In 1970, 10 local boards came together as the Peel County Board of Education. In 1969, the board served a community of a quarter million residents—20 percent of the population. The newly formed Peel County Board had 50,000 students in 114 schools and an operating budget of $41 million. (2009 annual report) In 1973, the name changed to the "Peel Board of Education," before being changed the "Peel District School Board" in 1998. On September 1, 2006, the school board announced that on Wednesday September 6, 2006, would launch a new website in 25 languages, all spoken in the Peel Region, to help parents who have a
first language other than English.
Directors • John Fraser, –1988, namesake of
John Fraser Secondary School • Bob Lee, 1988–c. 1993, namesake of Robert J. Lee Public School •
Harold Brathwaite, 1994–2002, namesake of
Harold M. Brathwaite Secondary School • Jim Grieve, 2002–2009, namesake of James Grieve Public School • Tony Pontes, 2010–2017, namesake of Tony Pontes Public School • Peter Joshua, 2017–2020 • Colleen Russell-Rawlins, 2020–2021 (interim) • Rashmi Swarup, 2021–present
Book bans In 2023, the Peel District School Board attempted to remove all titles that had been published before 2008 as an "equity-based weeding process". These books were perceived as inherently lacking inclusivity and thus harming students based solely on their publication date. The district prevented these books from being donated and required them to be thrown out. There were plans to remove any book published more than fifteen years ago on an ongoing basis "to remain culturally relevant".
Stephen Lecce ordered the weeding process to be halted from its completion after thousands of books had already been removed. == Peel board logo ==