FINAL OUTCOME OF THE WALKOUT/LOCKDOWN/MEDIA CIRCUS IN WAWOTA: WITH THE HELP OF THE SASKATCHEWAN MARIJUANA PARTY,(and a little help from the rest of the movement and the media)A TEENAGE HONOR STUDENT HAS BECOME A NATIONAL HERO FOR MARIJUANA MOVEMENT, CREATED A NEEDED FLASHPOINT FOR THE SASKATCHEWAN LEGALIZATION MOVEMENT, PUT HIS HOMETOWN ON THE MAP, WON HIS FIRST POLITICAL BATTLE, DEFEATED HIS PRINCIPAL IN A HIGHSCHOOL POWER STRUGGLE, AND MOST IMPORTANTLY, GOT HIS 90 AVERAGE BACK...
This comes at a perfect time, the same month that the lates Angus Reid Poll shows that 55%, of Canadians, including a majority of Saskatchewan residents, support full legalization of marijuana.
CBC News story on Kieran King.
A National Post editorial on the Wawota incident
A Globe And Mail article on the incident
Another Globe And Mail Article
Another Globe And Mail Article
You Tube videos from the Wawota incident.
Protest won't cost Wawota student marks
Saskatchewan News Network; Regina Leader-Post
Published: Saturday, June 30, 2007
REGINA (SNN) -- Wawota's Kieran King may be able to hang onto his honour roll status, despite being suspended from Wawota Parkland School for violating a lockdown.
King, 15, ignored the lockdown and tried to rally students to walk out in support of free speech. He was protesting the order of school principal Susan Wilson to stop talking about marijuana at school.
The debacle has attracted national attention and officials have come under withering criticism for their handling of the walkout and treatment of King.
Now, officials appear to have shifted their earlier position on the matter of King's final grades. He will not receive zero for each final exam he didn't write during his suspension. Instead, the school will award him a cumulative average of his marks throughout the school year.
King is an honour roll student with marks in the 80s and 90s.
(REGINA LEADER-POST)
Views on drugs lead to suspension
Matthew Barton, Leader-Post
Published: Wednesday, June 13, 2007
Kieran King's views on marijuana have led to his suspension from Wawota Parkland School.
King said he was threatened with police action by Principal Susan Wilson previously after making the case that marijuana was less harmful than alcohol.
"In my opinion, cannabis is safer than they say, it is not worse than alcohol or tobacco," said King, a 15-year-old Grade 10 student.
Wilson accused King of using and selling marijuana at school, according to a media release issued by the Saskatchewan Marijuana Party.
King has offered to submit to a voluntary drug test to prove otherwise.
"I've never smoked marijuana. I've never even seen it," said King.
He said he had done independent research on marijuana use out of personal curiosity and decided to share the information with his friends at school.
Feeling his right to freedom of speech had been violated by Wilson, he organized a walkout to begin at 11:05 a.m on Tuesday.
Instead, he said the school was locked down in anticipation of the attempted walkout. Teachers reportedly stood in the doorways threatening punishment for leaving the school.
King and his brother Lucas were given three-day-suspensions for disobeying the lockdown.
Outside the school three members of the Saskatchewan Marijuana Party, one member of the NDP and one protester gathered in the parking lane in front of the school.
They used a megaphone to show their support for King and the students, said Ethan Erkiletian, an executive member of the Saskatchewan Marijuana Party.
Only four students walked out of the school, including King and his brother. The other two students returned to the school to avoid punishment.
"When we asked them why they locked down the school they said we were from outside the community and had a megaphone and might be frightening to the parents and students," said Erkiletian.
Two RCMP officers arrived and observed the walkout. No arrests were made and no charges were pressed.
The group of seven disbanded at 12:30 p.m.
"The main purpose wasn't cannabis. It was the defence of the freedom of speech. I believe we have a right to freedom of expression. I don't believe in vulgarity," said King.
The three-day suspension will prevent King from writing his final exams before he goes to China on a correspondence course. He's to leave Thursday.
The honours student said he will still pass Grade 10 because his marks are in the 80s and 90s. By missing his final exams he will lose 30 per cent of his marks.
"I know my children don't smoke, drink or take drugs," said King's mother, Jo Ann Buler. "As a parent I feel I need to support Kieran but I can see both sides of the issue."
Buler is a teacher and works in the school division which oversees Wawota Parkland School. She said she holds no ill will for the school and believes Kieran and the school have a point of view.
"He doesn't feel he's promoting drug use by talking about it. I don't think he deserves a permanent black mark on his school record," said Buler.
Neither Wilson nor the school division returned calls made by the Leader-Post.
© The Leader-Post (Regina) 2007