Commission Scolaire des Draveurs

Commission Scolaire des Draveurs
Location
200 Boulevard Maloney Gatineau, Quebec
Gatineau Gatineau sector), Cantley & Val-des-Monts, Quebec
Canada
District information
Chair of the board Julien Croteau (president)
Director of education Marcel Bellemare
Schools
  • 24 elementary schools
  • 4 high schools[1]
Budget CA$150.2 million in revenues[2] & $150 million in spending[3] million (2006-2007)
Students and staff
Students 20,000[4]
Other information
Elected trustees
  • Riding 1: Julien Croteau
  • Riding 2: Andrée Sirois
  • Riding 3: Pierre Montreuil
  • Riding 4: Paul Loyer
  • Riding 5: Normand Sylvestre
  • Riding 6: Rachelle Laporte
  • Riding 7: Josée Lavigne
  • Riding 8: Francine Diotte
  • Riding 9: Claude J.R. Monfils
  • Riding 10: Paul Morin
  • Riding 11: Pierre Lefebvre
  • Riding 12: Bernard W. Morissette
  • Riding 13: Richard Quinn
  • Riding 14: Donald Verrette
  • Riding 15: Michel Choquette
  • Riding 16: Michel Parenteau
  • Riding 17: Gilbert Jolin
  • Riding 18: Benoît Tessier
  • Riding 19: Marie-France Gagnon
  • Riding 20: Robert Paquet
  • Riding 21: Diane Charbonneau[5][6]
Website www.csdraveurs.qc.ca

The Commission Scolaire des Draveurs is one of 4 public Francophone school boards operating in the Outaouais region, Quebec. The school board was created in 1986[7] in the old city of Gatineau about 15 years before amalgamation. The board is responsible for primary, secondary and adult schools located in the former city of Gatineau as well as in the municipalities of Val-des-Monts and Cantley located north of Gatineau. Its current president is Christine Emond-Lapointe, a former Bloc Québécois candidate for the riding of Pontiac in the 2006 Canadian federal elections. The general manager is Francois Jette.

The board operates 24 primary schools across the Gatineau sector as well as in Cantley and Val-des-Monts. However, it recent years, they have closed certain primary schools due to lower yearly attendance at those schools.

The board also operates 4 high schools : Polyvalente de l'Érablière, Polyvalente Nicolas-Gatineau, Polyvalente Le Carrefour and École secondaire du Versant and offers transportation to students attending Collège Saint-Joseph de Hull and Collège Saint-Alexandre, the city's two private schools.

It also operates professional and adult formation centres including the Centre de Competence Outaouais and the L'Escale and Nouvelle-Horizon center for adults.

Several councillors of the City of Gatineau were formally or are school trustees at the CSD. Among those included Aurèle Desjardins, Joseph de Sylva, Paul Morin and Luc Angers.

Its motto is : Decouvrir, Grandir, Devenir (Discover, Grow and Become)

Primary schools

Source:[8]

References


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