Rally in support of BCTF

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Approximately 5,000 people gathered at Canada Place in downtown Vancouver this afternoon for a high-sprited rally in support of the striking BC teachers. The Vancouver rally was one of 18 demonstrations in support of teachers taking place across British Columbia today and tomorrow.

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The rally, sponsored by the British Columbia Labour Federation, included a strong showing of support of workers from other sectors including the CUPE, Longshoremen, IBEW, Hospital Employee’s Union, BC Government and Services Employees’ Union, Telecommunications Workers Union (and others), as well many parents, and students.

Speakers included BCTF President Jinny Sims, BC Federation of Labour President Jim Sinclair, CUPE President Barry O’Neill, Canadian Federation of Teachers President Winston Carter, Vancouver School Board Trustee Allan Wong, and parent Annie Ehman (among others).

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Speeches focused on the provincial government’s failure to negotiate with teachers and it’s assault on collective bargaining through anti-worker legislation.

Throughout the rally there were repeated calls from the demonstrators for a general strike. News 1130 radio in Vancouver is reporting that “some unions are now talking about the idea of a general strike to support teachers in their fight. This would, in the opinion of many at the rally, bring the province to a standstill and hopefully get the government back to the bargaining table.”

BC teachers strike continues despite court order

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Global BC:
Teacher rallies planned across BC
Rallies were scheduled in 16 communities across B.C. Tuesday to support striking teachers.

Vancouver Sun:
Teachers’ strike impasse; Who’s going to blink
Students across B.C. will not be in class today and could remain out of school for the foreseeable future as the union representing striking public school teachers continues to lock horns with the province in an increasingly bitter labour dispute.

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The Globe & Mail:
BC teachers stay out despite court order
British Columbia public school teachers remained off the job Tuesday despite a weekend court ruling that found the striking workers in contempt for not abiding by an order to go back to work.

BC minister rebukes teachers over strike
Labour Minister Mike de Jong talked tough and preached morality to striking teachers yesterday, saying they’ve got some explaining to do to students about why they’re defying the law.

The Tyee:
IS JINNY SIMS GOING TO JAIL? What the courts have said about leaders of ‘illegal strikes.’ By David Schreck

WHY I’M A PARENT WHO SUPPORTS THE TEACHERS’ STRIKE; It’s a ‘teaching moment’ for all of us. By Gabriel Yiu

MAIR: UNTANGLE LIBS AND BCTF; Change a losing game. Try compulsive arbitration.

Vancouver Sun

Teachers’ strike impasse
Who is going to blink?

Darah Hansen
Vancouver Sun

October 11, 2005

Students across B.C. will not be in class today and could remain out of school for the foreseeable future as the union representing striking public school teachers continues to lock horns with the province in an increasingly bitter labour dispute.

Labour Minister Mike de Jong took a hard line Monday, saying he will not meet with members of the teachers’ union while its members remain off the job, in contravention of a ruling by the B.C. Supreme Court Sunday that found striking teachers in contempt of a Labour Relations Board order.

“The next step is for the union to rethink its position, stop breaking the law and go back to work,” de Jong said in a telephone conference with media representatives.

De Jong said the provincial government has done what it can to bring a resolution to the current labour dispute with teachers, from legislating a contract to end stalemated negotiations, hiring a mediator to come up with a workable bargaining structure for future teacher-government talks, and creating an education forum where issues such as class size and composition can be discussed.

There are no new plans to offer any solutions to end the dispute, de Jong said, adding the matter is now between the teachers and the courts.

“It’s not really about the government any more. It’s about the law,” de Jong said. “There has been an [LRB] order made, there’s been a contempt order made. And so this really does become, for the union and for the union’s membership, about obeying or continuing to disregard the Supreme Court of British Columbia.

“I’ve said this in the past: It’s a hell of an example for teachers to be presenting for students or our children. Madam Justice [Brenda Brown] herself said [in Sunday’s ruling that] in a society built around the principle of the rule of law, you don’t get to pick and choose, because if that’s how we’re going to run this thing, then we are one step away from anarchy,” de Jong said.

In response, Jinny Sims, president of the B.C. Teachers’ Federation, called de Jong’s statements “perplexing.”

“As late as yesterday afternoon, I had a cordial conversation with him and we once again invited him to a table and we are still waiting for a response. And again, this government has decided to respond through a press conference,” Sims said.

But de Jong told reporters Monday the telephone conversation did nothing but allow both sides to reiterate their opposing positions.

Contrary to the minister’s statement, Sims said, teachers feel it is the government’s responsibility to try to settle the dispute.

“Our protest is against the government,” Sims said. “They are the ones who set the mandate for [the B.C. Public School Employers’ Association], they are the ones who stripped our contract in 2002. They are the ones who took away our bargaining rights. They are the ones who imposed the essential services legislation. And they are the ones who have now introduced Bill 12, imposing through the legislation an agreement that further attacks our rights as working people and does nothing to address our students’ learning conditions. And now they are pretending they have no responsibility.

“Our dispute right now, the reason our teachers are out, is to protest an unjust law. It’s a political protest against the action of this government,” she said.

Because of these reasons, Sims said, it’s important the two sides sit down and hammer out some solutions.

Teachers have stated they will continue to defy Sunday’s B.C. Supreme Court order and continue to picket outside schools until the province agrees to sit down and negotiate a mutually agreeable contract that addresses their concerns over class size, class composition and wages.

Teachers and their employers, the BCPSEA, are scheduled to meet today as the Labour Relations Board hears an appeal of an Oct. 6 order that declared the teachers’ strike to be illegal under essential services legislation.

The only other meetings scheduled between the disputing parties is on Thursday when a B.C. Supreme Court judge will rule on the level of penalties to be levied against the union following the contempt ruling Sunday. The union is expected to be hit with stiff fines for every day its members continue to defy the law.

According to figures provided by the BCPSEA, teachers are currently earning $50 a day while walking the picket line, costing the union approximately $2 million a day in strike pay.

Various labour rallies in support of the teachers are planned to take place later today across the province. In Vancouver, the rally will be held at 5:30 p.m. at Canada Place. In Victoria, a rally is scheduled at 5 p.m. at the Greater Victoria school board office.

dahansen@png.canwest.com

© The Vancouver Sun 2005
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B.C. teachers stay out despite court order
By TERRY WEBER
Tuesday, October 11, 2005 Posted at 1:52 PM EDT
Globe and Mail Update

British Columbia public school teachers remained off the job Tuesday despite a weekend court ruling that found the striking workers in contempt for not abiding by an order to go back to work.

Classes have been cancelled in British Columbia since Friday, when teachers walked out to protest against legislation that would have forced them to accept a two-year contract that they say offers no pay increase and few improvements in working conditions.

The province’s 42,000 teachers have said they will stay off the job until their concerns are addressed. The B.C. Teachers Federation is expected to go back before the provincial labour board, asking it to reconsider an order labelling the job action an illegal strike.

That decision was upheld in a weekend B.C. Supreme Court decision, which found the union and its members were in contempt of court for not returning to work.

B.C. Supreme Court Justice Nancy Brown, who delivered the contempt order, is to rule Thursday on what penalties the union will face for defying the decision. Last year, the B.C. Hospital Employees’ Union was fined $150,000 a day after being found in contempt when members picketed hospitals in the province.

The union has been told to produce its financial statements at the hearing.

B.C. Labour Minister Mike de Jong, meanwhile, called on striking teachers to abide by the order and said the province will not negotiate with the union as long as it continues to defy the ruling.

“There has been an order made,” he said. “There has been a contempt order made.

“So this really does become, for the union and for the union’s membership, a question of obeying or continuing to disregard the Supreme Court of British Columbia.”

B.C. Teachers’ Federation president Jinny Sims, however, blamed the standoff on the province.

“This is the government that has created this crisis and has forced the teachers of the province to take part in civil disobedience against an unjust law and now they don’t just get to sit on the sidelines and watch,” Ms. Sims said.

“This is not the time to make those kind of grandiose statements. This is the time to get to a table and to find solutions.”

Public school teachers in British Columbia have been without a contract since June, 2004.

The government says other public-sector workers have accepted contracts with no wage increases.

The teachers have argued that, while they want a fair wage increase, their big issue is getting negotiations on class size back into their collective agreement.

Teachers lost the ability to negotiate class size and composition in 2002 when the government imposed its last settlement.

In some communities, students were preparing to join their teachers on the picket lines.

In Tappen, a group of Carlin Elementary School students were making signs and preparing to take apples to their teachers.

“They hope that if kids at other schools do the same thing for their teachers, it will send a message to the government that education is important,” Mae Wandinger, president of the school’s parent council, said in an email.

With reports from Canadian Press
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Globe and Mail
B.C. minister rebukes teachers over strike
By PETTI FONG
Tuesday, October 11, 2005 Page A5

VANCOUVER — Labour Minister Mike de Jong talked tough and preached morality to striking teachers yesterday, saying they’ve got some explaining to do to students about why they’re defying the law.

Mr. de Jong said the B.C. Teachers’ Federation and individual members will face fines for continuing to ignore a Labour Relations Board and Supreme Court ruling that found the teachers’ job action is illegal.

The Liberals passed legislation late last week that imposed a contract on the province’s 42,000 teachers and the minister said the government expects the teachers to be back at work.

If teachers don’t return, Mr. de Jong said, the system is one step away from anarchy.

“It’s a hell of an example of teachers to be presenting for students,” he said. “The union and individual members should think long and hard, in my view, of the example they’re setting and the extent right now to which they’re being viewed.”

Recent polls show the teachers have a majority of support from respondents in their job action.

Members have been without a contract since June of 2004. The government says other public-sector workers have accepted contracts with no wage increases, and teachers will not be getting anything higher.

Teachers, meanwhile, say they want a fair and reasonable wage increase, but their higher priority is getting negotiations on class size back into the collective agreement.

In 2002, when the government imposed its last settlement, it removed teachers’ ability to negotiate class size and composition.

Mr. de Jong said students, who will be out for the foreseeable future because both sides are unwilling to back down from their entrenched positions, will be asking teachers what laws should be obeyed once school resumes.

The union has maintained that teachers abide by and respect the law, but some laws are so odious, they must be defied.

Teachers’ federation president Jinny Sims said yesterday that teachers have the utmost respect for law and the courts, but her members are adamant they won’t return to work until there is a settlement.

“We feel badly that parents are inconvenienced,” Ms. Sims said. “We want to meet with government and we are willing to meet any time, 24/7.”

In a rare Sunday hearing, Madam Justice Brenda Brown of the B.C. Supreme Court found teachers were in contempt when they set up picket lines Friday.

Teachers began limited job action and stopped playground supervision after the BCTF had a strike vote came back 88-per-cent in favour.

Angered by the government’s decision to impose a contract, teachers went back to the voting stations. By an even higher percentage, slightly more than 90 per cent, teachers voted to ignore the government legislation, which, despite an all-night filibuster by the New Democratic Party, passed last week.

After picket lines were set up, the B.C. Public School Employers’ Association, the government bargaining arm and representative of the province’s school boards, made the application to the court late Friday to find the teachers in contempt after a Labour Relations Board ruling was made in its favour.

The teachers are appealing the board ruling.

In the meantime, the teachers’ federation has been given a slight reprieve. Although Judge Brown found teachers were in contempt, a hearing won’t be held until Thursday to determine what penalties teachers face for remaining off the job.

Lawyers for the school employers opposed that delay because it makes it unlikely school will resume before then.

BCTF strike in-context

Seven Oaks Magazine has published two recent articles that examine the current BC teachers strike in the context of progressive labor struggles in BC and the broader neoliberal agenda aimed at enriching the few at the expense of the many.

“Why We Need to Support the Teachers of British Columbia”, by Lawrence Boxall.

“The Struggle for BC’s Future: The Importance of the BCTF Strike”, by Dale McCartney.

BC teachers found in contempt; Will defy court order

The Globe and Mail
Teachers in contempt, B.C. judge concludes

British Columbia’s defiant public-school teachers were found in contempt of court late yesterday for their continuing province-wide illegal strike. After a rare Sunday hearing, Madam Justice Brenda Brown of the B.C. Supreme Court said citizens do not have the right to choose which court orders to obey and which to flout.

CTV
Teachers guilty of contempt says BC court

A B.C. Supreme Court judge has declared the province’s teachers in contempt of court. “No citizen or group of citizens may choose which orders they may obey,” said Justice Nancy Brown in issuing her ruling on Sunday. She had decided in favour of an application from the British Columbia Public School Employers Association.

Vancouver Sun
Teachers to defy contempt ruling; They won’t return to work despite court’s threat of fines
B.C.’s public school teachers vow to remain out on the picket line, despite a court ruling declaring their actions to be against the law and the threat of significant fines.

“The actions we’re taking do not signal any disrespect for the law,” Jinny Sims, president of the British Columbia Teachers’ Association, said Sunday after losing a legal battle in B.C. Supreme Court that hinged on the teachers’ right to strike.

The Daily News (Nanaimo)
Students sound off on strike

While the possibility of a teachers’ strike this fall has been known for months, Polita Rositano, a Grade 8 student at Woodlands Secondary School, said she was still caught off guard when teachers took to the picket lines Friday.
Teachers in contempt, B.C. judge concludes
By ROD MICKLEBURGH
Monday, October 10, 2005 Posted at 4:59 AM EDT
From Monday’s Globe and Mail

Vancouver — British Columbia’s defiant public-school teachers were found in contempt of court late yesterday for their continuing province-wide illegal strike.

After a rare Sunday hearing, Madam Justice Brenda Brown of the B.C. Supreme Court said citizens do not have the right to choose which court orders to obey and which to flout.

“If one may breach a court order, so may another . . . and anarchy cannot be far behind,” Judge Brown told the court.

The contempt application was made by the province’s school boards, which had earlier filed a cease-and-desist order from the B.C. Labour Relations Board in the Supreme Court, giving it the legal effect of a court order.

After she found the teachers guilty of contempt, however, Judge Brown delayed a hearing until Thursday to determine what penalties should be handed out.

The delay, which was strongly opposed by lawyers for the school boards, gives the teachers a few more days to consider how far they want to continue their defiance before being punished.

It also virtually guarantees no school for more than 600,000 elementary and high-school students tomorrow and Wednesday.

But at the same time, Judge Brown warned: “I am hopeful that teachers are responsible citizens and they will pay attention to my ruling.”

Should the strike continue, heavy fines will almost certainly be applied to the striking teachers’ union, the B.C. Teachers’ Federation. It is not anticipated that individual classroom instructors will be singled out for punishment.

BCTF president Jinny Sims wasted little time reasserting her union’s intention to stay off the job, despite yesterday’s contempt ruling.

Saying she was saddened by the decision, Ms. Sims said the teachers’ action is “in no way” intended to be disrespectful to the courts or the law.

“We are taking a stand against the unjust and punitive legislation of this government,” she declared. “Sometimes a law is bad, and we, as citizens, have to take a stand.”

Michael Hancock, meanwhile, a lawyer for the B.C. Public School Employers’ Association, called the contempt of court ruling “a sad day for education in British Columbia. Hopefully, our teachers will now go back to work.”

More than 42,000 teachers began an indefinite strike last Friday to protest against Bill 12, a government bill imposing a two-year contract extension on them, with no wage increase and no improvement in their working conditions.

The bitter dispute seems certain to produce the most prolonged shutdown of the province’s public schools in more than 20 years.

Before Judge Brown issued her ruling, BCTF lawyer John Rogers argued that there was a history to the current dispute, which had seen the Liberal government restrict teachers’ right to strike by designating education as an essential service and strip them of the ability to negotiate working conditions.

“In 3½ years, the teachers have gone from full collective bargaining to no collective bargaining rights,” he said. “It’s important to understand why they determined it was necessary to take a stand.”

Mr. Rogers said the teachers’ illegal strike is in the tradition of civil disobedience against unjust laws.

“This is not a defence, but civil disobedience does exist.”

However, school board lawyer Nazeer Mitha said the teachers’ walkout is a far cry from noble struggles against evils such as segregation in the southern United States and apartheid.

“This deals with wages and working conditions,” he said. “Teachers may feel aggrieved, but that does not excuse their conduct and obligation to obey the law.

“There is no doubt the BCTF is in contempt of court, and it is flagrant, premeditated and deliberate.”

The issue, Mr. Mitha said, is not about all the various players in the current conflict. “It is about an order of this court. If the court is going to make an order, it has to be obeyed.”

Judge Brown agreed. “The issue before me is not whether the legislation is appropriate, or whether the teachers’ position is correct,” she ruled.

“It is about the obligation of every citizen to obey a court order.”

No talks have been scheduled among any of the many parties involved in the dispute.

With a report from Canadian Press
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The Vancouver Sun

Teachers to defy contempt ruling
They won’t return to work despite court’s threat of fines

Darah Hansen and Jonathan Fowlie
Vancouver Sun

Monday, October 10, 2005

B.C.’s public school teachers vow to remain out on the picket line, despite a court ruling declaring their actions to be against the law and the threat of significant fines.

“The actions we’re taking do not signal any disrespect for the law,” Jinny Sims, president of the British Columbia Teachers’ Association, said Sunday after losing a legal battle in B.C. Supreme Court that hinged on the teachers’ right to strike.

“Rather, we are engaging in a political protest against the provincial government and its unjust legislation. We strongly believe some laws are so unjust that we cannot stand by and allow them to go unchallenged,” Sims said.

Sunday afternoon B.C. Supreme Court Justice Brenda Brown ruled in a special hearing that the striking teachers are acting in contempt of a Labour Relations Board order, issued Thursday, that declared the job action illegal.

“No citizen or group of citizens may choose which rules they will obey,” the judge said.

Brown said her decision was not based on whether the legislation under protest by teachers is fair, or whether the teachers’ position in respect to the legislation is correct.

“The issue before me is both narrower — confined to the consideration of the breach of the [LRB] order on Oct. 6 — and wider — concerned with the obligations of every citizen to obey court orders and the implications for democratic society if citizens choose which orders they will obey and which they will breach,” she said.

“It is the rule of law, in this case obedience to court orders, which permits us to enjoy rights and liberties in a civilized and democratic society,” the judge said. “These are fragile social constructs which are seriously weakened when a group refuses to obey orders from the court. If one may breach a court order, so may another, leaving none of us with rights or privileges.”

“I am hopeful that the teachers, as responsible citizens, will appreciate the significance of what I’ve had to say today, and its significance for citizens at large where court orders are breached,” she said.

Just how much the teachers will pay out in penalties, however, will have to wait until Thursday when the court will hear submissions from lawyers for both the teachers’ union and their provincial employers.

According to lawyer Nazeer Mitha, the B.C. Public School Employers’ Association will be seeking a monetary fine.

Mitha said ordering the arrest of the province’s 42,000 teachers was possible under law, but not practical.

“It would take more than all the police forces in this province to deal with this dispute,” he told the court Sunday.

Outside the court Sunday, Mike Hancock, general council for the employers’ association, said any penalty imposed should be stiff enough to get teachers to call off the strike.

“They [the union] are paying just about $2 million a day in strike pay, so the question is … what does it take to get their attention?” Hancock said.

Hancock said Sunday’s ruling represented “a sad day” for education in British Columbia — “that we’ve come to a point where our teachers’ union has been found in contempt of court.

“We hope the [teachers’ union] will hear the message the judge delivered today and will go back to work.”

Hancock added that the longer teachers’ remain on strike, the more serious the contempt will be considered.

Sims refused to discuss the union’s money situation Sunday, commenting only that the union has not asked for financial assistance from any other union at this time.

More than 90 per cent of union members voted last Wednesday to walk off the job in protest of Bill 12 — legislation introduced by the B.C. Liberals last week that will see a contract imposed on teachers until June 30, 2006. Picket lines went up around schools across the province Friday.

Sims said pickets will remain in place Tuesday, unless Labour Minister Mike de Jong agrees to sit down and negotiate a mutually agreeable contract with teachers.

The teachers are seeking to negotiate a cap on class sizes, improved working conditions and a 15-per-cent wage hike.

The teachers’ union is still holding out for a reversal of the original LRB ruling. An appeal of that order, which declared the strike to be illegal, is scheduled to be heard Tuesday by the board.

In his submissions to the court on behalf of the BCPSEA heard early in the day Sunday, Mitha argued that everyone must obey the law, “even if we have to hold our noses” at times.

Teachers, he said, are no different — and, in fact, must be held to a higher standard than others in society because they are expected to act as moral exemplar.

Mitha said there was “no doubt” the teachers’ union acted in contempt of court when it sanctioned a strike by its membership, and that the contempt was “flagrant, premeditated and deliberate.”

Meanwhile, John Rogers, lawyer for the B.C. Teachers’ Federation, argued teachers are merely practicing civil disobedience, a fundamental right in western democracies.

“In my summation, [the strike] is a reflection of how strongly teachers feel about what’s been imposed upon them that they have engaged in this conduct,” Rogers said.

Rogers further argued that while issues of wages and working conditions are not protected under the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, they are still “fundamental circumstances of the human condition” and, therefore, worth fighting for.

dahansen@png.canwest.com

jfowlie@png.canwest.com

© The Vancouver Sun 2005
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The Daily News (Nanaimo)
Monday » October 10 » 2005

Students sound off on strike

Robert Barron
The Daily News

Saturday, October 08, 2005

While the possibility of a teachers’ strike this fall has been known for months, Polita Rositano, a Grade 8 student at Woodlands Secondary School, said she was still caught off guard when teachers took to the picket lines Friday.

“There’s been talk of a strike at the school but I didn’t think it would happen so fast,” Polita said from her home Friday.

“While some of the students are happy the teachers went on strike, there’s also concern that if the strike goes on a long time, we’ll probably have to make up the time this summer. As well, some of the Grade 12 students are worried about their provincial exams if it’s a long strike.”

Asked how she felt about her teachers breaking the law and engaging in an illegal strike, Polita said she doesn’t like it.

“I think they’re doing it because they don’t like what they see happening with education in the province and they’re standing up for their rights, but I think they should have ‘waited it out’ a little longer before deciding to strike,” she said.

Other students in Nanaimo are standing firmly with the teachers in their job action, some even making their own picket signs and walking the picket lines.

Katherine Mitton and Mike Skoropad, students at Dufferin Crescent Elementary School, talked a group of their friends into joining their teachers Friday.

“We want to help them because they’re really good teachers and they need our help right now,” Katherine said.

“Our school needs smaller classes, more time for students in the library, better books and supplies and I think the teachers deserve a raise. Teachers rule and we need school.”

Asked if she felt teachers are setting a bad example for students by participating in an illegal strike, Katherine said she felt the teachers “have good reasons” for resorting to job action.

Will Murray, a Grade 8 student from Woodlands who spent eight years at Dufferin, said he thinks if anyone is setting a bad example for students in the issue it’s Gordon Campbell.

SEE ALSO

-Unions back teachers – A3

-Parents uneasy as teachers thumb nose at law – A3

-No end in sight – A7

© The Daily News (Nanaimo) 2005

BCTF Strike Bulletin #1

Respect for the law

We have the utmost respect for the law and the judicial system so it is difficult to listen to this government tell teachers they should respect the law.

This is the same government that used the Legislature to rip up legally binding collective agreements.

This is the government that said it didn’t feel the need to follow a ruling by the International Labour Organization, a United Nations body composed of representatives of government, business, and labour. The ILO ruled that the BC Liberal law declaring education an “essential service” should be repealed. The ruling also called on the government to open talks with the BCTF to negotiate an agreement and to refrain from imposing settlements in the future.

This is a government that will not even allow teachers to exercise their limited rights provided by the BC Liberals own “essential service” legislation. The government didn’t even wait for the Labour Relations Board to rule on what constituted “essential services” for education. After only three days of teachers undertaking minimal actions such as refusing to exchange papers with AOs, the government introduced Bill 12 to bring teachers to heel.

This is the government that after losing a decision in court simply turned around and legislated what the courts had just ruled was fundamentally flawed. The B.C. Teachers’ Federation challenged the decisions of government-appointed arbitrator Eric Rice in the B.C. Supreme Court and won. January 22, 2004, Justice D.W. Shaw concluded that Rice’s ruling contained “fundamental” errors on “points of law that are of importance to the education system of British Columbia, including the teachers, the school boards and the students.” However, the BC Liberals introduced Bill 19, and made that fundamentally flawed ruling a new law.

This is the government that overturned arbitrated settlements for doctors and provincial court prosecutors because it didn’t like the results.

This is not a government to be lecturing people about respect for the law.

BC teachers to remain out until at least Tuesday

Canadian Press:
BC Students to remain out of classes Tuesday as teachers strike continues

Students at British Columbia’s public schools will remain out of classes Tuesday as striking teachers ask the Labour Relations Board to reconsider a ruling their strike is illegal. A spokeswoman from the B.C. Teachers’ Federation said classes would not resume while the board considers the application scheduled to be heard Tuesday. The B.C. Public School Employers’ Association was heading to court Friday afternoon to ask for an enforcement order of the board’s ruling.

The Province:
BC news update: Teachers strike

The Public School Employers Association will present a contempt of court application to B.C. Supreme Court Justice Nancy Brown today. The association is making the application after teachers walked off the job on Friday in an illegal strike. The association wants the court to enforce a Labour Relations Board ruling that the strike is illegal in attempt to force the teachers back to work. B.C.’s 42,000 teachers want a 15-per-cent wage increase over three years.

Parents on picket lines
Parent Lori Goldie’s sign succinctly summarizes her view on the teachers’ strike, which she says her son, Kyle, who has cerebral palsy, is taking very hard, as he ‘lives for school.’
Teachers weren’t the only ones to hit the picket lines Friday. Angry parents and supportive students also walked the line with signs, airing their views on the walkout by B.C.’s 42,000 teachers.

National Post:
BC teachers’ illegal strike continues; Union faces heavy fines
The British Columbia teachers’ strike appears set to drag on into next week, barring a surprise move by either side this weekend. The province’s 42,000 teachers did not report for work yesterday and they say they will remain out until the government negotiates a contract that guarantees improvements to classroom conditions, restores their collective bargaining rights and provides them with a raise.

The Marxist-Leninist Daily:
Liberal Government denies teachers’ right to bargain terms of their employment
The B.C. Liberal government has introduced legislation to outlaw collective bargaining between the B.C. Teachers’ Federation (BCTF) and the B.C. Public School Employers’ Association. Bill 12, The Teachers’ Collective Agreement Act, extends the existing teachers’ collective contract to June 30, 2006 effectively negating the teachers’ right to strike or take other job action to defend their common interests as employees of the public school system and teachers of the province’s students. The 42,000 members of BCTF meeting throughout Wednesday voted over 90 per cent in favour of beginning an unlimited strike on Friday in defiance of Bill 12. The strike will continue until the government offers a new collective agreement acceptable to teachers. TML heartily supports and endorses the courageous stand of B.C. teachers.

Teachers vote to take a stand in protest of Bill 12

Teachers throughout the province have voted 90.5 % to take a stand in protest against Bill 12, the legislation introduced Monday to once again impose a contract and order an end to job action.

In Defence of Marxism:
Victory to the teachers
Yet again, the BC Liberal Government has removed the democratic right of employees to strike. From the UBC TAs, to the ferry workers and hospital employees, workers’ rights and public programs are coming under constant attack. Now the Liberals plan to use BC’s teachers as their next layer of cannon fodder. On October 7, 42 000 public school teachers will illegally walk the line in defence of their right to collectively bargain, to go on strike and to save education for BC’s youth. Fightback stands together with the striking teachers.

The Province

Angry B.C. parents lash out at teachers
PICKET LINES: But students provide support to teachers

Elaine O’Connor
The Province

Sunday, October 09, 2005

CREDIT: Les Bazso, The Province
Parent Lori Goldie’s sign succinctly summarizes her view on the teachers’ strike, which she says her son, Kyle, who has cerebral palsy, is taking very hard, as he ‘lives for school.’
Teachers weren’t the only ones to hit the picket lines Friday.

Angry parents and supportive students also walked the line with signs, airing their views on the walkout by B.C.’s 42,000 teachers.

Abbotsford parent Lori Goldie was so fed up with the job action that she went to her son’s school Friday to picket teachers with a sign of her own.

It read: “Teachers: My child is not your leverage tool to get what you want.”

Goldie broke down in tears as she described the impact of the strike on her son, who has cerebral palsy.

“It’s his life. He lives for school. This isn’t fair to my son,” said Goldie, whose son Kyle, 15, is in Grade 10 at W.J. Mouat Secondary.

“I’m angry. I want teachers back in the classroom teaching children.”

She said teachers should wait for a raise like other public sector workers.

“I know all about cutbacks. I’ve lived with them for 15 years, with my own child,” she said.

“The government has asked for one lousy year [of a wage freeze].”

Goldie said many passersby assumed she was picketing with teachers. But those who read her sign honked and clapped, she says.

The other side of her placard read: “Teachers: you claim the government is bullying you: what do you call your own behavior? The only difference is you’re using children.”

But on the other side of the street, teachers were getting a very different message.

W.J. Mouat students Robbi McIntosh, in Grade 12, and Danielle MacDonald, in Grade 11, marched proudly with teachers on the line to back their fight for a negotiated contract.

“As much as I am concerned about my grades and everything because of missing school, I understand why there is a strike. It’s the only way for teachers to be heard and taken seriously,” said McIntosh, 17.

She said she has watched her teachers work hard through recess, lunch, after school and on weekends, coaching, tutoring and marking and thought they deserved better.

“I think they are very underpaid for what they do.”

Both McIntosh and Goldie plan to be on the line at the school again Tuesday to make sure students’ and parents’ voices are heard.

eoconnor@png.canwest.com

© The Vancouver Province 2005
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Sunday » October 9 » 2005

B.C. teachers’ illegal strike continues
Union faces heavy fines

Jeff Rud
CanWest News Service

Saturday, October 08, 2005

CREDIT: Ray Smith, CanWest News Service
Striking teachers form a picket line outside Victoria High School in Victoria, B.C.
VICTORIA – The British Columbia teachers’ strike appears set to drag on into next week, barring a surprise move by either side this weekend.

The province’s 42,000 teachers did not report for work yesterday and they say they will remain out until the government negotiates a contract that guarantees improvements to classroom conditions, restores their collective bargaining rights and provides them with a raise.

B.C.’s Liberal government yesterday passed the Teachers’ Collective Agreement Act, which sparked the walkout.

The new law imposes a contract extension on teachers until June, 2006, with no wage increase or change to other conditions.

Passage of the act was not easy, however. It came late yesterday afternoon, after an all-night session at the legislature as the Opposition NDP exercised its full entitlement to speaking time on the bill.

After an application by the B.C. Public School Employers’ Association on Thursday, the province’s Labour Relations Board ruled the teachers’ walkout illegal and ordered “the union, its officers, members, employees and agents to immediately refrain from declaring or authorizing a strike against the schools.”

The B.C. Teachers’ Federation faces the possibility of heavy fines if it continues to defy the ruling. But the BCTF has appealed the ruling of the labour board.

The BCTF said yesterday that teachers would not return to work on Tuesday, when the Labour Relations Board is scheduled to hear the union’s appeal of the ruling.

Labour Minister Mike de Jong warned the BCTF and its teachers to obey the law and return to classrooms. He told reporters he was not planning to meet with the union this weekend.

“I know teachers are angry. I know they are upset when a contract is derived out of a process like this,” Mr. de Jong said. “But that’s what’s happened, unfortunately, too many times in the past. It’s happened again. Teachers need to set an example and they need to go back to work and they need to abide by the law.”

NDP leader Carole James said the government is to blame for the dispute, which has put more than 600,000 students out of school.

Schools were open yesterday, but parents were told not to send their children.

“We’re here because the government created this confrontation,” Ms. James said. “There was an opportunity until the passage of the bill for the government to back down, to sit down with the teachers … and the government didn’t make an effort to sit down with the teachers.”

© National Post 2005

BC Teachers strike: Notes from the picket line

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Yesterday we visited the picket lines at McBride Elementary (29th/Knight), Charles Dickens Elementary (Glen Drive), Eric Hamber Secondary (33rd/Oak), and Tupper Secondary (King Edward/Fraser).

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Teachers were very upbeat and noted lot’s of support from parents and students. At McBride students brought teachers cookies and were serenading picketers with the chorus of “Solidarity Forever.” Kids were also walking the line at Eric Hamber and teachers reports lots of support from motorists on Oak St. There was also singing and guitar playing at Tupper, along with some very upbeat leadership from picket captains. At Charles Dickens a parent was delivering lunch and neighborhood kids had set up a “Coffee For Teachers” stand.

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The message we heard over and over from teachers was that they didn’t want to walk-out but that the government left them no option. The concerns we heard expressed on the line mirrored those stated by the BCTF leadership: teaching and learning conditions, fair salaries in comparison to teachers in other provinces, and basic worker’s rights (e.g., the right to strike).

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