- Source:
Jamaica
Observer
- GANJA-SMOKERS
RETURNED TO MUNRO HIGH-SCOOL
Education Minister Overturns Board's Expulsion Order
THE education minister, Burchell Whiteman, yesterday
confirmed that he overturned the expulsion of five boys
from Munro College for smoking ganja, saying that the
school's board had exceeded its powers by punishing the
students twice for the same offence.
At the same time, Whiteman said that he had also been
swayed by the commitment of the boys not to repeat their
errors "as well as the signs of academic progress
which they have exhibited during their time at the school
this term". "I have sought to balance the
considerations, the well-being of the school and the
well-being and future prospects of the students,"
Whiteman said in a statement. "I urge all
parties to continue to work with these issues held in
balance."
But despite Whiteman's plea for the matter to end, there
was still likely to be a substantial fall-out from his
decision, including the possible resignation of the
school's board of governors, which twice voted to expel
the students.
Laurie Sharpe, the board's chairman, was last night still
considering his options but continued to hold to his
position that the education ministry's decision was a
"slap in the face" of the school's authorities
and sent "a wrong signal to the students".
The five boys were asked to leave Munro, a 145-year-old
high school in St Elizabeth, after it was found out that
they had gone, without permission, to the nearby town,
Malvern, where they bought the ganja ( marijuana ), which
was smoked on the school premises.
When their parents refused to withdraw the boys, they
were formally expelled. A sixth boy who was
implicated was placed on probation after it was
discovered that he had neither smoked the ganja nor left
the compound, although he was with the others.
A caretaker who caught the boys smoking the drug but
tried to extract money for his silence was fired by the
school. Most of the students had transferred to
Munro - one of the few remaining boarding schools in
Jamaica - during the last term from high schools in
Kingston.
The parents took their case to the education ministry for
a hearing last week, and Whiteman, in his ruling, said
that the board had gone beyond the powers it has under
the 1980 Education Regulations.
The board, the minister said, had initially suspended the
boys for five days and then followed up by expelling them
when it could only have imposed one of three penalties
prescribed under the regulations.
The minister commended the board and the school's
principal, Dr Earl Hendricks, for the importance they
attach to the maintenance of discipline at Munro, but
seemed to suggest that in this case they could achieve
their ends without expulsion.
"I believe that the opportunity remains for further
action by the administration, which reflects the
seriousness with which the offences are viewed and
provides a means of correction and rehabilitation for the
students involved, as well as warnings for others who
might be tempted to transgress," Whiteman
said.