Kitchener-Waterloo

School name vote ends difficult period for Sir John A. Macdonald Secondary, says principal

Sir John A. Macdonald Secondary School in Waterloo will soon be renamed, after staff and students are being asked to help choose the name of their new school. 

Schools will no longer be named for individual people

Staff and students are weighing in on a new name for Sir John A Macdonald Secondary School in Waterloo. (Google StreetView)

Staff and students at Sir John A. Macdonald Secondary School in Waterloo, Ont., have until Saturday to select one of five potential school names, drawn from nearly 500 community suggestions, which the Waterloo Region District School Board received in January.  

The choices are:

  • Creekside Secondary School.
  • Headwaters Secondary School.
  • Laurel Heights Secondary School.
  • North West Secondary School.
  • Sugar Maple Secondary School.

After staff and students have their say, the top three choices will be considered by board trustees, who will then make the final decision. 

A committee dedicated to looking at the names of schools within the Waterloo Region District School Board started its consultation process last June. It outlined several guidelines for the naming of new schools.

'People are flawed' 

In addition to Sir John A. Macdonald, Canada's First Prime Minister, schools named for local industrialist  A.R. Kaufman, an advocate of eugenics, and Egerton Ryerson, considered one of the primary architects of the residential school system, are also slated for name changes. 

"People are flawed and we don't want to be constantly renaming things when we discover things about people's flaws," said Scott Piatkowski, chair of the board of trustees for the Waterloo Region District School Board.

And so in the new school naming criteria, developed by the board, schools will not be named for individuals. 

"These are land-based names, largely neighborhood-based names," said Piatkowski.

He said, though the name will not reflect the Indigenous heritage of the region, it does address the community's desire to refocus on the land. 

"We looked at a variety of options for names that were explicitly Indigenous, based in Indigenous languages, but that would have required more consultation," said Piatkowski. "I am hoping that the board can do that for future school naming." 

'A cloud over our school community' 

Principal Vida Collis said the decision closes the book on a difficult period for her school. 

"It has really been a bit of a cloud over our school community," said Collis. "I really do see my role as helping to guide through that process and to come out of the cloud into the sunshine." 

She said, part of that role was ensuring students' voices were heard — a role she said they've embraced. 

"I see the results pour in and the first couple of hours, hundreds of responses. It was fantastic," said Collis. 

It will still be another month until the school has a new name. 

Piatkowski said the naming decision is expected to be on the agenda for the committee of the whole meeting on March 21.

He said he expects a final decision by March 28.