CBC: Teachers face more punishment

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BC teachers defiant in face of more punishment
Both sides in the British Columbia teachers dispute will be back in the province’s Supreme Court on Tuesday, with the B.C. Public School Employers’ Association seeking stiff fines against the union.

The province’s 38,000 teachers continue to disobey a back to work court order issued more than a week ago. That court also found the teachers and their union in civil contempt.

Special prosecutor Len Doust, who was hired by the province, has decided against initiating criminal contempt proceedings, at least for now. He said Monday he is proceeding cautiously and will continue to monitor the teachers’ conduct.

The comment came as thousands of teachers and other trade unionists marched onto the lawn of the B.C. legislature in Victoria, part of a “day of action” aimed at getting the government’s attention.

The protesters ignored a heavy rainfall, demanding the province negotiate a new collective agreement, and brought the provincial capital to a virtual standstill.

The teachers’ wildcat strike is illegal because the Liberal government of Gordon Campbell has deemed that the province’s schools are an essential service.

But the appointment of a special prosecutor to follow the dispute has further irritated the situation.

“That just made us a little more angry and a little more resilient. And we’re going to be here and walk the line no matter what,” said Joan Ma, who teaches Grades 2 and 3.

Last week the B.C. Supreme Court ordered the union to stop paying teachers strike wages or giving them any other kind of financial support.

Jinny Simms, the president of the B.C. Teachers’ Federation, says teachers want smaller class sizes and accuses the premier of using the courts to attempt to silence the union.

“Teachers want to have their students back in the schools. But we need to have guarantees for our students’ learning conditions and we need to have our rights as well,” said Simms.

The dispute erupted into a wildcat strike after the government passed Bill 12. The legislation forces the teachers to accept a two-year contract with no wage increase.

About 600,000 students are affected by the strike.

But at a news conference Premier Campbell said there is “no excuse to break the law and show such flagrant contempt for the courts of British Columbia.”

Campbell says he is willing to meet with teachers, but he says it won’t be to renegotiate the collective agreement. He says the union must order its teachers back to their classrooms to avoid the possibility of criminal charges.

“I don’t want that to happen. I don’t think anybody will be served by that. But that will be the choice of the courts,” he said.

But Simms says the teachers won’t be bowed. “There is a big difference between breaking the law and having a law designed to break you. We will not be broken.”

Union leaders say they are ready to deal with the consequences of their illegal strike, even if it means jail time.

Teachers say they are determined to continue their job action, in spite of receiving no pay from their union.

“I will eat up all the canned food and frozen dinners in my pantry and visit my mother more often,” said Ma.

Teachers organzations from across Canada at Victoria Rally

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CKNW Radio reports as many as 10,000 protesters gathered at the BC legislature in Victoria in support of striking teachers. Teachers union president Jinny Sims said she and her union will not be broken by the government and what she called unjust laws.

“Mr. Campbell, stop threatening us,” she told the cheering crowd on the legislature lawn. “Stop trying to divide us. It will not work. We will not be broken.”

Campbell said the government is ready to talk class sizes, class composition and wages if the union drops its picket lines.

“We hear that they’ve got concerns,” he said. “We’re concerned about class composition. We’re concerned about class size. We want to solve this problem.”

Campbell said government officials in the Ministry of Labour have been talking with officials in the B.C. Federation of Labour about the dispute, but nothing has been able to start talks.

The government won’t open the door on negotiations until the teachers return to work, but others were suggesting it’s up to Campbell to bend.

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The presidents of teacher’s organizations from every province and territory are in Victoria at today’s rally.

Canadian Teachers’ Federation President Winston Carter says they won’t stand idly by and allow a member organization to be attacked by what he calls a ‘wrong-headed’ government.

“We are afraid, we are scared as a teachers federation that this is just a thin wedge and that other unions and all the public sector groups throughout Canada are going to be in the same boat the next time round if the government of this province gets away with this draconian measures that they’re employing at this point in time.”

When asked whether the dispute could ignite a national general strike, Carter said it’s important to make every public sector group in Canada aware of the BCTF dispute, but it will be up to each organization to decide how to support B.C. teachers.

Thousands rally for teachers at legislature in Victoria

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CHTV Vancouver Island

For video report, click here.

Thousands rally to support teachers

CH News

Monday, October 17, 2005

Thousands rally in Victoria to support B.C. teachers.

VICTORIA (CP) — Striking B.C. teachers and the Liberal government stared each other down Monday, with neither appearing willing to yield ground in a dispute that has kept 600,000 children out of school for more than a week.

A showdown between the government and organized labour grew more likely as up to 10,000 protesters gathered at the B.C. legislature to support the teachers.

Premier Gordon Campbell said the government is prepared to negotiate with the 38,000-member B.C. Teachers Federation, but not when its members are walking an illegal picket line.

Teachers union president Jinny Sims said she and her union will not be broken by the government and what she called unjust laws.

“Mr. Campbell, stop threatening us,” she told the cheering crowd on the legislature lawn. “Stop trying to divide us. It will not work. We will not be broken.”

Campbell said the government is ready to talk class sizes, class composition and wages if the union drops its picket lines.

“We hear that they’ve got concerns,” he said. “We’re concerned about class composition. We’re concerned about class size. We want to solve this problem.”

Campbell said government officials in the Ministry of Labour have been talking with officials in the B.C. Federation of Labour about the dispute, but nothing has been able to start talks.

The government won’t open the door on negotiations until the teachers return to work, but others were suggesting it’s up to Campbell to bend.

“When you put 15,000 or 20,000 people on the (legislature) lawn on a rainy day, it gives it more the feeling of legitimate protest than civil disobedience,” he said.

The government must consider that its attempts to force the teachers to end their walkout have only inflamed the situation, said Zubyk, who has worked for B.C.’s federal Liberals and provincial New Democrats.

“Teachers have been out one day in the 10 years leading up to today and now they’re on Day 6,” he said. “At some point the tough talk’s got to end and they have to find a face-saving way to start talking.”

Teachers went on strike Oct. 7 after the government imposed a contract on them, refusing to obey a Labour Relations Board ruling that their walkout was illegal.

A judge found them in contempt of court and when the teachers stayed off the job she froze their strike pay.

A special prosecutor has been appointed by the Criminal Justice Branch to consider whether to pursue criminal contempt charges against the B.C. Teachers Federation.

Special prosecutor Leonard Doust told Justice Brenda Brown on Monday in Vancouver that he had reviewed the court’s earlier rulings, was monitoring the issue and had decided the strike was “perilously close” to criminal contempt.

But Doust also told B.C. Supreme Court that he would proceed cautiously and would wait for further direction from the court before proceeding further.

The judge said the possibility of criminal court proceedings “has been on my mind.”

She suggested that there could be more discussion of that when lawyers for both sides return to court Tuesday to discuss the judge’s ruling of last week.

The associate dean of teacher education at the University of Victoria said it’s up to the government to take actions that get the two sides back to the negotiating table.

“The government passed the legislation that put them in this place,” said David Blades. “So it might be useful if the government were to say, `I tell you what, let’s get back to the table.”’

The protest at the legislature appeared to be a cross-section of British Columbia society.

Longshoremen wearing union placards stood beside mothers and their children. Young people traded high-fives with teachers.

“I’m just sticking up for our rights,” said Bruce Howe, a unionized forest worker who travelled from nearby Ladysmith to attend the protest.

A teacher at the rally said the number of people at the protest should send a message to the government about whose side the public supports.

“The people have spoken pretty clearly in the polls that they support the teachers and they need to bargain with us fairly,” said the teacher who didn’t want to identify herself.

The crowd filled the legislature lawn and packed the side causeway leading to the building.

Most people carried placards supporting the teachers.

Some of the home-made placards contained messages relaying individual feelings about the strike.

One placard said An Exorcist is Needed in Victoria.

Transit service in at least two Vancouver Island cities was halted as pickets appeared before dawn at bus yards in Greater Victoria and Nanaimo, preventing drivers from reporting to work.

Sims has said from the start of the job action that she is willing to go to jail for her members.

Jim Sinclair, B.C. Federation of Labour president, said a second day of protest was scheduled for Wednesday. He would not say where in British Columbia the protest would occur.
© CH Vancouver Island 2005

BC Teachers strike analysis from The Tyee

TEACHERS’S STRIKE ANALYSIS FROM The Tyee

WHY THE ‘NO STRIKE PAY’ RULING MAY BOOMERANG
By infuriating teachers, the judgment may prolong their walkout. By David Schreck

WHERE ARE OUR ‘GUARDIANS OF PUBLIC INTEREST’?
That’s what my mother and all teachers actually are. By Jo-Anne Dillabough

THE NEW SCHOOL WAR
What’s at stake in the teachers’ strike. By Crawford Kilian

McMARTIN: TOO MANY TEACHERS?
One factor in BC’s conflict may be educator ‘overpopulation’

Unions vow escalating protest…can a general strike be far away?

The Province
Unions vow escalating protest
Labour unrest over the ongoing teachers’ strike is threatening to break into outright war. Today, an estimated 15,000 Vancouver Island Canadian Union of Public Employees members and other public- and private-sector unions are expected to march on the legislature to support teachers.

The Vancouver Sun
BC business council denounces teachers strike
Labour unions are leading B.C. on a “quick road to anarchy” with plans for a large-scale demonstration in Victoria today, B.C. Business Council president Jerry Lampert said Sunday. “We cannot have anarchy and chaos in the province,” he said. “It can only serve to undermine both the economic and social aspects of this great province.”

The Globe and Mail
Labour throws cap into the ring; Public-sector unions plan massive protest in support of 40,000 striking teachers
Thousands of workers will be off the job today protesting against the government’s refusal to negotiate with the province’s striking teachers, with more job action planned in the province tomorrow. The B.C. Federation of Labour and CUPE are staging the massive protest in Victoria in support of the province’s 40,000 teachers who have been off the job since Oct. 7 after the government imposed a new contract on them.

World Socialist Web Site
BC teachers strike poses need for a working-class political offensive
Today’s walkout in the Greater Victoria region and march on the provincial legislature attest to the mass popular support that exists for British Columbia’s 40,000 striking public school teachers and their principled and courageous defiance of anti-strike legislation and court rulings.Unions vow escalating protests
Today’s rally in Victoria is just the beginning, say labour leaders

David Carrigg and Ethan Baron
The Province; With News Services

October 17, 2005

Labour unrest over the ongoing teachers’ strike is threatening to break into outright war.

Today, an estimated 15,000 Vancouver Island Canadian Union of Public Employees members and other public- and private-sector unions are expected to march on the legislature to support teachers.

Bus travel and municipal services will be disrupted and classes at higher-education facilities such as Camosun College, Royal Roads University and the University of Victoria will be affected.

And tomorrow, about 4,000 northern B.C. CUPE workers plan to protest for a day if the dispute is not settled.

CUPE B.C. president Barry O’Neill said: “Our members will go on as long as it takes to get a settlement. We see collective bargaining going down the tube if we lose this.”

About 25,000 CUPE school-support workers have been on the picket lines with 38,000 teachers since the strike started Oct. 7.

The protest rallies are organized by the B.C. Federation of Labour as a first step in an escalating action to pressure the government to settle with teachers.

Fed president Jim Sinclair has said his 470,000 members could escalate their job action if there’s no resolution to the dispute.

B.C. Teachers Federation president Jinny Sims, who planned to march in today’s protest, said teachers will not go back to work until they get a meeting with Labour Minister Mike de Jong.

“We’re still looking for a table with government,” Sims said.

“There’s not going to be a solution until both sides are sitting in the room.”

But de Jong is refusing to meet with the union until they return to their classrooms. And he warned that the escalating job action is a serious threat to society as a whole.

“I hope no one underestimates the seriousness of the situation,” he said last night.

“When you’ve got teachers openly defying the laws of the land, then you’ve reached breaking point.”

De Jong said his office held informal talks with the B.C. Fed over the weekend, but no resolution was in sight. He would not elaborate.

The teachers are seeking a 15-per-cent wage increase over three years, smaller class sizes and more support for special-needs students.

The government recently passed Bill 12, which rolled over the current collective agreement until next March. The move sparked the strike.

De Jong said that, if the two groups do meet, it will be to discuss issues such as class size, not to negotiate a collective agreement.

Teachers are defying a B.C. Supreme Court order that they return to work, and the union has subsequently had its strike fund frozen.

On another front yesterday, business leaders urged the unions to call off the protest and said the teachers must return to work.

“By engaging in this illegal protest, they are sanctioning an illegal strike that is undermining the rule of law by openly defying our province’s highest legal authority, the B.C. Supreme Court,” said John Winter, president of the B.C. Chamber of Commerce.

Business Council of B.C. president Jerry Lampert said that by engaging in an illegal strike, the teachers and other unions are setting a dangerous precedent.

“Organized labour in Canada generally has a good record of recognizing and respecting the law,” he said.

“The B.C. Federation of Labour’s actions mark a regrettable departure from this tradition.”

Around 600,000 public-school students have been kept out of class.

Opposition Leader Carol James said NDP MLAs will attend today’s protest rally.

Today’s protest won’t affect patient-care services, extended care or those with disabilities. Neither will ferries nor prisons be affected. dcarrigg@png.canwest.com

ebaron@png.canwest.com

© The Vancouver Province 2005

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Business denounces protest to back teachers

Jonathan Fowlie
Vancouver sun

October 17, 2005

Labour unions are leading B.C. on a “quick road to anarchy” with plans for a large-scale demonstration in Victoria today, B.C. Business Council president Jerry Lampert said Sunday.

“We cannot have anarchy and chaos in the province,” he said. “It can only serve to undermine both the economic and social aspects of this great province.”

But B.C. Federation of Labour spokeswoman Jessie Uppal said there is “unanimous support” for the protest, which is expected to draw thousands of people, among the federation’s member unions.

The head Canadian Union of Public Employees, B.C.’s largest union, warned the province is in for “many days” of labour unrest.

“We are going to escalate this action” beyond today, CUPE B.C. president Barry O’Neill said in a weekend interview. “We will most definitely be moving this dispute to a much higher level.”

Uppal said the B.C. Fed will announce today plans for further action if the government won’t negotiate with teachers.

Nearly a third of CUPE’s B.C. members — 25,000 of them, including school secretarial staff, teaching assistants and custodians — are off work after refusing to cross teacher picket lines.

“Our members will go on as long as it takes to get a settlement,” O’Neill said. “We see collective bargaining going down the tubes if we lose this.”

Lampert, the business council president, warned “the rule of law must prevail” in B.C.

In a Sunday-afternoon press conference, Lampert joined with leaders of the Coalition of B.C. Businesses and the B.C. Chamber of Commerce to denounce the planned action.

The labour federation urged thousands of unionized workers to walk off their jobs this morning to join a coordinated shutdown of the city of Victoria to protest Bill 12, which imposed a contract on teachers, who then launched their illegal strike. A protest march is expected to begin at 11 a.m., followed by a gathering at the legislature at 1 p.m.

In announcing the day of protest, federation president Jim Sinclair said the action marks “the first stage of action.”

“We hope the government reaches out to do the right thing so we don’t have to make further announcements, but we have prepared a plan should the need arise,” he said in a press conference Friday.

Labour Minister Mike de Jong said Sunday the government will not waver.

“We have an obligation to the law, we have an obligation to the court, we have an obligation not to allow the government of British Columbia to be intimidated into a course of action by a group that, at the moment, seems to believe it is above the law,” he said in a conference call with reporters.

De Jong said there has been “dialogue with the B.C. Federation of Labour,” but would not say who was talking and whether any progress had been made.

He said the government will not speak with teachers until they end the strike, and he expects the courts to get more involved as the dispute lingers on.

“It’s the Supreme Court of British Columbia that the union is thumbing its nose at — that the union is insulting,” de Jong said.

At the business leaders’ press conference, Kevin Evans of the Coalition of B.C. Businesses said the teachers’ strike and today’s rally send a poor message to potential migrants and investors.

“There’s no question this is harkening back to some of the bad old days of British Columbia where instability ruled,” he said, asking people across the province to consider the impact of further demonstrations or strikes.

“Our appeal is that individual British Columbians, union workers, non-union workers — step back, try and divorce themselves from the emotion for a moment and ask themselves a very personal question: As a citizen of this province, what is my responsibility to the rule of law and how should I act according to that?”

John Winter, president of the B.C. Chamber of Commerce, said that in supporting today’s demonstration, the labour federation is “sanctioning” an illegal strike.

“None of us can place ourselves above the law,” he said. “This is an astonishing abdication of leadership by the B.C. Federation of Labour and they need to give very serious consideration to the long-term consequences of the message they are sending and the destabilizing precedent that it sends.”

Lampert said he supports people’s right to demonstrate, but said that changes when they break the law.

“People from time to time feel laws are unjust. They have ways to protest those laws but they do not have the right, in our society, to defy the law. If you start making exceptions you are on the quick road to anarchy,” he said.

“Organized labour, in a sense, is making a mockery of the courts of B.C. right now and we’re saying that that’s unacceptable.”

Evans said he is concerned about this strike and the precedent being set as other unions approach deadlines in their own collective agreements.

“We are going to be having in the spring a number of collective agreements,” he said. “If this sets the tone . . . for what we are in for in the spring this may look small in comparison.”

jfowlie@png.canwest.com

Files from the Victoria Times Colonist

© The Vancouver Sun 2005
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Labour throws cap into the ring
Public-sector unions plan massive protest in support of 40,000 striking teachers
By PETTI FONG
Monday, October 17, 2005 Page S1

VANCOUVER — Thousands of workers will be off the job today protesting against the government’s refusal to negotiate with the province’s striking teachers, with more job action planned in the province tomorrow.

The B.C. Federation of Labour and CUPE are staging the massive protest in Victoria in support of the province’s 40,000 teachers who have been off the job since Oct. 7 after the government imposed a new contract on them.

The B.C. Teachers Federation has been in an illegal strike position ever since the Labour Relations Board and the B.C. Supreme Court ruled against its job action, but the union showed no signs yesterday it was willing to back down from its demands for a negotiated settlement.

With no talks planned, it is unlikely schools will reopen in the immediate future .

BCTF president Ginny Sims and thousands of teachers will join other unionized workers at a Victoria park this morning and then march to the legislature to draw attention to their demands for the government to return to bargaining.

Last Thursday, the B.C. Supreme Court froze the teachers’ federation’s assets and ruled the union cannot give $50-a-day strike pay to teachers on the picket line.

Provincial Labour Minister Mike de Jong has steadfastly refused to talk while teachers continue to break the law.

Canadian Union of Public Employees B.C. president Barry O’Neill said 25,000 members who work in schools have already been out in support of teachers around the province, and he expects as many as 10,000 CUPE members at the rally today.

Those CUPE members in postsecondary education institutes and municipalities could shut down many government facilities and universities and colleges on Vancouver Island.

“We’re going to be out for two real reasons,” Mr. O’Neill yesterday said. “We know what happens in the education sector and we live in every one of the communities across the province. We have children and we understand why teachers are doing this.”

The onus now is on the government to resume negotiations, Mr. O’Neill said. While a settlement is not guaranteed at the bargaining table, refusal to talk guarantees continued job action, he said.

The province’s business community, however, urged workers and teachers to return to their jobs.

Jerry Lampert, president and chief executive officer of the Business Council of B.C., said he felt compelled to step forward and ask workers to respect the law. Labour leaders have often accused the province’s business community of being a mouthpiece for the Liberals, but Mr. Lampert said yesterday that is not the case here.

“Workers should be asking themselves as a citizen of this province, ‘What is my responsibility to the rule of law?’ ” Mr. Lampert said yesterday.

“The business community feels very strongly that, looking ahead, if the rule of law is not respected, it can truly destabilize the province,” he said.

Mr. Lampert said at this time he has no thoughts about what role the government should be playing to ease the standoff.

Kevin Evans, chairman of the Coalition of B.C. Businesses, said it is extremely hard to quantify the short-term economic impact of the job action.

But the province will lose investors and investment opportunities if labour unrest continues for a prolonged period, he said.

The B.C. Federation of Labour had urged the government to initiate negotiations with teachers over the weekend, but when the province failed to reach out, the federation said people should expect shutdowns throughout greater Victoria.

“The government’s move to legislate a contract and take away democratic rights is an attack on all working people,” said Jim Sinclair, president of the labour federation.

Health-care workers, including those in the Hospital Employees Union and the B.C. Nurses Union, are expected to join teachers and other unionized workers in the rally today.

However, it is not expected that there will be any impact on patient services because health-care facilities will not be shut down and workers on shift will remain on the job.

From the line: Surrey/Fraser Heights

Julia MacRae reports that spirits are high on the line in Surrey. Below are photos from pickets at Fraser Heights Secondary School in Surrey:

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Picket line stalwarts at Fraser Heights Secondary School, including students.

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A picketing teacher takes the time to clean up the neighborhood.

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Lorena Duran, Julia MacRae, and Larissa Sampson (daughter of a teacher) show their spirit on the picket line at Fraser Heights in North Surrey.

Julia notes that all that anti-bullying pro D teachers have had is really being put to use!

Strike to hot to handle for Campbell, who flees to Toronto

Campbell flees BC

BC too hot to handle: Gordon Campbell flees to Toronto

TORONTO, Oct. 14 /CNW/ – Various reports indicate that British Columbia’s Premier, Liberal Gordon Campbell was in Toronto yesterday at Queen’s Park, accompanied by a heavy security detail.
It is ironic that the BC premier is in Ontario while his own province needs leadership most. British Columbia Teachers’ Federation are on strike protesting his unjust laws that are flouting international labour law to which Canada is a signatory.
With polls showing overwhelming support for the teachers, Premier Campbell is following the old adage “when the going gets tough, the premier gets going – right out of the province.”
It is indeed ironic that the premier has chosen to leave the province of BC when the students of his province need him the most.
“By refusing to negotiate with the BC teachers, Campbell is showing contempt for public education in the province,” says Ontario Secondary School Teachers’ Federation President Rhonda Kimberley-Young. “We have seen this type of extreme anti-teacher, anti-public education attitude in Ontario’s recent past from the Harris/Eves Tory regime, and in the end, it doesn’t work. Every scrap of educational research indicates that no meaningful reform of education can take place without consultation and dialogue with the teachers charged to implement the reforms.”
“It is time for the BC premier to return to BC, and show both the students and teachers of BC the respect they deserve,” concluded Kimberley-Young.
OSSTF/FEESO, founded in 1919, has 50,000 members across Ontario. They include public high school teachers, occasional teachers, educational assistants, continuing education teachers and instructors, psychologists, secretaries, speech-language pathologists, social workers, plant support
personnel, attendance counsellors, and many others in education.

Workers to walk off job in solidarity

The Province:
Workers to walk off job in solidarity
Thousands of unionized workers in Greater Victoria are expected to walk off the job tomorrow as part of a B.C. Federation of Labour bid to get the government to start talking to teachers.Workers to walk off job in solidarity
LABOUR RALLY: Victoria a ‘first step’

Elaine O’Connor
The Province; with files from The Canadian Press

October 16, 2005

Thousands of unionized workers in Greater Victoria are expected to walk off the job tomorrow as part of a B.C. Federation of Labour bid to get the government to start talking to teachers.

The rally is the first step in a plan of escalating action to support teachers and pressure the government to act, said federation president Jim Sinclair.

“This is only Monday. We are giving the government a very strong reason to sit down with teachers and solve this dispute,” Sinclair said Friday, flanked by 15 union leaders.

Union members plan to converge in Confederation Square at 11 a.m. tomorrow and march to the legislature and rally at 1 p.m.

The walk-out is limited to Greater Victoria workers and will not involve essential-service disruptions. Union members working in hospitals with patients, in the long-term care field, with people with disabilities, in correctional services or on the ferries have not been asked to participate.

The day of protest will fall on the sixth day of the B.C. teachers’ strike that has kept 600,000 public-school children out of class.

Labour Minister Mike de Jong seemed unmoved by the tactic, holding to his promise not to bargain with workers in an illegal strike.

“It is troubling to see other organizations wanting to, and apparently on the verge of, linking themselves and their members to behaviour that has already been characterized as illegal — that is continuing in defiance of the two court orders,” he said.

De Jong said the workers could be disciplined under B.C.’s Labour Code.

B.C. Teachers Federation president Jinny Sims said teachers won’t back down.

“This is one of those principled stands for our teachers and you can see that we have support of parents and students and community members,” Sims said.

Labour unions are not alone in rallying for teachers. More than 200 Lower Mainland high-school students filled the intersection of Broadway and Granville a block from Vancouver School Boards offices Friday, chanting, dancing, waving signs and soliciting a deafening number of horn blasts from passing cars, buses, even fire trucks.

“I’d give teachers everything they deserve,” said Grade 12 Kitsilano Secondary student Pippa Mackie over the din. “They work so hard. They inspire me. What they believe in, I believe in.”

Teachers passing by were buoyed by the support.

“I think it’s fantastic,” said Denise Nereida, a Grade 3/4 teacher at Blair Elementary in Richmond.

“They are the ones that are sitting in the overcrowded classrooms. They are the ones that don’t have enough textbooks.”

Meanwhile, some unions have found creative ways to circumvent the court decision barring other unions to help fund the teachers.

The Federation of Post Secondary Educators set up a “Feed the Teachers” fund to distribute $50 food vouchers on the line.

“We’re not circumventing anything. This is very respectful of that order,” said FPSE’s Cindy Oliver.

“People are certainly able to drop off boxes of doughnuts on a picket line and this is no different.

“We’re giving them the opportunity to take that money and feed their

families.”

Twenty-six school boards have called to repeal Bill 12. The B.C. Retired Teachers’ Association and the Council of Senior Citizen’s Organizations of B.C. have also voiced support for teachers.

© The Vancouver Province 2005