Chomedey Polyvalent High School

Chomedey Polyvalent High School (CPHS) (French: l'École secondaire Chomedey Polyvalent) was a junior and senior high school in Laval. Prior to its name change, it was a part of the Laurenval and then later Sir Wilfrid Laurier School Board.[1] It was located at 3200 Blvd du Souvenir in Laval. Its current incarnation is Laval Senior Academy.[2]

Chomedey High
Chomedey Polyvalent High School
Location
Map
Information
Established1962
School boardPSBGSM / Larenval / Sir Wilfrid Laurier
School districtLaval, Quebec
TeamsChomedey Chiefs

History edit

The school was initially founded by the newly created Protestant School board of Greater St Martin in 1962 and was named Chomedey Protestant High school. In 1964 during the time of the creation of the city of Laval and the establishment of regional school boards in Quebec, the school was renamed Chomedey Polyvalent High school[3] and merged in students from the other local high school, in the then St.Martin Parish as well as students from the newly formed Laurenvale school board in the Two Mountains area[4][5]

In February in 1981 an explosion occurred in a washroom at the school, smoke filled the adjacent hallways. Students were quickly evacuated from the building and classes were cancelled for the remainder of the day. Investigators concluded that the explosion was caused by a homemade bomb and attributed motivation as a student prank. The damage was considered minimal.[6]

At the start of the 1983 school year, the senior classes of Western Laval High School (WLHS) and Chomedey Polyvalent High School (At the time part of the Laurenval Schoolboard) were amalgamated into Chomedey Polyvalent High School, thus creating WHLS as a Junior High School and CPHS as its senior counterpart. At the end of the decade, due to the influx of non-Catholic students who didn't qualify for English education in Quebec,[7] the Junior/Senior split of the schools was reversed and WLHS became an English high school and CPHS a French instruction secondary school, then known as "École secondaire Chomedey"[8][9][10]

In 1994, Quebec's Bill 107 was passed,[11] which would dissolve confessional school boards and create linguistic ones. The Protestant and Catholic school boards would convert in the next four years[12] into secular linguistic (French and English) school boards.[13][14] In 1998 the Laurenval school board had to complete the transition to an English school board, while the Catholic school board was able to obtain an extension until 2003, resulting in a student population dynamic which required that one English secondary school in Laval would have to be given up to the Catholic school board. The building containing Western Laval High School was given to the Catholic school board, and the staff and all WLHS students were moved to the Chomedey High building, and it was then renamed to "Western Laval High School"[15][16]

CPHS was home to the Chiefs football team until the early '80s, the football program was re-instated in 2003 after the founding of Laval Liberty High school with the introduction of the Panthers and Junior High Vipers team. The new football program, as well as several others, were implemented as an attempt to curb a high dropout rate among students.[17][18][19][20]

Alumni edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Sir Wilfrid Laurier School Board". Swlauriersb.qc.ca. Retrieved 2019-07-09.
  2. ^ Willy Speeckaert (2015-06-04). "Laval Liberty High School". Swlauriersb.qc.ca. Retrieved 2019-07-09.
  3. ^ "School board mulls high-school reorganization". Newscoverage.org. December 4, 2013.
  4. ^ </ref? "Souvenir Elementary School".
  5. ^ A Meeting of the People: School Boards and Protestant Communities in Quebec, 1801-1998ISBN 978-0773527423
  6. ^ Article "School Bomb Work of Pranksters" The Montreal Gazette February 18, 1981
  7. ^ "Eligibility". www.education.gouv.qc.ca.
  8. ^ Memorandum to WLHS Students April 7, 1998 "Principal's Message" by Leslie R. Harding Principal CPHS/WLHS
  9. ^ "Resultats aux epreuves uniques de juin 1998 par ecole pour les secteurs public et prive et diplomation par commison scolaire" govt of Quebec.
  10. ^ "Opening All the Doors to Success" September 2003 Education Quebec
  11. ^ CELA Rapport: THE REORGANIZATION OF SCHOOL BOARDS ALONG LINGUISTIC LINES BILL 107 An English School Perspective
  12. ^ "Community Besieged: The Anglophone Minority and the Politics of Quebec" by Garth Stevenson ISBN 978-0773518391
  13. ^ education act (Que.), [1993] 2 S.C.R. 511
  14. ^ Constitutional Amendment: Nov. 18, 1997 §93A of Constitution Act, 1867
  15. ^ Memorandum to WLHS Student June 26, 1998 "Last Principal's Message from the "Old WLHS"" by Leslie R. Harding Principal CPHS/WLHS
  16. ^ "MINUTES OF THE REGULAR MEETING OF THE SIR WILFRID LAURIER SCHOOL BOARD HELD ON 1999-05-19". Swlauriersb.qc.ca. Retrieved 2019-07-09.
  17. ^ "Laval Liberty PANTHERS :: CHOMEDEY CHIEFS". www.swlauriersb.qc.ca.
  18. ^ "Laval Liberty PANTHERS :: HISTORY". www.swlauriersb.qc.ca.
  19. ^ "Ray Baillie was a CFL player, author, teacher and avid Quebec historian" – via The Globe and Mail.
  20. ^ "Laval Liberty tackles high dropout rate with football" Montreal Gazette Oct. 2, 2008
  21. ^ "Ray Baillie". justsportsstats.com.
  22. ^ "Author, teacher, former Alouette Ray Baillie dies at age 80". Montreal. 11 May 2015.
  23. ^ "Former CFLer Ray Baillie dies at 80". May 11, 2015 – via www.thespec.com.
  24. ^ "Letter: An appreciation of Ray Baillie | Montreal Gazette". May 28, 2015.
  25. ^ "globeandmail.com: Sage coach became avid Quebec historian". v1.theglobeandmail.com.
  26. ^ "Ville de Laval - Parc Gerry-Dattilio". www.laval.ca.
  27. ^ THE LAVAL SUBURBAN, WEDNESDAY, JULY 10, 2013: Dattilio was Laval’s most celebrated Montreal Alouette
  28. ^ "Dru Onyx - OWW". Online World of Wrestling.
  29. ^ "Rodney Kellman". Discogs.
  30. ^ "Nicolas Macrozonaris". September 19, 2011.
  31. ^ Arnold, Janice (December 12, 2015). "Montreal lawyer is first non-American Bar officer".
  32. ^ Mordecai and Me: An Appreciation of a Kind ISBN 978-0889952669
  33. ^ "A 'senseless' death, but have things changed? Remembering police shooting victim Anthony Griffin | CBC News".

45°33′9″N 73°44′31″W / 45.55250°N 73.74194°W / 45.55250; -73.74194