The Etobicoke Board of Education was formed in 1949. Around that period the district had over 50,000 students. The board expanded through the mergers of three small lakeside municipalities — the Village of Long Branch, the Town of New Toronto, and the Town of Mimico — to form the borough of Etobicoke in 1967. In its lifetime the district had offered continuing education programs. After an increasing in advertising of the programs, by January 1988 the district's programs had an increase of students. In January 1985 65 secretaries in elementary schools of the district went on strike. At the time the Etobicoke secretaries earned $11.07 hourly or $387.52 weekly, while Toronto Board of Education secretaries earned $11.96 hourly or $418.49 weekly. In April 1990 the district increased its tax rate by 9.9 percent, meaning each Etobicoke homeowner would be paying $130 more in school taxes. At the time, the district had a $202.3 million operating budget. In 1991 the district was attempting to have its early French immersion program closed effective 1992.
Schools
The following schools of the Etobicoke Board of Education were transferred to and remain active with the TDSB
In 1986, 9 of the 10 Etobicoke trustees rejected the Metropolitan Separate School Board or MSSB 's application to lease the Parkview Junior School. The MSSB wanted 400 students of the Christ the King School to attend classes at the campus. EBE had also leased three secondary school sites and five elementary school properties to the MSSB. Since 1985 the MSSB had used a leased Etobicoke School Board building near Bloor Street West and Royal Oak Road, calling it Josyf Cardinal SlipyjCatholic School. The school had Eastern Rite Catholicism classes and Ukrainian language heritage classes. In 1989 the district stated that it planned to close Cardinal Josyf Slipyj in July 1990, when the lease with the MSSB was scheduled to expire, and reopen it as Sunnylea Junior School. The Etobicoke board stated that south Etobicoke neighborhoods have a shortage of classrooms, so it wants to use the school building. Surveys from the board projected that Sunnylea would have 200 students in 1994. Area Catholic residents expressed opposition to the proposal.