Close X
Saturday, September 21, 2024
ADVT 
National

BC Appeals Teachers' Victory, Points Finger At Union's Refusal To Budge

Darpan News Desk Darpan, 14 Oct, 2014 10:17 PM
    VANCOUVER - A lawyer for British Columbia's government is challenging a judge's ruling that it acted unconstitutionally when it deleted hundreds of clauses over working conditions involving its teachers' union.
     
    Government lawyer Karen Horsman opened the much-anticipated case in the B.C. Court of Appeal on Tuesday with an offensive stand aimed at convincing a panel of five judges to overturn the union victory handed down last January.
     
    Horsman told the court that the government was never required to restore the language removed from the B.C. Teachers' Federation contract in 2002.
     
    It was only obligated to consult in good faith, she said.
     
    "The government's strong position to not restore the clauses is no more illustrative of bad faith than the refusal of the BCTF to discuss anything other than the union's statement of terms of the 2001 collective agreement," Horsman told court in her opening statement.
     
    B.C. Supreme Court Justice Susan Griffin twice ruled the government acted illegally in 2002 when it removed the clauses, and the appeal court hearing begins the next chapter in the saga of the teachers versus the province over the matter.
     
    Union leadership repeatedly raised the victories in 2011 and 2014 during the bitter teachers' strike that delayed the fall session by three weeks, claiming the government was attempting to bargain away rights enshrined by the court.
     
    In her most recent decision, Griffin found the government had bargained in bad faith — and deliberately planned to provoke a strike — during the consultation process for a 2012 education bill that ultimately barred further strikes and appointed a mediator.
     
     
    Teachers walked off the job in protest of Bill 22 for three days in March 2012, and the government subsequently passed back-to-work legislation. The bill again deleted the clauses related to working conditions, but allowed for class size and class composition to be part of future negotiations.
     
    Horsman argued Tuesday the trial judge erred in her analysis of the case, saying Griffin's decision went too far when it retroactively restored the stripped clauses. She asserted that the teachers' constitutional rights are limited to providing a fair process, as opposed to guaranteeing an outcome.
     
    "A limited right to process cannot conceivably translate into a perpetual right on the part of unionized employees to insist on the inclusion of prior terms in renewal collective agreements," she said. "The result is to fetter successive government administrations who act in different fiscal and policy climates."
     
    The issue of whether educational policy should be in the hands of the union or the government is at stake in this latest round of the legal battle. After Griffin first ruled the government had violated teachers' rights, she gave one year for the province to provide a remedy. In response, it passed the back-to-work legislation.
     
    Horsman said the consultation aimed at answering the court must be viewed in the context of two decades of impasse between the sides. She told the panel the government was trying to find its way around the historic gulf through an alternative approach — by addressing concerns over class composition and teacher workload in the form of a targeted fund.
     
    "An obligation to consider the views of employees expressed through their union does not mean the government has to agree with them," Horsman said. "Good faith requires that both parties be willing to consider alternatives to their initial positions — and the government was the only party to advance an alternative."
     
    Outside court, union president Jim Iker said the BCTF continues to feel vindicated by the lower court rulings and believes in the strength of its case.
     
     
    "Governments are elected to uphold the law, not to break the law," Iker said in an interview.
     
    "I think this decision is huge, not just for teachers and students and public education, but for all working people, for all Canadians, where government actually has to uphold the constitution and not violate it."
     
    He said the recent, six-year negotiated settlement created a place holder for the ultimate ruling, which is likely to be appealed by whichever side loses the case and takes it to the Supreme Court of Canada.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Budget office says job credit will create only 200 jobs next year

    Budget office says job credit will create only 200 jobs next year
    OTTAWA - The parliamentary budget office says the Harper government's $550 million small business job credit will only create 200 net new jobs next year and another 600 in 2016.

    Budget office says job credit will create only 200 jobs next year

    Peladeau will put his Quebecor shares in trust if he becomes PQ leader

    Peladeau will put his Quebecor shares in trust if he becomes PQ leader
    QUEBEC - Pierre Karl Peladeau is rejecting calls that he sell his controlling stake in Quebecor Inc. as he ponders a bid for the leadership of the Parti Quebecois.

    Peladeau will put his Quebecor shares in trust if he becomes PQ leader

    Trial dates for Nelson Hart expected to be set next month in prison incident

    Trial dates for Nelson Hart expected to be set next month in prison incident
    ST. JOHN'S, N.L. - The case of a Newfoundland man released from prison after murder charges were dropped will return to court next month to set trial dates on separate charges.

    Trial dates for Nelson Hart expected to be set next month in prison incident

    Activists plan court challenge to 'anti-democratic' Fair Elections Act

    Activists plan court challenge to 'anti-democratic' Fair Elections Act
    OTTAWA - The Council of Canadians and the Canadian Federation of Students will ask the courts to overturn parts of the Harper government's Fair Elections Act.

    Activists plan court challenge to 'anti-democratic' Fair Elections Act

    Conservative changes to EI could cost Canada jobs, Budget watchdog warns

    Conservative changes to EI could cost Canada jobs, Budget watchdog warns
    OTTAWA - The Harper government's $550-million small-business job credit will create just 800 net new jobs in 2015-16, while a freeze in employment insurance premiums could cost the economy 10,000 jobs over the same period, Canada's parliamentary budget office says.

    Conservative changes to EI could cost Canada jobs, Budget watchdog warns

    RCMP investigating suspected extremists heading abroad, returning from fights

    RCMP investigating suspected extremists heading abroad, returning from fights
    OTTAWA - The RCMP has about 63 active security investigations on 90 suspected extremists who intend to join fights abroad or who have returned to Canada, said Bob Paulson, commissioner of the national police force.

    RCMP investigating suspected extremists heading abroad, returning from fights