OSSTF's 2nd day of strikes will close many public high schools on Wednesday - Action News
Home WebMail Sunday, November 24, 2024, 06:56 AM | Calgary | -12.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Toronto

OSSTF's 2nd day of strikes will close many public high schools on Wednesday

Members of the Ontario Secondary School Teachers' Federation (OSSTF) announced they will go ahead witha second one-day schoolstrikeWednesday sinceno deal has beenreached between the union and the government.

Ontario education minister provided update to contract talks Tuesday

The province estimates the OSSTF's proposed increase incompensation and benefits for teachers and education workers would cost the province $240 million over three years. (Julianne Hazlewood/CBC)

Members of the Ontario Secondary School Teachers' Federation (OSSTF) announced they will go ahead witha second one-day schoolstrikeWednesday sinceno deal has beenreached between the union and the government.

High schools run by nine school boards across the province will be closed on Wednesday now that the strike is going ahead,including at high schools in the Toronto District School Board.

OSSTF president Harvey Bischof says theunion, whichrepresentsmost of the province's public high school teachers,and the provincial government have not met this week to continue contract negotiations, making the job action unavoidable.

In a news conference Tuesday,Ontario Education MinisterStephen Lecce urged the union to call off the strike and sit down with a third-party mediator in a bid to reach an agreement.

"We'd been reasonable, the union has not moved once since this process began,and they now need to do the same," Lecce said at the conference Tuesday.

He says it's up OSSTF to make the next move.

"This isn't a a game, theseare our kids, they should be in class tomorrow."

Lecce also announceda tentative labour deal with the Educational Workers' Alliance of Ontario (EWAO), which represents a number of smaller unions.

EWAO represents teachers from the following groups:

  • Educational Assistants Association.
  • Dufferin-Peel Education Resource Worker's Association.
  • Halton District Educational Assistants Association.
  • Association of Professional Student Services Personnel.
  • Unite Here Local 272, Service Employees' International Union Local 2.
  • Association des enseignantes et des enseignants franco-ontariens.

"As shown with EWAO, and CUPE in October, our government has remained a constructive force at the table working hard to ensure parents have the predictability they deserve," Lecce said.

Meanwhile, the province remains locked in labour talks with two other major teachers' unions.

Elementary teachers are ramping up their work-to-rule campaign, saying the teachers they represent will no longerplan any new field trips or distribute letters or memos from schools and boards.

Ontario English Catholic teachers are also moving closer to a potential strike.

OSSTFincreasewould cost$240Mover 3 years: province

With education bargaining at a standstill, Lecce has released cost figures for OSSTF's contract proposals.

The government laid out the costs in a chartprovided to reporters during a technical briefing this afternoon, and projected the cost if all education unions get the same deal as OSSTF.

Across the public high school system province-wide, the government estimates the increase incompensation and benefits for teachers and education workers would cost an estimated $1.52 billion by the end of 2022.

Of that $1.52 billion increase, Lecce says OSSTF teachers and education workers alone would cost $240 million.

Rolling back all class size increases and cancelling all plans for online courses would cost another $275 million by the third year, Lecce added.

In total by the end of 2022, the province estimates the proposed requirementswould cost a total of $2.98 billion, which includes the estimated cost if the proposal is applied to all education unions.

That total, however, doesn't include the addition of professional development (PD) days or the proposal to improve the sick-leave plan for teachers and education workers.

"I just think it is important for those data points to be publicized, I actually choose not to comment on the merits of them," Lecce said.

'Ford knows exactly how to keep kids in school'

NDP LeaderAndrea Horwathisn't convinced by thenumbers projected by Ontario Premier Doug Ford's government.They're meant to "confuse and worry people," she said.

"Today what we're seeing from Mr. Lecce is an obvious desperate attempt to make this about anything but Mr. Ford's class size hikes, teacher layoffs and cuts to our children's education," Horwathsaid.

"Mr. Ford knows exactly how to keep kids in school tomorrow and I'm calling on him to do just that."

Horwathsaysshe'surging the premier to cancel education budget cuts, keep class sizes at an average of 22 students andget rid of the plan to have students take courses online changes she calls "pretty basic."

With files from The Canadian Press