Miss-Delectable
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edmontonsun.com - Alberta- 'School destroyed my life'
Margo Pelkey was afraid to say no to the staff at Edmonton’s Alberta School for the Deaf.
“If I ever said no they would abuse me,” Pelkey told Sun Media through an interpreter. “I was not allowed to say no. They made me say yes all the time.”
Pelkey is a plaintiff in a class-action lawsuit against the Alberta government, which ran the school from 1955 to 1996.
She claims the “systematic” sexual and physical abuse she suffered while attending the school from 1957 to 1970 resulted in a lifetime of mental and emotional suffering. According to the statement of claim, filed Tuesday in Edmonton Court of Queen’s Bench, it eventually led to her developing schizophrenia.
Pelkey, who now lives in New Westminster, B.C., said that because she was forced to submit to the will of school staff, “even after I left school, I always said yes to people and they would often take advantage of me. I was so messed up. School destroyed my life.”
The Alberta lawsuit is the first part of a class-action suit against eight provincial governments for alleged abuses in 12 special boarding schools for the deaf. In all, the claim covers more than 61,000 children who attended the schools from the 1950s to the mid-1990s.
Lawyer Tony Merchant said the alleged victims were easy prey for their abusers because they were only able to communicate through sign language, which was discouraged in the schools at the time because they were trying to teach the children to talk.
“We believe that the problem of non-speaking students made them perfect targets for sexual abuse and that is why it existed in all of the schools,” Merchant said.
Asked if she wanted to see criminal charges laid against the people who allegedly abused her, Pelkey replied, “of course.”
However, Merchant said he won’t encourage any of his clients to pursue criminal charges.
“That just puts the victim through a further horrible process,” he said.
The criminal justice system, he said, is “ill-suited” for treating sex crime victims with compassion and dignity.
Alberta Education spokesman Kathy Telfer declined comment because government officials were still waiting to be officially served notice of the lawsuit.
A statement of claim contains allegations that have not been proven in court.
Since 1996, the school at 6240 113 St. has been run by Edmonton Public Schools, which has nothing to do with the lawsuit.
Margo Pelkey was afraid to say no to the staff at Edmonton’s Alberta School for the Deaf.
“If I ever said no they would abuse me,” Pelkey told Sun Media through an interpreter. “I was not allowed to say no. They made me say yes all the time.”
Pelkey is a plaintiff in a class-action lawsuit against the Alberta government, which ran the school from 1955 to 1996.
She claims the “systematic” sexual and physical abuse she suffered while attending the school from 1957 to 1970 resulted in a lifetime of mental and emotional suffering. According to the statement of claim, filed Tuesday in Edmonton Court of Queen’s Bench, it eventually led to her developing schizophrenia.
Pelkey, who now lives in New Westminster, B.C., said that because she was forced to submit to the will of school staff, “even after I left school, I always said yes to people and they would often take advantage of me. I was so messed up. School destroyed my life.”
The Alberta lawsuit is the first part of a class-action suit against eight provincial governments for alleged abuses in 12 special boarding schools for the deaf. In all, the claim covers more than 61,000 children who attended the schools from the 1950s to the mid-1990s.
Lawyer Tony Merchant said the alleged victims were easy prey for their abusers because they were only able to communicate through sign language, which was discouraged in the schools at the time because they were trying to teach the children to talk.
“We believe that the problem of non-speaking students made them perfect targets for sexual abuse and that is why it existed in all of the schools,” Merchant said.
Asked if she wanted to see criminal charges laid against the people who allegedly abused her, Pelkey replied, “of course.”
However, Merchant said he won’t encourage any of his clients to pursue criminal charges.
“That just puts the victim through a further horrible process,” he said.
The criminal justice system, he said, is “ill-suited” for treating sex crime victims with compassion and dignity.
Alberta Education spokesman Kathy Telfer declined comment because government officials were still waiting to be officially served notice of the lawsuit.
A statement of claim contains allegations that have not been proven in court.
Since 1996, the school at 6240 113 St. has been run by Edmonton Public Schools, which has nothing to do with the lawsuit.

