Alberta law aims to ban ‘ideology,’ non-government flags in schools

Bill 25, introduced in the legislature this week, will prohibit teachers and school districts from promoting or taking stances “social or ideological” issues

On Tuesday, Alberta education minister Demetrios Nicolaides tabled Bill 25, a sweeping “neutrality in education” bill that could result in Pride flags being banned from schools and teachers being censored from talking about “political” or “ideological” issues in the classroom. 

The bill amends the Alberta Education Act with a variety of new clauses and language, particularly around how “ideological” schools in the province can or should be.

School boards would be expected to stay focused on their core responsibilities and avoid taking positions on political or ideological issues that fall outside of their scope,” Nicolaides said in a press conference announcing the legislation.

The law bans schools from flying or displaying flags other than the Canada or Alberta flags, including what teachers display in their classrooms. The bill requires that schools play the Canadian national anthem at least once a week. It also mandates that school boards and teachers not “take positions” on political or ideological issues.

Is a Pride rainbow an “ideological symbol” according to the Alberta government? Is a trans flag? Is a picture of a gay couple? Could teachers get in trouble for displaying any of these in their classrooms? 

We break down what this could mean for LGBTQ2S+ students, teachers and families.

Cody Corrall is Xtra's Social Video Producer. Their work has appeared in BuzzFeed News, TechCrunch, the Chicago Reader, CINE-FILE, Thrillist, Paste Magazine, and other places on the world wide web. He lives in Chicago and speaks English.

Senior editor Mel Woods is an English-speaking Vancouver-based writer, editor and audio producer and a former associate editor with HuffPost Canada. A proud prairie queer and ranch dressing expert, their work has also appeared in Vice, Slate, the Tyee, the CBC, the Globe and Mail and the Walrus.

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