Our History

Our History

The Louis Riel School Division (LRSD) grew out of three different legacy divisions: the St. Vital, St. Boniface, and Norwood School Divisions. In a broad sense, the creation of Louis Riel School Division began in 1998 with the voluntary amalgamation of the Norwood School Division and the St. Boniface School Division. 

Four years later, the Louis Riel School Division was established when Manitoba's premier at the time, Gary Doer, directed a number of school divisions - rural and urban - to amalgamate. This brought together the new St. Boniface School Division with the St. Vital School Division. The new division was named the Louis Riel School Division on February 5, 2002, and officially amalgamated on July 19 of the same year.


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Important Dates

The following are a few key events that have shaped the LRSD over its twenty years of history. 

Creation of LRSD

  • November 8, 2001: Minister Drew Caldwell announces that the St. Boniface and St. Vital School Divisions be amalgamated.
  • February 5, 2002: "Divison scolaire Louis Riel School Division" (DSLR, LRSD) is chosen as the name of the new school division.
  • July 19, 2002: Amalgamation of the St. Vital and St. Boniface School Divisions
  • October 22, 2002: Creation of the first LRSD board of nine trustees following the civic elections.
  • March 2003: School Board adopts the operating procedures and policies for the new school division.

2004-2005

  • November 2004: School Board adopts LRSD's Statements of Mission and Vision and the LRSD motto (2004-2018)
  • January 2005: School Board hires a social research company, Proactive Information Services Inc., to identify the strengths of existing programs and services, and to suggest improvements
  • May 31, 2005: Initiation of a study on overcrowding at Island Lakes Community School, eventually leading to the school's expansion

2005-2006

  • September 2005: It's All About Me partnership with the St. Boniface Hospital Research Centre begins
  • January 2006: School Board considers the findings and recommendation of the Student Services Review.  

2006-2007

  • Opening of the Legacy Conference Centre
  • September 2006: Implementation of a divisional framework for assessment, evaluation, and reporting (AER) after a one-year pilot in eight schools
  • September 2006: Introduction of LRSD's Middle French Immersion Program in Grade 4 at École Julie-Riel

2007-2008

  • September 2007: Creation of the Clinical Services Unit (CSU)
  • October 30, 2007: Official opening of the René Deleurme Centre 

2008-2009

  • September 2008: Implementation of the French Immersion program at École Provencher
  • September 2008: Beginning of the transition for all Grade 9 students from elementary schools to high schools

2009-2010

  • September 2009: Implementation of LRSD's Social-Emotional Learning Framework (SELF)
  • November 2009: Survey on the division's Vision and Mission

2010-2011

  • September 2010: Beginning of LRSD's multi-year literacy and numeracy focus

2011-2012

2011-2012

2012-2013

2013-2014

2014-2015

  • Architectural design plans developed for expansions at Collège Béliveau and Collège Jeanne-Sauvé to help make room for growing French Immersion programming.
  • ASPIRE Program is introduced, offering a fun summer educational opportunity for students in grade 1 - 5. 
  • Transitioned École Provencher to K - 3 and École Henri-Bergeron to 4 - 8 to help grow capacity at Collège Béliveau and better serve the surrounding community.
  • July 2015: Construction begins on École Sage Creek School.
  • School Board makes significant investments in facilities updates and developments, addressing aging infrastructure and population growth in the Division.

2015-2016

2016-2017

  • Division welcomes Elder Jules Lavallee as Elder in Residence and Frank Deer as Indigenous Scholar in Residence.
  • November 2016: Division students create Blanket of Remembrance containing thousands of hand-made poppies for Remembrance Day.
  • January 2017: Division hosts two French Immersion forums with the goal of finding sustainable solutions to overcrowding in the Division.
  • Division offers Immigrant Teacher Education Program (ITEP) for internationally trained teachers that are new to Canada and looking for employment opportunities.
  • June 20, 2017: Division signs Winnipeg's Indigenous Accord.
  • Board invests in significant updates and improvements to facilities.
  • The Special Needs Initiative in eight (8) schools discontinued student specific funding applications and forged a new model to support students with special/additional.

2018-2019

  • August 2017: Provincial government announces that two new classrooms will be added to École Guyot to accommodate growth in French Immersion.
  • September 2017: École Sage Creek School (K-8) opens.
  • The Special Needs Initiative reimagines a new model to support students with special/additional in all 40 schools.
  • Division launches website portal with Treaty Education resources.
  • LRSD launches its first Powwow Club!
  • Division reviews Safe Routes to School planning.
  • May 2018: École Sage Creek School Community Update provides parents with information about managing growth and overcrowding at the school in the 2019-2020 school year and beyond.
  • As part of the initiative to reimagine the René Deleurme Centre's mandate, the Boys and Girls Club of Winnipeg partners with a second school in the Louis Riel School Division.
  • June 2018: Collège Jeanne-Sauvé officially breaks ground on important updates and expansions.

Our Name & Legacy

The historical figure from which our Division draws its name, Louis Riel, grounds our Division in Manitoba's tradition, culture, and history; however, and in keeping with this visionary figure, we strive for progress and innovation. The name for our Division emerged from several suggestions provided by the residents of both communities.

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