In a letter handed to Maier on June 12, GSSD Director of Education Quintin Robertson said her post was in “direct conflict” with division policies on social media and discrimination, “the Employee Code of Conduct, GSSD foundational beliefs and the core values that our organization upholds.”
“While we respect the rights of our employees to express their opinions outside the workplace, it is essential that our employees uphold the core values of our organization, both professionally and personally. The nature of your social media post is damaging to the reputation of the school division and incompatible with our values and the culture we strive to maintain,” the letter read.
In response to The Epoch Times, Robertson said “privacy laws and regulations” prevented him from disclosing “specific details” about an employee’s work status or discipline.
‘Called Out the School Division’
The letter to Maier also noted that she had “received written discipline regarding an incident of similar nature” in February 2022. Meier said she had posted an article about a graduate who had taken her own life, whose suicide note said that mandates related to COVID-19 were part of what led to her despair.“I called out the school division and anyone who was pushing the vaccine mandates and masking mandates, etc., and I basically said, ‘Shame on all of you, this is a result of what you’re pushing,’” she said.
‘A Target on Your Back’
Nadine Ness, founder and president of Unified Grassroots, a Saskatchewan citizen’s group, publicized Maier’s firing on Twitter.“We are at that point where you get fired for sharing the news,” Ness wrote.
In an interview, Ness said educators not on board with critical race theory or gender politics find themselves increasingly marginalized.
“If you don’t follow the woke agenda you get a target put on your back, and we’re noticing that with a lot of workers in the education system in Saskatchewan. And not only that, a lot of workers in the education system have been perpetrators of targeting people for their personal beliefs,” she said.
Ness said her vocal defence of parental authority has met with opposition from some teachers. She said at least 450 teachers within Unified Grassroots “express concerns to [her] on a regular basis” over ideologies being perpetrated in schools.
“They’re trying to cancel those who don’t match the leftist politics within the school system,” Ness said.
“The school needs to be a place that is non-political, where ideology and agenda are being indoctrinated into our kids. We need to start focusing back on education and not politics.”
Maier said she was a well-liked EA and is unsure what she will do for a career if she can’t continue.
“I love these students. I love kids,” she said.
“I went out of my way to bring them doughnuts. I did so much with them. On recesses I played with the kids. I was so involved with them. I took them for ice cream. I just went above and beyond. And some of my best friends are teachers there.”