, an associate professor of linguistics at the University of Toronto, is in the Yukon this week listening to how people talk. It's part of an ongoing research project to better understand and document regional dialects of Canadian English. "Right now, the most ... 'accurate' map, dialect map of Canada, it has cut off the territories," he said. "I'd like to change that." His research team is in Whitehorse looking for volunteers to, essentially, shoot the breeze a bit. "We just wanna talk to them, hear their stories, and then later, down the road, do some linguistics with those recordings," he explained. "And we also get people to read a short story, and a list of words as well." Denis says he's long been fascinated by how languages evolve over time, in different geographical areas and among different cultures. "The idea that multiple languages could be related to some long-gone language blew my mind and sparked a lifelong interest in language change," he writes on his website. Now, he teaches about the different ways the English language is used and heard in different parts of the world, from Europe to Africa to Asia. He said the dialects in many regions have been well-studied, but it's a different story in North America. "It turns out linguists know very, very little about what's going on with Englishes in the Canadian North," he said. Denis is not just interested in the quirks of local vocabulary — for example, the way Yukoners might use "outside" to refer to areas beyond the territory — but also things like pronunciation. He cites the linguistic phenomenon of "Canadian raising," which refers to a distinct, supposedly signature Canadian way of saying some vowel sounds (often mocked as "oot and aboot"). "I'm really curious about that, if that's happening up here as well," he said. He admits that a lot of research over the years has involved that most famous Canadianism — "eh" — but after a couple of days in the Yukon, he said he hasn't heard it used much. "Not saying it's not here. I'm gonna be listening out for it," he said. For Denis, the notion of a distinct sort of "Yukon English" intrigues him because of the territory's unique history of settlement. "The migration history here is very different from elsewhere in western Canada, and so those influences are coming together in different ways," he said. He's also aiming to continue his research beyond the Yukon, by studying the varieties of English usage in the N.W.T. and Nunavut as well. In the meantime, he's hoping to hear from as many Yukoners who might be interested in speaking to his team over the next few days. He said people can contact him through his website — but that right now, they're only looking for people who were raised in the territory.

Food forests offer way to address food insecurity and also have fun
Food forests offer way to address food insecurity and also have fun

CBC

timean hour ago

  • CBC

Food forests offer way to address food insecurity and also have fun

Beneath an oak tree lies a checkered blanket and a picnic basket, surrounded by a sea of fruit trees and rows of root vegetables. The St. Mary's Community Food Forest is just behind the community's Anglican Church in Sitansisk, also known as St. Mary's First Nation, in the Fredericton area. People can pick organic, fresh food at any time of day — for free. Andrew Mathis, who runs the food forest at St. Mary's, is organizing a provincewide tour of 17 such gardens, along with Sima Usvyatsov. "A food forest is a diverse planting of mostly food-bearing plants that aims to mimic a natural ecosystem," Usvyatsov says. Mathis hopes people from across the province will visit the food forest in Sitansisk, which is just one stop on the New Brunswick Food Forest Tour. "It's really a food security project," he said. "Not everyone has a front lawn to grow food on, so these community spaces that don't have individual plots really make it very accessible." At St. Mary's Food Forest, Mathis said, you don't have to plant something to be able to harvest. He said members of the community are welcome to grow their own food as long as they don't mind sharing. Growing in the food forest this season is a variety of fruit, including apples, kiwi, peaches, pears, cherries and berries. Vegetables like squash, carrots and string beans can also be seen growing in the garden beds. The food forest even has a heartnut tree, a walnut native to Japan, and is growing bamboo and willow as well. "It's really open to whatever you want it to be," Mathis said of the food forest. "Maybe somebody focuses on medicine … another person focuses on medicine and mushrooms. Somebody else wants to grow mostly chestnuts." Food forests growing in popularity Farther south, on the Kingston Peninsula, Usvyatsov operates Sima's Roots & Fruits, a food forest that sells plants and hosts gardening workshops. Usvyatsov said there has been more awareness about food forests in recent years. "We're seeing more people planting stuff in their own yards, but we're also seeing municipalities plant and run food forests," she said. In June, 30 fruit trees were planted in Fredericton's Wilmot Park as part of a municipal project. The food forest tours will continue until September. Usvyatsov said about 150 people are registered. "I'm very big on community building," Usvyatsov said. "Seeing people learn from each other … is such a tremendous thing." Mathis said the tours are a learning opportunity but are also about access to food. "It's a really great way to provide some food security to individual households but also to experiment and have fun and see what we can grow here." Mathis said. The St. Mary's Community Food Forest is also building a pizza oven, expected to be completed in September. "We wanted to have something that would be able to draw people into this space and use it more consistently than just when certain things are in season," Mathis said.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store