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Current School
Bus Route Information and School Closures















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SECTION AF-R - DEALING WITH
HARASSMENT |
File AF-R
Preamble –
Explanations
Freedom from harassment in the workplace is a fundamental right
of all employees, students, and parents/guardians. The Portage la Prairie School
Division will not condone or tolerate harassment in any form, whether it occurs
on Division property or in relation to Division activities.
Individuals have the right to take assertive action when they
encounter harassment in the learning or working environment. An individual who
believes he/she is being harassed by any person affiliated with the Portage la
Prairie School Division shall follow the procedures herein set forth.
See also: Workplace Harassment section of the Portage la Prairie
Teachers’ Association and the Portage la Prairie School Division Collective
Agreement.
Definition of HARASSMENT
Consistent with the Human Rights Code, and the
characteristics referred to in that code in Subsection 19(2), harassment is any
one or more of the following:
- a course of abusive and unwelcome conduct or comment undertaken or made on
the basis of any of the following characteristics:
- ancestry, including color and perceived race
- nationality or national origin
- ethnic background or origin
- religion or creed, religious belief, religious association or
religious activity
- age
- sex, including pregnancy, the possibility of pregnancy, or
circumstances related to pregnancy
- gender determined characteristics or circumstances other than those
included in subsection (vi)
- sexual orientation
- marital or family status
- source of income
- political belief, political association or political activity
- physical or mental disability or related characteristics or
circumstance, including reliance on a dog guide or other animal
assistant, a wheelchair or any other remedial appliance or device;
[Subsection 19 (2)]
- a series of objectionable and unwelcome sexual solicitations or advances;
- a sexual solicitation or advance made by a person who is in a position to
confer any benefit on, or deny any benefit to, to recipient of the
solicitation or advance, if the person making the solicitation or advance
knows or ought reasonable to know that it is unwelcome;
- a reprisal or threat of reprisal for rejecting a sexual solicitation or
advance.
Harassment may occur in a number of ways. Some examples may be
student by a student, employee by employee, employee by student, student by
employee, visitor by employee, employee by visitor, etc.
Explanation of SEXUAL HARASSMENT
Any repeated and unwelcome sexual comment, look, suggestion,
or physical contact that creates an uncomfortable working or learning
environment for the recipient. It is made by a person who knows, or ought
reasonably to know, that such attention is unwelcome. Sexual Harassment may also
be a single sexual advance, particularly one by a person in authority, that
includes or implies a threat and/or a reprisal after a sexual advance is
rejected.
Some examples of sexual harassment are:
 | unwanted, persistent or abusive sexual attention; |
 | sexually oriented behaviour or remarks which create an intimidating,
hostile, or offensive learning or working environment; |
 | demeaning remarks based on gender; |
 | suggestive jokes about sex; |
 | sexually-oriented verbal "kidding" or verbal abuse; |
 | inappropriate comments about clothing, physical characteristics, or
activities; |
 | leering, ogling, and suggestive or insulting sounds; |
 | unwanted questions or comments about one’s private life; |
 | unwanted physical contact, such as brushing up against one’s body,
patting, grabbing, or pinching; |
 | sexual assault (an offence under the Criminal Code); |
 | subtle pressures for sexual activity; |
 | suggestion or demands for sexual favors; |
 | expressed or implied promise of reward for complying with a sexually
oriented request; |
 | the display of pornographic and/or exploitative pictures, cartoons, and
graffiti in the schools and on other school division premises. This
includes pictures and/or messages on clothing. |
Explanation of RACIAL HARASSMENT
Words used or actions taken in an abusive or persistent manner
by anyone, such that another person is disparaged or caused to feel humiliation
because of her or his race, color, creed, ancestry, place of origin, or ethnic
origin. Racial harassment may be overt or subtle, explicit, or in a disguised
form such as humor or joking.
Some examples of racial harassment are:
 | slurs, gestures, name-calling, innuendoes or taunts about another’s
racial or ethnic backgrounds; |
 | similar remarks about other racial groups made in the presence of another
employee or student; |
 | unwelcome banter, "teasing" or jokes that are racially
derogatory or present stereotypical portrayals of racial or ethnic groups; |
 | displaying racist, derogatory or offensive pictures, materials, or
graffiti; |
 | refusing to study with, work with, or have contact with, an employee,
volunteer, or student in the work/school setting because of her or his
racial or ethnic background. |
The study of other cultures does not constitute racial
harassment.
Explanation of OTHER FORMS OF HARASSMENT
Other forms of harassment include discrimination, (overt,
subtle, and covert) on the basis of gender, sexual orientation, disability or
economic/social status.
Some examples of other forms of harassment are:
 | negative comments about the general unsuitability of an individual’s
or a group’s educational or career goals to which they aspire; for
example, generalizations about women’s "proper place" or lack
of ability in particular areas; |
 | derogatory comments about an individual’s or a group’s moral,
intellectual, economic, or social status; |
 | unwelcome conduct or comment undertaken or made on the basis of medical
circumstances or illness; |
 | unwelcome conduct or comment undertaken or made on the basis of physical
appearance/attributes; |
 | taunting, teasing, criticizing, or demeaning remarks about individuals,
or group members as a category; |
 | individual or group behaviour that is intimidating or threatening; |
 | stalking; |
 | unwanted or persistent invasion of personal space; |
 | bullying; |
 | hazing. |
Where and when do these PROCEDURES APPLY
The procedures apply to, but are not limited to harassment which
occurs:
- at a school or other Division facilities;
- outside of a school or other Division facilities;
- at a school or Division sponsored social function;
- in the course of an employment or school assignment outside of a school
or other Division facilities;
- at an employment or school-related conference or training session;
- during employment or school-related travel; and
- by means of a communication medium (Internet, telephone, mail).
What is NOT HARASSMENT
Consensual banter or romantic relationships, where the people
involved agree with what is happening, are not harassment. Appropriate
performance reviews, counselling, or discipline by a superior or manager is not
harassment.
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