Ottawa

School trip to Dominican orphanage cancelled over coronavirus fears

Two Ottawa high schools have had a "once-in-a-lifetime" humanitarian trip to a Caribbean orphanage cancelled over concerns students and staff could contract COVID-19 on their travels.

Grade 12 students were due to depart on 8-day humanitarian mission March 14

‘It should have been our decision’

5 years ago
Duration 0:58
Students Anabelle Price and Léa Roy say they were frustrated and angry that officials at Collège catholique Mer Bleue decided to cancel a trip to the Dominican Republic due to worries about the coronavirus.

Two Ottawa high schools have had a "once-in-a-lifetime" humanitarian trip to a Caribbean orphanage cancelled over concerns students and staff could contract COVID-19 on their travels.

About 20 students from Collège catholique Mer Bleue and Collège catholique Franco-Ouest were scheduled to visit the Dominican Republic over March Break. They were preparing to depart March 14, and return to Ottawa eight days later.

But on Tuesday, students were told their school board, the Conseil des écoles catholiques du Centre-Est, has cancelled all international trips because of the coronavirus outbreak.

In an email, the school board said it decided to cancel all international trips "due to the increase in the number of cases of the COVID-19 virus worldwide," and will inform parents "in a timely manner" if and when travel resumes.

Students raised thousands

Anabelle Price, a Grade 12 student at Mer Bleue, disagrees with that blanket policy, pointing out there's so far just one confirmed case of the virus in the Dominican.

"There is more of a chance of us getting it here than over there, if you compare the number of cases," Price said.

The 17-year-old said she saved up $2,000 to pay the trip to the Dominican, where students were going to volunteer at an orphanage and help renovate a local school. The Ottawa students would also have stayed at the orphanage.

Anabelle Price, left, and Léa Roy, right, said they've been preparing for the trip to the Dominican Republic for a year. (Judy Trinh/CBC)

Price's classmate Léa Roy, also 17, said she cried after finding out about the cancellation. She said the group had worked for more than a year to raise money for the trip.

"We had garage sales, bake sales, selling stuff on our own, going door-to-door collecting cans and selling cheese and bedsheets," Roy said.

Orphanage 'was depending on us'

The students each collected a suitcase full of toys, books and clothing, goods they planned to donate to the children they encountered.

"The orphanage was depending on us for services, our money, our donations. They were counting on us to bring that stuff over there and be there for that week," Price said.

Sylvie Demers, whose 17-year-old daughter was supposed to go on the trip, believes the board should have left the decision to the students. (Judy Trinh/CBC)

Roy's mother, Sylvie Demers, said she's disappointed her daughter will miss out on a "once-in-a-lifetime" opportunity, and said the decision to cancel the trip should have been left to the students themselves.

"These students are in Grade 12. They're very close to the age of majority," Demers said. "They are very mature students who should have been consulted, because they have the full understanding of what's going on in the world."

Officials at the Ottawa-Carleton District School Board and the Ottawa Catholic School Board have met to discuss the impact of COVID-19, and said they'll make a decision about pending school trips soon.