Thursday, 30 October 2025

Contact Info

  • ADDRESS: 555 West Hastings Street, Suite #1200 Vancouver, BC, Canada V6B 4N6

  • PHONE: (+1) 604-999-2365

     
  • E-MAIL: info@surreyspeak.com

     

Some Populer Post

Sports

Blue Jays Crush Dodgers 6-1, One Win from World Series Glory

Legendary broadcaster Jim Hughson has been officially inducted into the BC Sports Hall of Fame’s

Sports

Canucks’ Six-Game Slide Ties Franchise Record After Shootout Heartbreak

Legendary broadcaster Jim Hughson, known for his iconic play-by-play calls across hockey, baseball, and the

Sports

Hometown Hero Nina Jobst-Smith Joins PWHL Vancouver

Legendary broadcaster Jim Hughson, known for his iconic play-by-play calls across four decades, has been

Sports

South Surrey Swimmers Make Waves at Zone Meet

South Surrey’s rising swim stars made waves at the regional zone meet, delivering record-breaking performances

Food

Vancouver Food Runners to Host Volunteer Info Session in Surrey

Vancouver Food Runners is hosting a volunteer info session on Nov. 12 at Surrey Libraries

Leaders in Surrey

Surrey Teacher Wins Prime Minister’s Teaching Award

Fleetwood Park Secondary teacher Derek Fournier has received the Prime Minister’s Award for Teaching Excellence,

Sports

Nearly 600 Swimmers Compete at South Fraser Zone Meet

Nearly 600 swimmers from across the Lower Mainland competed at the 2025 B.C. School Sports

Sports

Cloverdale’s New Sport & Ice Complex Ignites Community Excitement

Legendary broadcaster Jim Hughson, known for his iconic play-by-play calls, has been inducted into the

Sports

Elgin Park Orcas Spike into Season with Back-to-Back Wins

Legendary broadcaster Jim Hughson, known for his iconic hockey calls, has been inducted into the

Sports

Vernon Mourns Beloved Referee Darren Zupp’s Legacy

Legendary broadcaster Jim Hughson has been officially inducted into the BC Sports Hall of Fame’s

Sports

Giants Stun Blazers Again With Thrilling Comeback Win

Legendary sportscaster Jim Hughson, known for his iconic hockey and baseball calls, has been officially

Travel

Upgrades to 24 Ave–Hwy 99 ramps move forward in Surrey

Surrey Council has approved moving the 24 Avenue–Highway 99 interchange upgrade in South Surrey to

  • Home  
  • Surrey Schools Launch Tool to Track Classroom Evacuations
- Education

Surrey Schools Launch Tool to Track Classroom Evacuations

Surrey’s District Parent Advisory Council (DPAC), with the Surrey Teachers’ Association and CUPE 728, has launched the Room Clear Tracker to record class evacuations caused by student crises. Introduced during B.C.’s Community Inclusion Month, the tool addresses untracked exclusions in schools and aims to highlight gaps in student support. The tracker complements the B.C. Ombudsperson’s review of exclusionary practices and is available at surreydpac.ca/roomclear.

Surrey Schools Launch Tool to Track Classroom Evacuations

Surrey schools launch a tracker to record classroom evacuations and highlight growing exclusion concerns in B.C.’s public education system.

Joint effort to address overlooked disruptions

In Surrey, the Surrey District Parent Advisory Council (DPAC) has partnered with the Surrey Teachers’ Association (STA) and CUPE 728 to launch the “Room Clear Tracker” — a new tool designed to document instances when entire classes are evacuated due to student behaviour. According to their news release, this move coincides with Community Inclusion Month in British Columbia, signalling the initiative’s commitment to highlight exclusion in public schooling.

Occurrence and purpose of the tracker

A “room clear” refers to an event when an entire class is cleared out because of a safety concern related to a student’s escalated behaviour. The partners describe these incidents as “a growing and largely invisible form of exclusion” in public schools. Until now, such events have not been formally tracked by the Ministry of Education of British Columbia or most school districts in the province. The tracker aims to fill that gap by enabling educators, parents and support staff to self-report incidents confidentially, thereby building an evidence-based picture of how often learning is disrupted, who is impacted and what supports are missing.

Timing and context of the launch

The tracker is now live on the Surrey DPAC website. The launch aligns with Community Inclusion Month, which celebrates full participation of people with disabilities — yet organisers say that in schools, exclusion is happening daily and often goes uncounted. The timing also comes amid an ongoing investigation by the Office of the Ombudsperson of British Columbia into exclusionary practices in public schools, where room clears have not been captured in existing data sets.

Location and participating institutions

The initiative is based in Surrey, British Columbia, involving the local DPAC, STA and CUPE 728. It covers public schools within the Surrey School District and invites participation from educators, parents and support staff across the district. While the focus is local, the partners note that the tool is intended as a step toward a province-wide initiative.

Underlying reasons for action

The launch is driven by concerns that class evacuations leave students, teachers, education assistants and classmates — as well as the student whose behaviour triggered the room clear — in unsafe, stressful situations. The news release argues that these incidents often signify gaps in support for students with complex needs. By making them visible, the partners hope to spur transparency, accountability and increased resources for inclusive education.

Mechanism and next steps

Users can access the tracker at the Surrey DPAC website and submit confidential self-reports of room-clear incidents. The aggregated findings will be made publicly available and shared with policymakers to strengthen calls for funding and systemic change. As the STA’s president says: “A room clear represents a system that has run out of options, not a child who has run out of chances.” CUPE 728 emphasises the need for more support staff, smaller class sizes and resources to create real inclusion. The partners underscore that the initiative is not about allocating blame to students but about illuminating invisible exclusion and transforming Community Inclusion Month into a call to action.

Your voice. Your city. Your news. Stay connected with Surrey Speak.

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

About Us

Surrey Speak is a trusted online news portal delivering the latest updates, stories, and events from across Surrey.
We keep the community informed, connected, and engaged—one headline at a time.

Contact: +1(604)354-8287

Powered by ADGTech @2025. All Rights Reserved.