School boards push back as government seeks data on religious symbols
MONTREAL — A Quebec government initiative to determine how many teachers wear religious symbols also extended to include police officers, prosecutors and the judiciary, the minister responsible said Monday.
Simon Jolin-Barrette, Quebec’s Minister of Immigration, Diversity and Inclusion, confirmed that the government has approached school boards, the provincial police and its own Justice Department to ask about the wearing of religious symbols.
“We received a mandate from the population to present legislation on secularism aimed at people in authority like judges, prison guards, police, Crown prosecutors as well as teachers — that they don’t wear religious symbols while at work — and I plan to table a bill in the spring,” Jolin-Barrette said.
“What I did was I asked to find out if the information was available, to know how many people that affects in different workforces. As minister, it was important to know if the information was available and that it be sent to me.”