David Sweet walks slowly down a snow-covered laneway cutting through the campus of what used to be St. Josephâs Training School, a residential reform institution for boys deemed âdelinquentâ or âunmanageableâ decades ago by the courts.Itâs early January and Sweet, a federal Conservative Member of Parliament, is walking a reporter and photographer through the site of the former school, located in the small town of Alfred, Ont., about 70 kilometres east of Ottawa. It was here that Sweet says he spent three âpainfulâ years between the ages of 13 and 15 in the early 1970s, after being sent to the school for running away from his home in Kingston and stealing a few cars.Sweet, who is the National Conservative Caucus Chair, is now going public with his experiences at St. Josephâs, he says, to lend his voice to a growing number of former training school students telling their stories of abuse. He is also calling for a public inquiry into that abuse. Read More:They say they suffered âcruel and sadisticâ abuse as kids at Ontario training schools â and the government paid them to keep quietClass action suit launched against Ontario over alleged abuse in âtraining schoolsâSweet decided to tell his story after a Star investigation revealed last month that the government has secretly settled more than 200 lawsuits alleging historic sexual, physical and emotional abuse by teachers and staff at provincially run secular training schools. The investigation also revealed that two provincial officials sounded alarms in the 1970s about the abuse, but that the province appeared to have ignored those warnings.Sweet pauses and points at the top floor of the three-storey building that housed upwards of 150 boys at any one time between 1933 and the mid 1970s. St. Josephâs was one of two reform schools for boys operated by Christian Brothers, a Roman Catholic lay order, but funded by the provincial ...
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