Category Archives: Strikes

British Columbia: Teachers poised to strike

The British Columbia Teachers Federation—armed with an overwhelming mandate from its 42,000 members—announced plans last week for escalating job actions, culminating in an full-scale walk out by October 24.

Starting today (Sept 28) teachers will begin a modest job action aimed at inconveniencing administrator, by refusing to supervise students outside of class, except voluntary extra-curriculars, attend management meetings or complete report cards.

If there is no progress in contract talks by October 11, the teachers union will launch rotating strikes around the province, which will be followed by a full strike on October 24.

Because the Liberal government of BC has declared education an essential service, the BC Labour Relations Board will rule on what level of teaching would have to be maintained during a strike. The BCTF has not indicated if it will or will not abide by the rulings made the Labour Board.

Below are links to a number of articles from the national and local press, was well as the BCTF regarding the job actions/strikes:

The Province: Teachers take action today (Sept 28)

Why teachers are primed to strike (Sept 28)

BCTF: Teachers take a stand to restore services (Sept 28)

BCTF: BC Premier Gordon Campbell blames schools boards (Sept 28)

BCTF: A message to parents from your children’s teachers

Video message from BCTF president Jinny Sims (Sept 27)

Vancouver Sun: BCTF needs a lesson in marketplace competition (Sept 27)

Globe and Mail: B.C. teachers poised to strike (Sept 24)

Teachers vote 88.4% for strike (Sept 24)Teachers take action today
They refuse to supervise kids, write reports

Elaine O’Connor, with a file by Ian Bailey
The Province

Wednesday, September 28, 2005

B.C. teachers begin job action today by withdrawing administrative and supervisory duties.

It’s not supposed to impact students, but that’s not the case in some districts.

In districts with adequate non-union and board staff, schools are calling on principals, vice-principals and district staff to supervise students before and after school, and during recess and lunch.

But smaller districts are already overhauling their school day due to job action. Students in Fort Nelson schools, for example, will see recess eliminated, lunch hour shortened and the school day cut because the district doesn’t have the extra staff to take on supervisory duties.

“We’re a small district,” said Diana Samchuck, superintendent for the five-school, 1,177-student district.

“The fear is someone will be out on duty who is not used to doing student supervision and they’ll be thinking of their primary job task and not see something and we’ll have an accident on our hands.”

In Kelowna, the district has cancelled recess, so all students will be dismissed 15 minutes early.

In the first stage of B.C.-wide job action, teachers are refusing to supervise students outside of class, except voluntary extra-curriculars, attend management meetings or complete report cards.

Vancouver’s University Hill principal Jill Philipchuck said she, her vice-principal, and a district staffer will watch the 525 students over lunch. But it’s staff relations, not extra work, that are her big concern.

“Because teachers are not attending meetings, it makes it difficult to work as a team and to work collaboratively,” she said. “We may need to make a lot more unilateral decisions.”

The B.C. Teachers Federation continues to talk with the employer. BCTF reps met with Associate Deputy Minister of Labour Rick Connolly again yesterday to try to find common ground.

But Premier Gordon Campbell hinted that legislating teachers back to work might be the only solution.

“Legislation is always an option, and unfortunately for us in British Columbia it’s always been required since province-wide bargaining was brought in. We were hopeful the BCTF, the union and the employers would be able to come to a resolution. So far they haven’t been able to,” Campbell told The Province.

B.C. Confederation of Parent Advisory Councils past-president Terry Watson said parents are nervous.

“The first round includes items not supposed to affect students in classrooms, but they do affect who is supervising the kids. That’s a change parents are anxious about.”

Surrey’s Christina Woodworth has a six-year-old at James Ardiel Elementary and a 12-year-old at Como Lake Middle School in Coquitlam. She’s frustrated by the lack of information about school plans and concerned about interim supervision.

“You’ve got 300 kids on a school ground. They may not be able to recognize the different dangers that are out there,” she said.

eoconnor@png.canwest.com
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From TheTyee.ca
Why Teachers Are Primed to Strike

Link Address: http://www.thetyee.ca/Views/2005/09/26/Teachersstrike
Published: 2005-09-26 23:00:00
By John Malcolmson

TheTyee.ca

Campbell government’s freeze strategy ignores widening salary gap.

BC teachers have conducted a province-wide strike vote and given their leaders a mandate to initiate job action. Planned strike action is aimed at pressuring the employer and the government to negotiate a new collective agreement. Teachers have worked without a contract since the last one expired in June of 2004.

Labour disputes tend to be messy situations. In the course of collective bargaining and the run-up to a strike situation, many issues get thrown into the mix. Within the current context, however, two “big picture” issues come to the fore.

Big issue #1: Salaries

First is the question of salary. Teachers expect to receive a “reasonable” increase in the new agreement. The employer, backed by government, is determined to hold the line on any hike for teachers. This would freeze teachers’ salaries for all of this past year and at least an additional year.

It is useful to look at the salary increase issue in the context of recent negotiation experiences and outcomes. The last collective agreement ran three years before ending in June of 2004. BC’s newly-elected liberal government imposed that agreement after contract negotiations became deadlocked. In it, teachers got 2.5 percent increases in each of three years. Consumer prices in Vancouver and BC rose at virtually the same rate over that period so real salary levels stayed near-constant.

If one goes back farther in time, a different picture emerges. A Category 5 Vancouver teacher earning the maximum salary saw her earnings grow just under 10 percent between June of 1998 and June of 2004. Prices over that period increased at a faster rate and have climbed another 1.5 percent in the past school year. What this means is that earnings lag inflation by about four percent over the last seven years. This is a significant but not enormous drop. However, what galls teachers is the fact that a salary freeze would be imposed at a time when economic growth, rising energy prices and increased federal transfers have pushed BC’s public accounts far into the black. And current forecasts have the province’s finances staying out of deficit territory over the full term of a new collective agreement.

So, if government can afford to reduce corporate taxes and put more cash in the pockets of big business, why is it loathe to pay teachers a “reasonable” salary increase? If it can put more money into roads, buildings and infrastructure, why not into supporting those who makes our public services work?

An aging teacher staff

These questions acquire a different urgency when looked at in light of the ongoing ageing of BC’s teacher population. At the start of 2003/04, almost two-thirds of our teachers were over age 45 and a full 43 percent of BC teachers were aged 50 plus. The latter group is within five years of possible retirement. Given recent layoffs of younger teachers having less seniority, that percentage is almost surely higher today.

BC’s post-secondary system does not graduate anywhere near the volume of education students to offset this impending attrition. Years of compressed funding at colleges and universities have left these institutions ill-prepared to meet the challenge of supplying enough teacher replacements to address staffing needs for the near-future.

The advancing retirement bulge means that we will have to attract and retain new BC grads here as well as compete nationally and beyond for more bodies if we are to replenish teachers’ ranks. Historically, this has been the approach BC has taken to address this need. A sizeable chunk of BC’s teachers were educated elsewhere in Canada and many internationally. They migrated here to start or continue their teaching careers.

This “strategy” may have worked in the past. However, today’s teachers are aging everywhere in Canada. School authorities and provincial ministries across the country all face a need to replace the high volume of educators expected to exit the system in the coming decade. It is a classic situation where demand will increase at a rate outstripping available supply. The winners in this kind of market scenario will be those offering, guess what — superior salaries, good pensions (which are tied to salaries) and decent career working conditions.

It is for reasons like this that the BCTF is working to focus attention on the yawning teacher salary gap between cities like Vancouver and urban centers in provinces like Alberta and Ontario. A just-published report by staff researcher Colleen Hawkey and titled “Inter-city Teacher Salary Comparisons, 2005-07” provides some startling comparisons with what teachers earn in other parts of the country.

For example, a new Category 5 teacher in Vancouver this September actually earns $329 more than her counterpart in Toronto, but after 10 years on the job, will trail the annual Toronto salary by almost $10,000. The same Vancouver teacher lags her starting colleague in Edmonton by more than $5,600, a gap which doubles in size over the next decade of movement up the experience grid.

These gaps are calculated for the current year only. They will grow in size if a salary freeze is imposed in BC. This is because teachers’ salaries are not frozen in these other jurisdictions.

If a new Alberta teacher can earn thousands more starting out in Edmonton, why make the trek to BC? Or, if a young teacher is struggling to pay the bills here in this province, why wouldn’t she take a long and hard look at a Toronto or Ottawa career that promises $300,000 more in lifetime earnings and a better pension to boot? There are surely good reasons these folks might come to or remain in BC, but we would do well remembering that nice scenery and Lotusland winters will only go so far.

Big Issue #2: Working and learning conditions

The second “big picture” issue referenced at the start concerns working conditions. In crucial respects, this is the real story of the current contract stand-off. BC has seen a wholesale deterioration in school working conditions since the last imposed settlement stripped out class size and staffing provisions.

In the past four years, salary and other cost increases have forced our school system to cannibalize itself. Since negotiating working conditions was made ultra vires and in the face of ongoing budget restrictions, class sizes have increased and thousands of teachers have been let go. Schools have become more difficult places to work and, for students, more difficult places to get an education.

This year, the province pumped an additional $150 million into school operating budgets. Judging from its strategy at the bargaining table, the Ministries of Finance, Education and Treasury Board are eager not to let much of this increase find its way into the pockets of teachers or other staff.

Back to freeze mode

School budgets are projected to re-enter freeze mode next year and remain there into 2007/08. This much was re-affirmed last week in Carole Taylor’s budget. Her speech to the legislature mentioned the word “education” only once, in the context of plans to build new relationships with First Nations.

Accompanying budget documents confirm that last spring’s forecast of a two-year school funding freeze remains the Liberal party line.

What better way to lock the freeze down than to put the clamps on a teacher salary bill which currently accounts for more than a half of all public school spending? And what better tool to free up money for other priorities, including corporate tax cuts, than to engineer a multi-year respite from rising cost pressure on the school salary front? Many parents and other members of the public may not relish the prospect of a school shutdown this fall. However, we would all do well to remember that, as messy as labour negotiations are, they provide a vital forum for raising and resolving issues necessary for our schools to adapt for the future. By short-circuiting this process, a legislated settlement blocks such adaptation. Given the issues at stake, we will all lose with that outcome.

John Malcolmson is a consulting sociologist doing research and evaluation in the fields of public education and education finance, literacy, labour relations, justice issues and social policy. He publishes the digital newsletter Finance Watch, where a version of this appeared. To subscribe, email financewatch@shaw.ca
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Wednesday » September 28 » 2005

BCTF needs a lesson in marketplace competition

Michael Campbell
Vancouver Sun

Tuesday, September 27, 2005

You know things are a bit whacky in the ongoing teachers’ labour dispute when the lawyer for the BCTF argues in front of the Labour Relations Board that there is no evidence to suggest that lengthy disruptions or lockouts do long-term damage to education. Lawyer Diane MacDonald is quoted as telling the B.C. Labour Relations Board: “We have had job actions in the past that have been up to three months’ duration without significant impact on the student body.”

Given that my wife and many dear friends are teachers, I think it’s a safe bet to say that if I argued the same thing at home I’d get into a little hot water. Can you imagine how popular I’d be if I said to my wife: ‘Why don’t you phone in sick for a couple of weeks. After all, it won’t make any difference to the kids’ education.’ Not to get into too many personal details, but the response wouldn’t be pretty.

We find ourselves in this bizarre world where a BCTF lawyer is arguing that the federation’s own members aren’t necessary for significant periods of time when it comes to students’ education, while the Ministry of Education argues that they are. Talk about role reversal.

Given that this is the calibre of discussion, maybe I shouldn’t be surprised when I hear the BCTF argue that teachers’ wages must be competitive with Alberta. Even if the BCTF’s demand for a salary increase of 15 per cent over three years is accepted, it will put teachers with 12 years experience earning $73,298, which is about $4,700 less than their counterparts in Edmonton.

I appreciate that salaries do not make up the entire teacher compensation package — which also includes sick days, other forms of paid leave, employer pension contributions, paid vacation, dental and medical benefits. But the point is that, in this one area, the BCTF believes that being competitive is important. As BCTF head Jinny Sims says: “We certainly hope that the employer will consider the need to offer competitive salaries to attract bright graduates and to keep experienced classroom teachers in B.C.”

The B.C. Business Council couldn’t have said it better. The difference is that, for the BCTF, the importance of being competitive with other jurisdictions stops with teachers’ salaries, and certainly doesn’t extend to issues like tax rates, especially for business.

And this brain cramp is not unique to the BCTF. It seems to be a regular feature in the world view of many major unions.

Canada’s largest private-sector union, the Canadian Auto Workers, argues that special tax breaks in the form of subsidies are needed for big U.S. auto manufacturers in order to encourage investment in Canadian plants. Yet they strongly oppose corporate tax reductions in other sectors. We also have the NDP opposed to lowering business taxes, yet supporting special tax breaks for major American and Canadian film companies. Organized labour supports special tax breaks for labour-sponsored mutual funds, while opposing business tax reductions in other areas.

The intellectual inconsistency is breathtaking. The appreciation for the need to be competitive in terms of wages, tax rates and regulatory environment should not be confined to few self-serving areas. All Canadians will benefit when a broader policy approach toward competitiveness is adopted that extends past the concerns of a few special interests in business or labour.

Michael Campbell’s Money Talks radio show can be heard on CKNW 980 on Saturdays from 8:30 a.m. to 10 a.m.

© The Vancouver Sun 2005

Copyright © 2005 CanWest Interactive, a division of CanWest Global Communications Corp. All rights reserved.

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B.C. teachers poised to strike
Union announces escalating job action; province vows to prevent class disruptions
By ROD MICKLEBURGH
Saturday, September 24, 2005 Page S1

VANCOUVER — Armed with an overwhelming strike mandate, the B.C. Teachers’ Federation unveiled plans yesterday for escalating job action by the province’s 42,000 public school teachers, culminating in an all-out walkout by Oct. 24.

The Liberal government immediately vowed to prevent any disruption of school classrooms, setting the stage for yet another bitter showdown between the long-standing adversaries.

The wide gulf between the two sides was underscored later in the day when, for the first time in the long dispute, the BCTF disclosed its salary demands.

The union is seeking annual wage increases of 4, 5 and 6 per cent over three years, a direct challenge to the government’s two-year, mandated wage freeze for all public-sector employees.

“Teachers need and deserve a reasonable salary increase,” said a BCTF bargaining bulletin, arguing that pay hikes are justified by cost-of-living increases and a widening wage gap between B.C. teachers and their counterparts in Alberta and Ontario.

Further inflaming the pending confrontation is the teachers’ determination to roll back Liberal legislation banning them from negotiating class sizes. The union won that right from the previous NDP government in return for giving up a wage increase.

Education Minister Shirley Bond said the government is committed to keep the schools running, despite the strike plans.

“Education is absolutely essential . . . and we will consider all of our options to make sure that students stay in the classroom,” Ms. Bond declared yesterday, less than an hour after BCTF president Jinny Sims announced the union’s vote and strike strategy.

She charged that the teachers union has stalled attempts to negotiate a new collective agreement so it can be in a position to strike this fall.

“I am continually disappointed by the practices that are being engaged in by the teachers,” said Ms. Bond, noting that a government-appointed fact-finder is meeting with union and school trustee negotiators.

The teachers’ strike vote was 88.4-per-cent in favour, with about 80 per cent of the union membership taking part.

“This is a historic day for teachers,” Ms. Sims said.

“We have voted yes to restore student learning conditions to where they were in 2002.

“Since then, they have deteriorated incredibly, and our bargaining rights were legislated away. . . .We know that students have always benefited when teachers take a stand.”

Starting Tuesday, teachers intend to begin modest job action aimed at inconveniencing administrators.

That would include refusing mandated supervision outside regular classroom hours and not submitting student attendance information.

If there is no progress by Oct. 11, the teachers union will launch rotating strikes around the province, followed by a full strike on Oct. 24.

Complicating the situation, however, is how far the teachers can legally withdraw their services.

Education is included under the province’s essential services legislation, so it is up to the B.C. Labour Relations Board to rule on what level of teaching would have to be maintained during a strike.

Ms. Sims was coy on whether the union would comply with LRB restrictions.

“The membership will make that decision,” she said. “The labour board has not yet made any rulings. This is our action plan and we will proceed accordingly.”

Also at the teachers news conference was Leann Buteau, a Vancouver high-school teacher working with special-needs students and the mother of a young daughter with learning disabilities.

Ms. Buteau said she voted to back strike action to improve conditions for students with learning problems. She said her high school has 50 students with difficulties, but funds for only five psycho-educational assessments a year.

Hugh Finlayson, CEO of the B.C. Public School Employers Association, said government intervention may be the only way to solve the bargaining impasse with the BCTF.

“If a dispute is intractable, if mediation doesn’t work, then you have to take action. As it sits right now, this is an intractable dispute.”
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Teachers vote 88.4% for strike
Parents brace for escalating measures

Janet Steffenhagen; With a file from Jennifer Chen
Vancouver Sun

Saturday, September 24, 2005

Teachers are seeking a 15-per-cent wage increase over three years and will begin job action in public schools next week that will affect administrators but not students, the B.C. Teachers’ Federation announced Friday.

But that limited action will escalate to rotating strikes starting Oct. 11 and a full-scale, province-wide walkout Oct. 24 if there is not significant progress at the bargaining table in the meantime, BCTF president Jinny Sims told a news conference.

She wouldn’t say where the rotating strikes would begin but promised to give parents 72-hours notice.

“It’s a historic day for teachers in British Columbia,” Sims said, noting that 80 per cent of the union’s 42,000 members participated in a strike vote this week and 88 per cent them — 27,990 — were in favour of job action. “I am proud of our members today — of their courage and their commitment.”

The BCTF said in a news release that it is seeking wage increases of four per cent in 2004 (its last contract expired in June of that year), five per cent in 2005 and six per cent in 2006.

The government has declared that teachers, like other public servants, will get nothing in 2004 or 2005.

Sims said that during the first phase of teachers’ job action, classroom instruction will continue but teachers won’t supervise students outside of class, attend meetings with management, send attendance reports to the office or communicate with principals and vice-principals. Extra-curricular activities will not be affected, Sims said.

The union originally announced that phase one job action would start Tuesday. But it took the plan to the B.C. Labour Relations Board for approval Friday night, and it was not clear when the board would grant approval, possibly delaying the start of job action until Wednesday

Education Minister Shirley Bond, responding to the union’s announcement, said her government intends to keep students in class, but she would not say whether that means there will be a back-to-work order.

“I remain committed, as does this government, to saying education is absolutely essential . . . and we’re going to make sure that students stay in classrooms.”

Sims said teachers have three goals in negotiations: the restoration of learning conditions that were in place in 2002, a “reasonable” wage increase and the return of full bargaining rights, which were curtailed in 2001 when the Liberals passed a law declaring education an essential service.

That law prohibits a withdrawal of services that would seriously disrupt the education program. The Labour Relations Board has been holding hearings — which are expected to resume Monday — to determine what level of job action is permitted before instructional services is seriously disrupted.

Sims hotly rejected a suggestion from the B.C. Public School Employers’ Association, which bargains for the province’s 60 school boards, that union requests for contract improvements and a pay hike would boost education spending by 35 per cent a year.

“That’s a totally bogus figure,” she said. “It’s a fabrication.”

The 35 per cent figure cited by the employer includes not only the three-year, 15-per-cent wage increase put forward by teachers, but also other proposals currently on the negotiation table, such as an early retirement incentive package.

Sims said earlier that an improvement in classroom conditions is the top priority, with 98 per cent of respondents to a recent union survey indicating they want learning conditions enshrined in their contract as they were in early 2002. That included class-size limits, restrictions on the number of special-needs students in any one class and a requirement that schools have a certain number of specialty teachers — such as librarians, counsellors and ESL teachers — based on student numbers.

Leann Buteau, a teacher at Gladstone secondary in Vancouver, said she voted for a strike after seeing 38 students in a History 12 class, including six with severe learning disabilities. The class has desks for 26 students and textbooks for 24. As well, there are 50 students waiting for psycho-education assessments, but only five can be assessed each year, she said.

“It was time for me to stand up and speak out for all of our students’ learning conditions. That’s why I voted yes.”

Although teachers are ready to strike, Sims said they are also prepared to bargain at any time. She described the appointment of deputy labour minister Rick Connolly as a fact-finder as “a ray of hope.” He has been asked to meet the parties, determine if a negotiated settlement is possible and report to government by Sept. 30.

Bond said she was disappointed the union did not wait for Connolly to finish his work or the labour relations board to issue its ruling on essential services before announcing strike plans.

Many parents picking up their children at Lord Roberts elementary Friday supported the teachers’ proposed strike.

The teachers’ call for higher salaries and improved conditions in schools seems fair, said Zoran Jermilov, standing with his 10-year-old daughter and six-year-old son. “For example, this school has only one telephone for the whole school,” he said.

jsteffenhagen@png.canwest.com

ACTION PLAN

If there is no major progress in bargaining, BCTF president Jinny Sims, pictured above, promised these measures Friday:

FROM This Tuesday No out-of-class student supervision. No meetings with management. No attendance reports. No communication with principals.

Tuesday Oct. 11 Rotating strikes

Monday Oct. 24 Full-scale, province-wide walkout.

WHAT IT WOULD COST

According to figures provided by the B.C. Public School Employers’ Association, the total salary paid out to the province’s 33,314 full-time and part-time teachers in 2004/05 equaled $1.977 billion.

p A four per cent increase to that total would add $79 million, bringing the teacher’s payroll to $2.056 billion in the first year of the contract.

p A five per cent increase would cost a further $103 million, for a total payroll of $2.158 billion in the second year of the contract.

p A six per cent increase would cost a further $130 million, for a total payroll of $2.288 billion in the third year of the contract.

Ran with fact box “Action Plan” and “What It Would Cost”,which has been appended to the end of the story. Also See:Editorial, Letters, C6

© The Vancouver Sun 2005

BC: Province won’t allow teachers a long strike

Province won’t allow teachers a long strike

Janet Steffenhagen
Vancouver Sun

Thursday, September 22, 2005

The Liberal government will not allow a lengthy walkout by teachers, despite their union’s contention that long strikes do not have a significant impact on students, Education Minister Shirley Bond said Wednesday.

“This government is committed to making sure that students are in classrooms,” she said in an interview. “We’re worried about students being out of classrooms for a day, much less for weeks or months.

“We’re not even going to consider what the impact would be with any lengthy disruption. We’ve said that education is essential [and] … students will be in classrooms.”

Bond made the comments after the B.C. Teachers’ Federation told the B.C. Labour Relations Board there is no evidence lengthy work disruptions — such as those in Powell River, Vancouver Island North and Peace River North in the early 1990s — have a significant or long-lasting impact on students.

“In the past, there have been lengthy strikes and lockouts without serious consequences for students or the education system,” the union’s lawyer Diane MacDonald told the labour board.

“The sky does not fall when teachers exercise their right to strike.”

There are no data showing that students in those three districts lost a year of schooling, failed to graduate, did poorly in government exams or lost opportunities for post-secondary education, she added.

“The evidence was that students managed.”

Bond said she was incredibly surprised by the union’s statement. “To suggest that a day or two days doesn’t have an impact — much less weeks or months — is absolutely unbelievable.”

She dismissed the suggestion there is no hard evidence of an impact.

“Trying to graduate is difficult enough with the time frame that we have for students. To suggest that they can either make it up or deal with it in some other way is just unreasonable.”

The union said teachers make up for time lost during strikes by reducing the curriculum to the bare essentials, teaching to the test and giving students extra help before and after classes.

Teachers are holding a strike vote this week, with results to be announced Friday. Earlier in the week, the labour board heard arguments from teachers and their employers about what level of service should be considered essential in the event of a strike.

jsteffenhagen@png.canwest.com

© The Vancouver Sun 2005

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Globe & Mail: No end in sight to BC teachers dispute

No end in sight to B.C. teachers’ dispute, Minister suggests union is to blame
Thursday, September 22, 2005 Page S3
Canadian Press, with a report from Petti Fong

VICTORIA — Hopes of a settlement in the B.C. teachers’ dispute are fading, even with the appointment of a fact-finder, says Education Minister Shirley Bond.

“I’m having less optimism every day,” she said yesterday at the B.C. Legislature. “I think we need to hear where the parties are at in this set of circumstances, but quite frankly there seems to be a little less will to come back to the table in a meaningful way.”

Ms. Bond appeared to lay most of the blame for the impasse in negotiations with the British Columbia Teachers’ Federation.

“Let’s face it, these groups have had 40 bargaining sessions over the course of months, and during that period of time, the BCTF still has not tabled their salary proposals,” she said. “Tell me how meaningful that is.”

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The labour board is holding hearings to determine what level of service teachers can withdraw under a provincial law that makes education an essential service.

Teachers began a strike vote on Tuesday. The results will be announced tomorrow.

BCTF president Jinny Sims said the Education Minister is trying to use provocative language to intimidate teachers.

This week, Labour Minister Mike de Jong named deputy minister Rick Connolly as a facilitator to try to get a negotiated settlement. Ms. Sims said those initial talks were positive, so she was surprised to hear Ms. Bond’s comments.

“We’re rather perturbed by the minister’s comments. Historically, what we’ve seen is whenever teachers prepare to take a stance, this government tries to intimidate us,” Ms. Sims said. “They should know by now we’re not moved by rhetoric; we are concerned about learning conditions.”

Results of the strike vote by the province’s 42,000 teachers will be made public tomorrow and teachers are going ahead with the vote despite appeals by the B.C. Public School Employers’ Association to delay that while talks continue.

Teachers have been without a contract since June of 2004.

The employers’ association suggested the union’s demands would raise education spending in the province by 35 per cent, a figure teachers dispute.

Although the BCTF has not said specifically how much of a salary increase it wants, teachers are saying their wages should be on equal footing with colleagues in Alberta and Ontario. The government’s mandate has been zero wage increases for three years.

Relations between teachers and the government have been strained since January of 2002, when the Liberals legislated a contract that expired more than a year ago. The two sides have been before the Labour Relations Board this week to determine what qualifies as essential service levels in the event of a strike.

New York Post: Teachers strike vote set if no deal inked

NY Post: Teacher strike vote set if no deal inked

September 21, 2005 — Furious over long-stalled contract talks, the city’s teachers union threatened yesterday to authorize a strike vote if Mayor Bloomberg doesn’t seal a deal within a month.
The more than 2,000 delegates of the United Federation of Teachers who gathered in Downtown Brooklyn also raised the possibility of endorsing Democrat Fernando Ferrer in the mayoral election.

The saber-rattling was aimed at pushing City Hall to use a state labor panel’s recommendations as a roadmap to a contract — over the objections of many teachers — and to appease members who feel the union has failed to…

Globe & Mail: Fact-finder to study BC teachers’ dispute

Fact-finder to study teachers’ dispute

By ROD MICKLEBURGH
Tuesday, September 20, 2005 Page S3
With a report from Canadian Press.

VANCOUVER — With job action looming by the province’s 42,000 public school teachers, Labour Minister Mike de Jong stepped into the escalating dispute yesterday to try to avert a showdown on the picket line.

On the eve of a teachers’ strike vote, Mr. de Jong appointed associate minister Rick Connolly to investigate the impasse and report back to him on possible solutions by the end of the month.

However, the minister said he is not optimistic that a voluntary settlement is possible between the B.C. Teachers’ Federation and the province’s school boards, represented by the B.C. Public School Employers’ Association.

“The last contract expired more than a year ago, and it is clear that there are very different viewpoints on what is preventing a settlement,” Mr. de Jong said.

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BCTF president Jinny Sims said she welcomed the appointment of Mr. Connolly and pledged to “work hard” to negotiate a new contract without job action.

The union plans to meet the government’s so-called fact-finder as early as this morning, but that won’t have an impact on the BCTF’s strike vote, which is scheduled to begin today, Ms. Sims said.

Trustee CEO Hugh Finlayson said Mr. Connolly’s involvement improves the chances of a negotiated settlement.

The two sides have been locked in a war of words since contract talks broke down last week.

Trustees accused the teachers of demanding an annual increase of 35 per cent, outraging BCTF leaders, who said they have not yet tabled a specific wage package.

The situation is complicated by the fact that teachers are facing an employer with almost nothing to offer.

The government has already announced that teachers are covered by a two-year wage freeze imposed on other government employees. And there is a legislated ban on negotiating working conditions, such as class size.

Teachers are expected to overwhelmingly endorse the BCTF’s request for a strike mandate.

But the extent of their as-yet-unknown plan for job action is limited by the province’s essential-services legislation, which includes education.

Teacher and trustee representatives are at the B.C. Labour Relations Board this week to determine what services must be maintained in the event of a strike.

Trustees have argued that teachers should not be permitted to disrupt classes more than one day a week.

The current stalemate is nothing new in the parties’ troubled history of bargaining, which began when the then-NDP government brought in provincewide negotiations in 1993.

In each subsequent round of bargaining, the government has had to legislate a new collective agreement.

“History would suggest that negotiations . . . have never led to a solution. But maybe we can break that mould,” Mr. de Jong told reporters in Victoria.

A government-commissioned report by former deputy education minister Don Wright found that the two sides have a dysfunctional bargaining relationship, in part because there is little incentive on either side to settle.

Although teachers technically have the right to strike, public, political and editorial board hysteria over the possibility of any classroom disruption, however limited, has effectively removed that weapon from the union’s arsenal.

BC teachers strike vote update, 9/19/05

Globe and Mail:Classes at risk as vote looms in teachers’ battle with province

VANCOUVER — A breakdown in contract talks and a looming strike vote by British Columbia’s teachers could spell trouble for students at risk of having their education disrupted.

Labour Minister Mike de Jong has promised to step into the simmering dispute today by meeting with the 42,000-member B.C. Teachers’ Federation and the B.C. Public School Employers’ Association.

UK: Unions threaten “biggest strike since 1926)

Guardian: “Unions threaten ‘biggest strike since 1926’

Union leaders today warned the government that pushing through a rise in the public sector retirement age to 65 could provoke the biggest industrial action since the General Strike of 1926.

Industrial action by eight unions protesting to the plan was only narrowly averted before the general election by the promise of talks. Alan Johnson today apologised to unions at the TUC conference in Brighton for the failure to consult them on that occasion.

Workers at U Saskatchewan & U Regina hold strike vote

CUPE 1975 members hold strike vote

REGINA/SASKATOON, SK University workers represented by the Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE) Local 1975 are voting today and tomorrow on whether to support job action to achieve a fair collective agreement.

The union negotiating committee is seeking a strong strike mandate from its 2,400 members who work in food services, maintenance, clerical and many other areas at the University of Saskatchewan and the University of Regina.

Only CUPE 1975 members directly employed by the two universities are involved in this strike vote.

YSU faculty ratify contract proposal

August 29, 2005
Youngstown State University’s faculty union ratified a new contract proposal from the university Sunday evening, ensuring that instructors would be in front of their classrooms when the fall semester begins this morning. Early this morning, the university also reached agreement with more than 400 secretaries, computer programmers and other classified employees, ending their strike of more than a week

By a vote of 182 to 119, the members of the Youngstown State chapter of the Ohio Education Association ratified the contract by secret ballot Sunday evening, according to Bob Hogue, an associate professor of computer science and information systems and the union’s first vice president.

BC teachers strike vote update

The Globe and Mail: Teachers to hold strike vote

VANCOUVER — Teachers are going back to school Sept. 6 and voting Sept. 20 and 22 on whether they will stay there.

The B.C. Teachers’ Federation will conduct a provincewide strike vote over the two days and report the results to its members and the public on Sept. 23.

The province’s 42,000 teachers have been without a contract for 15 months.

If a majority votes in favour of a strike, teachers could walk off the job within 72 hours after the results are known.

YSU faculty and staff on strike

Inside Higher Ed: Youngstown State University Faculty Strike

The picket line is getting crowded around the perimeter of Youngstown State University.

All 390 full-time faculty members went on strike Tuesday after rejecting the university’s most recent contract proposal. With classes set to begin August 29, they joined the 400 secretaries, computer programmers, landscapers and other employees who walked off the job last week.

The major hangups in negotiations for the faculty contract are salary and health care premiums, the same issues as for the employees who struck last Tuesday. Youngstown State offered faculty members a 3 percent raise for each of the next three years, and asked faculty members to pay 1.5 percent of their salary for a family health care plan, or 0.75 percent for an individual plan. Previously, university officials said, Youngstown State was the only public university in Ohio that had not asked employees to contribute from their salaries for health insurance.

The Vindicator: YSU faculty reject pack, strike

YOUNGSTOWN — The Youngstown State University’s faculty union overwhelmingly rejected a three-year contract with 3 percent annual salary increases.

The contract also called for the union, with about 380 members, to pay an amount equal to 1.5 percent of their annual base salary toward health insurance premiums for family coverage and an amount equal to 0.75 percent for single coverage beginning Jan. 1, 2006.

Also, YSU employees whose spouses have jobs that offer health insurance would have to pay $100 a month to the university to keep their spouses on the YSU plan.

Faculty union officials declined to discuss their contract proposals.

But Thomas Maraffa, YSU’s chief negotiator on this contract and special assistant to the president, said the union sought annual salary increases of 3.5 percent, 5 percent and 4.5 percent.

The union wanted employee contributions to be an amount equal to 1 percent for family coverage and 0.5 percent for single coverage, beginning July 1, 2006, Maraffa said.

BC teachers set date for strike vote

Teachers set date for strike vote

After working a full school year without a contract, teachers are preparing to take action to resolve outstanding issues at the bargaining table. Members of the BCTF’s Representative Assembly voted Monday evening to conduct a province-wide strike vote between September 20 and 22, 2005, with the results to be reported to members and the public on September 23, 2005.

BCTF President Jinny Sims said teachers do not take job action lightly. “We would rather not have to do so, but we have been working under increasingly difficult classroom conditions for many months and our students deserve better,” Sims said.

Teachers have been bargaining for a return of class-size limits and other provisions that used to guarantee services and support to students, and a fair and reasonable salary increase. Since the government stripped these provisions from their collective agreement, more than 2,500 full-time teaching positions have been cut and learning conditions have deteriorated across the province.”We have been very outspoken about the decline in the quality of educational services we are able to offer,” Sims said. “Too many students are not getting the support they need to be successful. Teachers have carried on as best we can, trying to fill the gaps and make do with less. But we all know that, ultimately, this trend can’t be allowed to continue.”

Sims emphasized that teachers are willing to work hard to reach a negotiated settlement. However, the employer has refused to discuss the very issues that are crucial to teachers, and has insisted that government would not provide the resources needed to make improvements for students.

“As a result, we are calling on the provincial government to meet with us,” Sims said. “We hope that with a new government and a new school year there is an opportunity for a fresh start and a new problem-solving approach.”

“Our students deserve stability in the school system, and teachers need the resources to meet their needs,” Sims said. “We appeal to the government to join us in seeking solutions to these long-standing issues.”

For more information, contact Nancy Knickerbocker, BCTF media relations officer, at 604-871-1881 (office) or 604-250-6775 (cell).

British Columbia: Teachers set to take strike vote

Teachers to decide on strike vote—
Discussion will centre on types of job action and their legality

Miro Cernetig
Vancouver Sun

Saturday, August 20, 2005

VICTORIA –British Columbia’s teachers will decide Monday night whether to take a strike vote in the weeks ahead and challenge the Liberal government’s view that education is an essential service and illegal to withhold.

High on the agenda when the leadership of the B.C. Teachers’ Federation meets at the University of British Columbia campus will also be defining what sort of service withdrawals could be legally taken in the event of a strike. Options being considered are teachers withdrawing from extracurricular activities or even going to a four-day week or rotating strikes in some districts.

“We would like to be doing this at the table through conversations and negotiations rather than other steps,” said Jinny Sims, the former social studies and English teacher who is president of the BCTF.

“Teachers have been doing and will be doing everything they can to avoid any disruptions,” said Sims. “But they (the public) have to know we’ve been without a contract for 15 months . . . . Teachers are frustrated.”

B.C. Education Minister Shirley Bond said the province’s 42,000 teachers do have the right to take a strike vote, a common pressure tactic by a union when negotiations stall. But she hopes the teachers will vote against taking job action.

“Even taking a strike vote is a concern,” added Bond. “It’s an alarming thing for parents and families in this province. I don’t want the beginning of the school year to be affected . . . . I think that would be unfortunate.”

There is little sign the government will be loosening the purse strings or caving into teachers’ demands that issues such as limits on class sizes be part of the negotiations. Bond said she remains committed to the government’s “zero, zero” policy regarding wage increases and that classroom sizes will not be part of any agreement.

If the teachers do decide to hold a strike vote it would be three weeks or more before it was actually carried out. If a strike mandate were given by teachers, job action might be delayed further or not happen at all.

Still, many observers believe teachers and the government are headed for a showdown.

“We like to be optimistic,” said Kim Howland, the president of the B.C. Confederation of Parents’ Advisory Councils. “But I think the reality is, knowing the history of bargaining with the BCTF, that we are definitely headed toward a strike or job action unless something miraculous happens. But I think parents are prepared for job action.”

However, she said, they won’t be happy.

But defining an essential service in education won’t be up to parents or the government. The final word will rest with the B.C. Labour Relations Board, which would be likely be called on to adjudicate if job action begins.

John Horgan, the NDP’s education critic, said people should understand that a move toward a strike vote would be a normal and predictable part of the bargaining process. But he said the Liberal government needs to “extend an olive branch” and meet with teachers to discuss concerns such as class size.

A chance to solve the impasse may come Aug. 31, when Sims is set too meet with Bond. But don’t expect a quick solution.

“This is not a substitute for bargaining at the table,” Bond said.

mcernetig@png.canwest.com

© The Vancouver Sun 2005

Teachers union to decide on strike vote

Canadian Press

Monday, August 22, 2005

VICTORIA — Education Minister Shirley Bond says for the sake of the kids, the B.C. Teachers Federation should stop talking about the possibility of a strike.

Union officials meet in Vancouver Monday night to discuss options and decide whether to take a strike vote.

Bond says even the thought of a strike vote is causing incredible uncertainty and concern for parents and students.

Teachers have been without a contract since June of last year.

Bond is urging them to return to bargaining, adding that virtually every other public service union and association has adhered to the Liberals’ wage controls.

Bond is to meet with the head of the teachers union Aug. 31.

© The Canadian Press 2005

YSU faculty union sets date for strike

YSU faculty set strike date

YOUNGSTOWN — Youngstown State University’s 380-member faculty union filed a notice to strike effective Aug. 23 if a new contract isn’t ironed out by then.

It could get quite crowded on the strike line.

The YSU Association of Classified Employees union, which represents about 400 nonfaculty members, plans to strike Tuesday if it cannot get a new contract by then.

The YSU Board of Trustees met with top university officials for one hour and 45 minutes Tuesday behind closed doors to discuss contract negotiations with the two unions. No action was taken by the board.

The board had planned to consider a fact finder’s report on contract negotiations with ACE at Tuesday’s meeting.

However, the union rejected the report Friday 316 to 19, so the YSU board didn’t discuss it during the executive session, said Trustee John Pogue, chairman of the internal affairs committee.

“It was a moot issue; we didn’t discuss it at all,” he said. “We discussed our offer and ability to reach an agreement.”

Negotiators for ACE and the university met Tuesday and were to continue discussion today.

Kent State Professors Voting on Potential Strike

Kent State Professors Voting on Potential Strike

POSTED: 10:19 am EDT July 28, 2005
UPDATED: 1:29 pm EDT July 28, 2005

KENT, Ohio — Kent State University faculty members who have been working without a contract for nearly a year are voting on whether to authorize a strike, NewsChannel5 reported.

The voting by mail ends next Wednesday.

Members of the Kent chapter of the American Association of University Professors rejected a tentative agreement reached in June.

Kent State spokesman Scott Rainone said the university has every intention of starting classes on Aug. 29. He declined to talk about any contingency plan the school might have.

Physics professor Michael Lee, who is chairman of the union’s action committee, said members objected to a provision in the tentative agreement requiring them to pay half of any increases in health care costs.

Copyright 2005 by NewsNet5. The Associated Press contributed to this report. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistribute

Pennsylvania: Coaches Threaten Strike

College Coaches Threaten Strike

POSTED: 1:43 pm EDT August 1, 2005
UPDATED: 1:47 pm EDT August 1, 2005

HARRISBURG, Pa. — The start of the fall sports season may be in jeopardy for many Pennsylvania college and university students.

Coaches at Pennsylvania’s 14 state-run universities are threatening to strike over a contract dispute.

The coaches want pay raises retroactive to July 1, 2004, when their last contract expired. They also want job renewals linked to performance reviews.
The state is offering a 3 percent pay hike when the contract takes effect and another 2.5 percent raise in January 2007. On health care, the two sides have agreed that coaches will begin contributing 0.5 percent of their salaries toward insurance premiums.

The coaches authorized a strike in June. About 8,400 students participate in the National Collegiate Athletic Association Division II Pennsylvania State Athletic Conference.

As strike threat looms, school closure plot is crushed

UK: PLANS to close a major school site a year early have been ditched after teachers threatened to strike

Law profs at FAMU may strke

As many as 10 professors at Florida A&M University’s law school who didn’t get paid for the first session of summer classes have threatened to stop teaching if they don’t get the salaries they were promised.

Malaspina UC set for strike vote

Vocational instructors at Malaspina University-College are gearing up for possible job action in September by holding a strike vote next week after contract talks with their employer hit an impasse this month.

Quebec government weakened by student strike

University Affairs: Charest government weakened by Quebec student strike

With a brutal and prolonged strike by more than 170,000 university and college students finally winding down, administrators at dozens of Quebec campuses are now scrambling to salvage the winter term.

Yet it is Jean Charest’s Liberal government which has emerged from the conflict looking battered and bruised. After going 15 rounds with younger, fiercer and more agile adversaries, the Liberals caved to demands to restore $103 million in bursary funds. Now they may back away from what should have been the main event — ending the freeze on tuition, pegged at the bargain rate of $1,862 for more than a decade.