Mining, Uncategorized

Ryan Land leaves Vale after 8½ years to ‘pursue the next chapter in my career story’

Ryan Land has left Vale after 8½ years.

Land joined Vale, becoming manager of corporate affairs for Manitoba Operations, on May 9, 2011. He spent most of his time with the Brazilian mining giant working in Thompson, with his role growing to include managing organizational design and human resources. He was transferred to Sudbury, Ont. 14½ months ago in September 2018 for an expanded role with Vale as manager of corporate and indigenous affairs for Ontario and Manitoba.

He has also served as chair of the aboriginal relations committee of the Mining Association of Manitoba since April 2013, and as a member of the aboriginal affairs committee of the Ottawa-based Mining Association of Canada since October 2018. He has been a member of the aboriginal relations committee of the Ontario Mining Association since October 2018. As well, Land has been a member of the Manitoba liaison committee on mining and exploration since last June.

Land arrived in Thompson originally in August 2009 to become principal of R.D. Parker Collegiate.

In a public Facebook posting Nov. 14, Land says,”I am officially leaving Vale to pursue the next chapter of my career! I am taking this step without knowing what (or even where – though our first choice is Sudbury as we are thoroughly enjoying it here and the kids are thriving) is next. Even though it was time for a change, it is bittersweet for sure as I am so grateful for the opportunities, challenges and growth that Vale afforded me. I’ve worked with amazing people and from the beginning the company (and a key leader or two – they know who they are!) took a chance on me and allowed me to influence outcomes, innovate and become a champion for the success of others. No regrets, and also no idea what’s next. Yikes!”

Land ends his brief post by wryly quipping, “Another of my favourite quotes is by Emily Dickinson who said ‘The soul should always stand ajar, ready to welcome the ecstatic experience.’ Soul ajar. Hopefully the ecstatic experience covers the mortgage!”

Land posted a similar public message on LinkedIn last week to his one on Facebook.

“As some of you already know, I have left Vale to pursue the next chapter in my career story,” Land wrote. “The move from educational leader to corporate affairs at a mining company was an enriching, challenging and ultimately rewarding career pivot and I am so very grateful for having had the opportunity. I worked with, for and alongside so many remarkable people and the last (nearly) 9 years provided me with a real chance to grow, stretch, collaborate, influence outcomes, build meaningful relationships and work on being a champion for the success of my colleagues, our stakeholders and rights-holders, and the communities we work in and near. Importantly, it afforded me a real chance to deepen my understanding of truth and reconciliation, and my responsibility within it.

“I am not in a rush, but I feel like excited about what might be next. We have grown to love Sudbury and the region and we’d love to stay, but I’m anxious to invest myself as a servant leader in a great organization and I appreciate that the best opportunity may not be close to our current home. I’d love to hear about possibilities and ideas you have for me, so please message me if you have advice, coaching or suggestions.”

His wife, Carmilla Land, has been a registered nurse since 2016.

A number of Land’s former Vale colleagues posted their well-wishes on LinkedIn in response to his departure from the company.

Patti Pegues, mine planning manager for Vale North Atlantic, wrote, “Best of luck Ryan. It has been a real pleasure working with you.”

Said Anuj Agarwal, manager of mines and technical standards, North Atlantic at Vale Canada: “You will be missed. It was a pleasure to know you and work alongside you.”

Whether it is a local day trip travel fall colour adventure to Onaping Falls, near Sudbury, or an international summer jaunt from San Sebastián to Tuscany to Prague to Brussels, Land is well known to friends and colleagues as a bon vivant, who immensely enjoys adventuresome travel, sampling fine local cuisine wherever he lands, and a suitable craft brew to complement the rest.

Before becoming principal of R.D. Parker Collegiate in August 2009, Land had spent the previous academic year in West Africa as principal of the Canadian Independent College of Ghana in Accra, a Canadian university preparatory co-ed college day and boarding school. The Canadian Independent College of Ghana is a licensed sister campus to the Canadian Independent College (CIC), a co-ed university preparatory college, formerly known as the North Wilmot School, which opened in 1964 and is located in Baden, Ontario. It is a member of the Council of Advanced Placement Schools in Ontario.

Land completed one year of a five-year contract in Ghana, but, as was allowed in his contract, resigned from the position for family-related reasons.

Aside from Accra and Thompson, Land was a teacher and eventually a principal in schools in a number of communities, including a Dené community, Leicester in England, rural Saskatchewan, and Steinbach and Winnipeg in Manitoba. He has a masters degree in educational leadership and undergraduate bachelor degrees in education and the arts.

On April 27, 2010 trustees from the School District of Mystery Lake took the extraordinary step of publicly rebuking Land during a board meeting and announced that his probationary status as principal of R.D. Parker Collegiate which would normally be one year in duration, was being extended another year after a unanimous vote by the board of trustees, who had considered the option of terminating Land’s employment, but ultimately decided not to.

Trustees then twice in identical 5-2 splits on Feb. 22 and April 5, 2011, voted to remove him as probationary principal.

Then in mid-June 2011, trustees subsequently fired Land for cause – four months after they had removed him as probationary principal. At a trustees meeting the day before graduation, former superintendent Bev Hammond provided details of an investigation she said she had conducted, which she said found that students had had marks changed without doing remedial work, responsibility for which she later laid at the feet of Land in an interview with the Thompson Citizen. Hammond’s marks-changing investigation focused only on the years that Land was principal.

A year later, the saga, which generated strong feelings and emotions, with plenty of both pro and anti-Land sentiment, and national media coverage, ended when the school board and Land reached a deal, resulting in an arbitration hearing that had been set to begin June 18, 2012, being cancelled. Both Land and the SDML withdrew all claims against each other and ended litigation between the parties.

Land offered his resignation to the SDML June 14, 2012, effective Nov. 18, 2011. The school board accepted Land’s resignation and rescinded his termination.

Two years later, in what supporters saw as a rich case of poetic justice, Land would run for a trustee’s seat in the October 2014 municipal election for school board, where he not only won a seat, but was the top vote-getter among all candidates picking up 2,177 votes.

In between working for the School District of Mystery Lake and Vale, Land worked out of Thompson briefly in the run-up to the 2011 federal election campaign for then Elections Canada assistant returning officer Lou Morissette as a training officer looking after all the inland training for the polls.  A bit earlier, Land had been offered the position of part-time vice-principal of Hapnot Collegiate in Flin Flon, but turned it down, trustee Glenn Smith, chair of the Flin Flon School Division board of trustees, told the Flin Flon Reminder at the time.

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Mining

Ryan Land decamps to Sudbury for new Vale gig

Ryan Land, who arrived in Thompson nine years ago this month to become principal of R.D. Parker Collegiate, moves now to Sudbury for an expanded role with Vale. He joined Vale in May 2011 and has spent recent years as Manitoba Operations’ manager of corporate affairs, organizational design and human resources. Land became Vale’s manager of corporate affairs for Manitoba Operations May 9, 2011.

In an Aug. 27 Vale human resources bulletin sent to employees in Ontario and Manitoba, Angie Robson, based in Sudbury, and manager of corporate affairs and sustainability for Vale’s North Atlantic Operations and Asian refineries, said that Land will be the manager of corporate and indigenous affairs for Ontario and Manitoba effective Sept. 4. Robson said Land will report directly to her.

In between working for the School District of Mystery Lake and Vale, Land worked out of Thompson briefly in the run-up to the 2011 federal election campaign for then Elections Canada assistant returning officer Lou Morissette as a training officer looking after all the inland training for the polls.  A bit earlier, Land had been offered the position of part-time vice-principal of Hapnot Collegiate in Flin Flon, but turned it down, trustee Glenn Smith, chair of the Flin Flon School Division board of trustees, told the Flin Flon Reminder at the time.

Before becoming principal of R.D. Parker Collegiate in August 2009, Land had spent the previous academic year in West Africa as principal of the Canadian Independent College of Ghana in Accra, a Canadian university preparatory co-ed college day and boarding school. Land completed one year of a five-year contract in Ghana, but, as was allowed in his contract, resigned from the position for family-related reasons.

The Canadian Independent College of Ghana is a licensed sister campus to the Canadian Independent College (CIC), a co-ed university preparatory college, formerly known as the North Wilmot School, which opened in 1964 and is located in Baden, Ontario. It is a member of the Council of Advanced Placement Schools in Ontario.

On April 27, 2010 trustees from the School District of Mystery Lake took the extraordinary step of publicly rebuking Land during a board meeting and announced that his probationary status as principal of R.D. Parker Collegiate which would normally be one year in duration, was being extended another year after a unanimous vote by the board of trustees, who had considered the option of terminating Land’s employment, but ultimately decided not to.

Trustees then twice in identical 5-2 splits on Feb. 22 and April 5, 2011, voted to remove him as probationary principal.

Then in mid-June 2011, trustees subsequently fired Land for cause – four months after they had removed him as probationary principal. At a trustees meeting the day before graduation, former superintendent Bev Hammond provided details of an investigation she said she had conducted, which she said found that students had had marks changed without doing remedial work, responsibility for which she later laid at the feet of Land in an interview with the Thompson Citizen. Hammond’s marks-changing investigation focused only on the years that Land was principal.

A year later, the saga, which generated strong feelings and emotions, with plenty of both pro and anti-Land sentiment, and national media coverage, ended when the school board and Land reached a deal, resulting in an arbitration hearing that had been set to begin June 18, 2012, being cancelled. Both Land and the SDML withdrew all claims against each other and ended litigation between the parties.

Land offered his resignation to the SDML June 14, 2012, effective Nov. 18, 2011. The school board accepted Land’s resignation and rescinded his termination.

Two years later, in what supporters saw as a rich case of poetic justice, Land would run for a trustee’s seat in the October 2014 municipal election for school board, where he not only won a seat, but was the top vote-getter among all candidates picking up 2,177 votes.

While his seven-year tenure as Vale’s often public face in Thompson has been marked by substantial downsizing, first announced by the company in November 2010, Land himself has not been involved in  controversies or gaffes, and moves onto his new posting with an able record at Vale’s Manitoba Operations.

Land’s role within Vale that will be based in Sudbury, but he posted on Facebook Aug. 25 that he “will be in Thompson approximately 50-50 over the next few months (with accountabilities in Manitoba in the new role over the longer term).”

While most of the focus over the last year has been on the approximately 187 USW miners and above-ground workers laid off to date with Birchtree Mine being again placed on “care and maintenance” and the smelter and refinery being permanently closed, Land’s transfer to Sudbury is part of a Vale back story on office staff reductions, too, locally, as Thompson is no longer a fully integrated nickel operation for the first time since March 1961, and logically no longer requires the same level of daily on-site support based here in Thompson as a fully integrated operation did.

Mark Scott’s employment, as Vale Manitoba Operations vice-president, ended July 20 as the company has reorganized the management structure for its North Atlantic operations and Asia refineries division and eliminated the position Scott held at the top of the local Vale hierarchy.

Alistair Ross, previously the director of Ontario mining operations, also based in Sudbury, is now in charge of mining operations for the North Atlantic division, including mines in Sudbury and mining and milling operations in both Thompson and Voisey’s Bay.

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Education

Ryan Land and Caroline Winship running for SDML school board trustee seats

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More than 3½ years after the Ryan Land saga began, an afterword of sorts, even if unspoken or acknowledged publicly, is nonetheless being written in bold letters as the former probationary principal of R.D. Parker Collegiate, who now works as manager of corporate affairs and organizational development for Vale’s Manitoba Operations, announced Sept. 13, three days before nominations close, that he is running for a four-year term as a trustee in the Oct. 22 School District of Mystery Lake (SDML) board of trustees election.

The board is composed of seven elected trustees and this is the first election to be held since Land’s controversial firing as principal of R.D Parker Collegiate in 2011. Nominations close at Thompson City Hall Sept. 16 at 4:30 p.m.

On a new Facebook group page, “BLB – Bring Land Back for SDML Trustee!,” Land wrote Friday:https://www.facebook.com/groups/1460946134194226/permalink/1461270204161819/

“I, Ryan Land, just turned in my nomination and registration papers to run for school trustee in the School District of Mystery Lake. I did it because I love learning and I believe in students. I believe in their infinite capacity to learn, create, surprise, excel and inspire. I believe education should be democratic, differentiated, and inclusive, and should consider individual context, culture, and collective impact, and that trustees must be passionate promoters of student achievement and accountability. Like Barbara Coloroso, I believe education should be neither a ‘jellyfish” nor a ‘brick wall’ parent to the children and youth within its care, but rather it must be a reasonable and prudent parent with a ‘backbone’.

“I believe in teachers. That teachers are so often the difference, especially for at risk, high-achieving and exceptional children and youth. I believe in the power of belief and that children and youth learn best when they feel safe, confident, competent and loved. I believe that everyone that comes into contact with students–parent, caregiver, coach, custodian, educational assistant, mentor, trustee, etc.–is a teacher and that we are all career educators. Like Parker Palmer, I believe the loudest lesson we all teach is ‘who we are.’

“I believe in Thompson and in the School District of Mystery Lake. I know we have the capacity to be a flagship school division in the province and that every student can be successful in Thompson. I am proud of everything that we accomplished during my time as principal of RDPC. Being a part of that team was an honour that remains one of most amazing and inspiring professional experiences I’ve ever had, and I miss working with students, families and educators every day. This community showed me that it is capable of great care, and even greater courage. Ubuntu!

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“I believe we are better together, when we lead from and listen with our hearts and our heads, especially where children and youth are concerned. I believe we accomplish more when we focus on our shared values and interests, rather than on positions. I am absolutely encouraged by the fact that Doug Krokosz, Caroline Winship, Janet Brady, Leslie Tucker, Liz Lychuk, and Don MacDonald are also looking to run!

Brady was elected in a byelection Nov. 17, 2011 to replace Valerie Wilson, who resigned and moved to Winnipeg, as a School District of Mystery Lake trustee. Brady easily swept by Julyda Lagimodiere in a 458 to 230 vote cakewalk.

Brady, 60, a Montreal native, is a product of Quebec’s Roman Catholic school system in the 1960s and early 1970s, and a senior instructor at the University of Manitoba’s Faculty of Social Work in the Northern Bachelor of Social Work program here.

A former social worker with Awasis from 1987 to 1990, Brady returned to Thompson in 2002 to teach at the University of Manitoba.

Brady has a master’s degree in social work from Carleton University in Ottawa.

In 1999, she sought the NDP nomination for the riding of Arthur-Virden for the September general election, but lost out to fellow dipper Perry Kalynuk.

She did secure the NDP nomination, however, in the riding of Turtle Mountain where she finished second, losing to Progressive Conservative incumbent Merv Tweed.

Tucker is manager of Northern Region Training and Employment Services here for Jobs and the Economy Manitoba. She was first elected to the school board as a trustee last election in October 2010. Liz Lychuk is the manager of child and adolescent mental health programs and mental health promotion here at the Northern Regional Health Authority (NRHA).

Caroline Winship came to wide public notice several months ago when she tried unsuccessfully to have her son, Colin, who is home schooled, enrolled on a part-time basis in the Grade 6 band program this academic year. The seven incumbent trustees of the School District of Mystery Lake, including Brady and Tucker, decided unanimously May 27 to turn down the request, as the board says it no longer allows partial enrollment of home schooled students. Five years ago, Colin had been permitted into music and physical education classes through partial enrollment at École Riverside School back in 2009 when he was in Grade 1.

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But the board’s position now in 2014 is that home schooled students cannot partially enrol for some classes or activities with SDML, due to the board’s space and funding concerns, because in fairness saying yes to one such request would make it necessary to say yes to them all. There were eight families last academic year who home school their children in Thompson and some of their children, in addition to Colin, had taken part in school district programs in the past, though none have for the past two years.

Winship said last June she has spoken to superintendents at 38 other school districts or divisions, and that only one had a policy against allowing home schooled students to partially enrol and that was because that district didn’t have enough room for all of its own students in its programs.

Winship, and her husband, Jason, asked the board to reconsider their decision, which they did June 24. She presented a 15-page petition, including 324 names of people supporting Colin’s participation in the band program. While many of their petition supporters were from Thompson, many of the other petition signers were from places like Oxnard, California, Las Vegas, Richmond, Virginia, Indianapolis, Phenix City, Alabama, Summerville, South Carolina, Cleveland, Tennessee, Paramus, New Jersey, Panama City, Florida, Vienna, Austria, Cacém-sintra, Portugal, Gauteng, South Africa, Vyshneve, Ukraine and Ranelagh, Australia.

Neither the petition nor the second Winship delegation June 24, however, proved persuasive. “The decision we made at the May 27 meeting remains unchanged,” Brady wrote to the Winships in a one-paragraph letter of response June 26.

The Winships then took their case to provincial NDP Minister of Education and Advanced Learning James Allum, who asked Gerald Farthing, his deputy minister, to review their concerns directly. In his reply to the Winships, Farthing said “the decision to admit the student rests with locally elected school board trustees,” but added he contacted SDML officials and they “have agreed to review their policy regarding the admittance of home schooled children into public school courses and extra-curricular activities.”

In her new Facebook group page, created Sept. 19, “Caroline Winship For School Board Trustee” at https://www.facebook.com/groups/winshipfortrustee/, Winship notes she aside from the recent homeschooling issue, she has also been long well known as a local advocate on autism issues.

“As a local autism advocate and tutor,” Winship writes, “who has accompanied many families into meetings regarding their child’s education, I have seen, first hand, the trials that teachers and parents go through as they navigate the needs of each particular child.

“I have helped educate many EA’s here in town on the latest research and strategies for children on the spectrum and it has become a passion of mine to see every child succeed.

“Being on the school board would just be an extension of that passion.

“I am known, most recently, as the mom who attempted to bring the homeschooling world together with the public school district by having my son admitted into the band program. This is one issue that I could not vote on as a school board trustee due to conflict of interest.”

“I do feel however, that this situation proved to the community that I am a fighter for the underdog.

It showed my ability to work diligently, be well researched in policies and be professional and polite while working with others.

“This recent situation ignited a fire under my feet to make a difference.

“Whether my children are in public school or not.

“Whether they are in band or not.

“Education in our community is a top priority and I want to do whatever it takes to help all students succeed by supporting the staff of Mystery Lake so they can do the absolute best job possible.”

Writes Winship: “I am excited to ‘Be A Part Of The Change’ along with other new candidates that want to form a fully functional and accountable school board for the District of Mystery Lake.

“For those who might not know me,” Land writes on his Facebook group page,BLB – Bring Land Back for SDML Trustee!, “I have a B.Ed. degree with specializations in English and Physical Education, and an M.Ed. in Educational Leadership. I was a long-time teacher and administrator, which included two of the very best years of my educational career as principal of R.D. Parker Collegiate. I am a proud parent of four children who currently attend three different schools in SDML, and my amazing partner Carmilla and I are in our twenty-second year of marriage. Our dog is Kofi.”

Land sets the tone in his new Facebook group page in a comment Saturday, where in response to a thinly-veiled sarcastic comment about another trustee, replies in his comment at 12:59 p.m., “We’ll keep it healthy, clean, positive and constructive.”

Land has already gained some high-profile endorsements for his election bid as a trustee next month.

Wally Itson, who served as a vice-principal under Land and eventually replaced him, wrote Saturday on the Facebook group page BLB – Bring Land Back for SDML Trustee!, “As a educator, I had the pleasure of working with some very good people. As a vice principal, I was fortunate to be part of Principal Ryan Land’s leadership team and I must tell you, it was an awesome experience and I learned a great deal. He is the finest administrator I ever worked with. His knowledge about educating our youth is exemplary. His passion for the success of students is second to none. His work ethic is amazing! I proudly endorse Ryan Land as a candidate for the School District of Mystery Lake.”

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Itson, 63, who retired in June, was named as principal of R.D. Parker Collegiate in 2012. He took over the job of acting principal, which he had previously held briefly during the 2010-11 school year, from January 2012 until August 2012, taking over from interim principal Eric Overall, who came out of retirement for a second time to take on the job after the school district was unable to find a permanent replacement for Land. The “acting” was dropped from Itson’s job title effective September 2012. Itson landed the job after Legacy Bowes Group of Winnipeg conducted a national job search for SDML to fill the job, but in the end board trustees opted to stick with Itson’s local experience, as the district sought to solve the problem of transiency among senior administrators both at the high school and in the district office.

Land also has the support of John Donovan, a well-known R.D. Parker Collegiate figure, who retired March 17 from his encore career as Northern regional director of the Addictions Foundation of Manitoba (AFM) as Eaglewood Addictions Centre here, and Elaine Thompson, who retired as principal of Westwood Elementary School here in June 2013 and now lives in Gimli. Wrote Thompson on BLB – Bring Land Back for SDML Trustee!, Sept. 13:

“Like Wally Itson, I too worked with Ryan Land while I was an administrator at Westwood School. He was an exceptional leader and role model. I was lucky enough to attend principal conferences with him and watched while other administrators in the province networked with him and even nominated him to sit on the provincial board. Unfortunately he was not around long enough to take up the challenge of leading administrators at a provincial level. He was also involved in basketball at RDPC and chaperoned the boys team while I was asked by my coaching daughter, Jennifer Bryan to chaperone the girls on a trip to Flin Flon. At the tournament Ryan was approached by the organizers to ref some games, which he agreed to do. He then had to head to the local Walmart to buy new shorts and runners for the task. When he wasn’t with the boys team he came to watch the girls play, he asked them about their injuries and how they were feeling and he knew them all by name, something my daughter pointed out as being pretty special since her high school principal never knew her name. An awesome man, an awesome educator; an awesome parent (his daughter went to WW) and he’ll be an awesome trustee if given the opportunity. Bring Land Back!”

Trustees twice in identical 5-2 splits on Feb. 22, 2011, and again on April 5, 2011, where a five-member “Concerned Aboriginal Women’s Coalition” – consisting of Jackie Fitzpatrick, Hilda Fitzner, Freda Lepine and Sharon McLeod and Lagimodiere – appeared as a delegation to challenge several of the claims from an anonymous letter distributed earlier supporting Land, and also questioned his commitment to aboriginal students, saying no new aboriginal programs or courses had been introduced during his tenure as principal, voted to remove Land as probationary principal of R.D. Parker Collegiate – with then-chair Rob Pellizzaro, then vice-chair Guido Oliveira, as well as trustees Vince Nowlin, Alexander Ashton, and former trustee Wilson voting in favour both times – and trustees Sya Gregovski and Tucker opposed.

In mid-June 2011 Land was then subsequently fired for cause by the school board – four months after they had removed him as probationary principal. At a trustees meeting the day before graduation, then superintendent Bev Hammond provided details of an investigation she said she had conducted, which she said found that students had had marks changed without doing remedial work, responsibility for which she later laid at the feet of Land. Hammond’s marks-changing investigation focused only on the years that Land was principal.

The bureaucratic soap opera began April 27, 2010 – before Hammond was hired and when Hugh Fraser was still superintendent. Then-chair Pellizzaro, delivered what was described as a “public rebuke” to Land during a board meeting and announced that his probationary status, normally one year in duration, was being extended another year after a unanimous vote by the board of trustees, who had considered the option of terminating Land’s employment, but ultimately decided not to.

Pellizzaro then denounced employees who try to “manipulate the board by influence.” Pellizzaro, elected in 1998, is the longest-serving trustee on the board.

Five months later, just a few months into Hammond’s superintendent stint, the board apologized to Land – without his being present – for discussing his contract status publicly.

Before becoming principal of R.D. Parker Collegiate in August 2009, Land had spent the previous academic year in West Africa as principal of the Canadian Independent College of Ghana in Accra, a Canadian university preparatory co-ed college day and boarding school. Land completed one year of a five-year contract in Ghana, but, as was allowed in his contract, resigned from the position for family-related reasons.

The Canadian Independent College of Ghana is a licensed sister campus to the Canadian Independent College (CIC), a co-ed university preparatory college, formerly known as the North Wilmot School, which opened in 1964 and is located in Baden, Ontario. It is a member of the Council of Advanced Placement Schools in Ontario.

Hammond herself resigned on Jan. 18, 2012 as superintendent of the School District of Mystery Lake, She had been on medical leave from Dec. 13, 2011 through Dec. 22, 2011 and on holidays from then through Jan. 9, 2012 when classes resumed. In an e-mail sent about 5:25 p.m. Jan. 18, 2012 to all School District of Mystery Lake trustees and staff, Hammond wrote:

“It is with both regret and anticipation that I must advise you of my resignation as your Superintendent/CEO of Schools effective immediately. Life has a way of throwing us a few curve balls from time to time and my decision, while not an easy one, is the right one for me at this time both personally and professionally.”

Three months later in April 2012, in an unrelated matter that pre-dated her employment with SDML in Thompson, Hammond reached an out-of-court settlement in her $5.29-million lawsuit against one of her former employers, the Wild Rose Public School Board in Rocky Mountain House, Alta.

Land, who as principal was a member of Thompson Teachers’ Association No. 45-3 of the Manitoba Teachers’ Society, filed a number of grievances through his union against the SDML, his former employer. A five-day arbitration hearing was set to begin June 18, 2012 at the Burntwood Hotel between Land and the School District of Mystery Lake over his dismissal as principal of R.D. Parker Collegiate. However, two days later, on June 20, 2012, the parties issued a joint press release saying Land had offered his resignation to the SDML on June 14, 2012, effective Nov. 18, 2011. The board, Ashton said, as a result accepted Land’s resignation and rescinded his termination. Both Land and the SDML withdrew all claims against each other and ended all litigation between the parties.

The School District of Mystery Lake, citing his “litigation” against them, had banned Land in 2011 from setting foot on any school property or attending any school event, including in his capacity as corporate affairs manager for Vale’s Manitoba Operations, as the job was then called. The only exception was for matters as a parent involving his children.

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