Dear Honorable Stephen McNeiI,
I write to you today as another concerned parent with a child enrolled in the Petite Rivière Elementary School. I wish to add my voice to the chorus of distressed families and community members concerned with the impending loss of their school.
We are new to this area, having moved here from New Brunswick in 2014, looking for a new life in a rural community, close to Halifax and the beaches of the south shore. I left a career as an academic physician in the teaching hospital in Saint John, and chose a slower, perhaps less prestigious life raising a family and starting a small farm close to Petite Rivière.
One important factor in choosing this area were the educational opportunities in the area. We started with our first child at an independent school in Blockhouse. The school seemed to fit most closely with the ideals we wished to see imparted to our son. Although a wonderful school, sadly our son did not thrive there and after two years we decided to move him to the Petite Rivière Elementary school. It was not without some trepidation that we did this, for we had no experience with the public school system and stories are not always positive.
We are now eight months into Oliver’s first year at PRES and have seen the most wonderful thing happen. We now have a boy who wants to go to school! This may seem like a small thing, but to engage and enthuse a boy like Oliver is no small feat. We know this because we’ve been trying for years. I am so shocked and happy to see my son engaged on so many levels at PRES that I can not fathom how on earth anyone could bring themselves to destroy that type of environment.
This school is a product of its community and a service to the community. This is a community that is young and growing. This is a community that cares about its members, both young and old. This is a community that has increasingly chosen to eschew the fast pace and opportunities of city life. They have chosen to live a life perhaps a little closer to that of a different time, when humans lived in small communities and really knew their neighbours. To support themselves we see interest in farming, the arts and traditional trades, alongside more modern careers supported by high-speed telecommunications. This is a young and growing rural community, a rare and precious gift in a world being increasingly urbanized.
This school serves as a recruiting tool, bringing young families into the area. This school is recruiting young families that are so smart, caring, wise and brave that they are willing to move to rural Nova Scotia to start new lives. These are people who have so much to offer, so many ways to benefit their community and the surrounding area. These are the people you want in this province, if the province wants to improve its future. Take away the school, and you lose some of your ability to recruit into this vibrant community, and you risk this being the first cut that eventually leads to an unravelling of the fabric of the area in ways that been repeated in so many rural communities in rural North America. Indeed, since I started his letter we have had to warn a young professional family of five, moving from New Brunswick to not look at a farming property in the PRES catchment area.
Finally, I should like to put on my public health hat for a minute. As an internal medicine and intensive care specialist, I have devoted over 90% of my career treating diseases that are entirely preventable. That may seem like an extreme statement on the surface, but ask any physician out there and they’ll tell you the same. Yes, the vast majority of all the big killers, heart disease, lung disease, strokes, type 2 diabetes, cancer are all preventable. They do not need to happen, all that suffering and loss is truly preventable, and yet we do almost nothing. It seems evident but the path to avoid these killers is the simplest one we can know. Eat right, exercise, play and raise a family.
Sadly too many of us now do not know how to cook, meaning our children can not learn from us. Not knowing how to cook also implicitly means that one knows little of how truly important food is on so many different levels, how it can impact health, and bring a family together all at the same time. Now we can’t even learn how to cook in school. Why? Ironically because we’re spending our tax dollars treating the very illnesses we could have prevented.
How many of us, in our busy lives, take the time to exercise on a daily basis? Not enough I’ll warrant. How often do we get out and get our kids heart rates up? Not enough I’ll warrant. Like food, not exercising is often associated with a poor understanding of the benefits of exercise. Who knew being fit can impart a 75% reduction in the chance of dying? And now we can’t really teach our kids how to exercise in school. Why not? Oh yeah, we’re still treating all those illness we could have prevented!
Whilst on the subject of exercise (and mental health) let’s think about those kids from the farthest reaches of the proposed school bus catchment, sitting on their enlarging posteriors for a couple of hours a day. How are we encouraging these kids to live healthy, active and community-based lives when we waste so much of their time enforcing upon them an activity known to be bad for your health? We are stealing these children’s childhoods and transforming them into an unhealthy and uninspiring shadow of what they could be living.
Sadly my point about spending all of our money to treat preventable illnesses is all too true. We (yes us, the voting and entitled public) have chosen as a society to focus the lion’s share of our tax revenues on the treatment of preventable illnesses in our latter years. This is sadly short-sighted and selfish. We appear to have forgotten that the generation that comes next is inherently the one where most resources should be put. All of the issues we wish we could see solved in the Canadian educational system could be solved if we to a fraction of a percentage point away from that gorilla we call health care.
Our children should be given a head start, not hindered. With a properly funded educational system, they’d be fit, active and would largely stay that way through their lives. They’d know the value of food, and they’d know how to prepare it, freeing them from the grips of fast or pre-prepared foods. They’d have learned all this in the communities they lived in and would not have to waste hours of their lives in meaningless commutes.
We know today that with the childhood obesity epidemic that the next generation will likely be the first to live shorter and unhealthier lives than their parents. This is the end result of our selfish choices, favouring the previous generation over the next. We should be ashamed of ourselves. We should do all in our power to advocate for our children, for they are us, and in their turn, they will advocate for and nurture our grandchildren. Closing Petite Rivière Elementary school will be another strike against a healthy future for those children and that community.
Peter West