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Hearing over student exclusions for out of school pot-smoking

Author
Jimmy Ellingham ,
Publish Date
Mon, 23 May 2016, 11:36AM
Three pupils were excluded from Tauranga Boys’ College for smoking marijuana, despite doing so outside of school grounds and time (NZ Herald)
Three pupils were excluded from Tauranga Boys’ College for smoking marijuana, despite doing so outside of school grounds and time (NZ Herald)

Hearing over student exclusions for out of school pot-smoking

Author
Jimmy Ellingham ,
Publish Date
Mon, 23 May 2016, 11:36AM

A school’s right to get tough on pot puffing international pupils is under examination today.

Three pupils were excluded from Tauranga Boys’ College for smoking marijuana, despite doing so outside of school grounds and time.

This means the school has no power to suspend under education law, but the school argues the trio – German exchange pupils - were kicked out of class because they breached a contract with the college.

The issue lit up in March 2014, when five boys used the drug one of them had acquired through their home-stay family.

Three were excluded from class, something the International Education Appeal Authority criticised.

But the college argues it was in the right and, at a hearing in the High Court at Wellington today, sought a judicial review of the authority’s decision.

The lawyer for the school board of trustees, Jessica Dickson, said the authority wrongly characterised the school’s actions as a suspension on disciplinary grounds, which is not allowed.

It was instead a breach-of-contract matter between the school and the pupils, whose names are suppressed, and the authority was wrong to say education law overrode that.

The contracts signed by the boys’ parents say the youngsters must abide by New Zealand laws, not take non-prescribed drugs and abide by Tauranga Boys’ College rules.

Ms Dickson said the school board didn’t accept the situation was handled unfairly too, in that two boys weren’t excluded.

That decision was based on “circumstances, including their reaction to the incident and subsequent behaviour” and their risk to others and themselves.

The school board’s application is academic to the three boys concerned, who were now back in Germany.

Justice Rebecca Ellis said she was concerned the school might have breached the boys’ right to natural justice in its handling of the matter, including putting “essentially criminal allegations” to one boy without an interpreter, when the pupil didn’t speak good English.

“I struggle to see how a school can even enter a contract which governs people’s private lives,” Justice Ellis said.

She also wondered why the school didn’t intervene over earlier allegations about the pupils drinking alcohol at a party.

The hearing continues.

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