Close X
Thursday, November 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. Education Minister Urges Teachers' Union To Pause Strike For Mediation

The Canadian Press , 28 Aug, 2014 12:50 AM
    VICTORIA - The question of whether British Columbia's half-million schoolchildren start classes as scheduled next week appears to hinge the teachers' union accepting a government proposal to temporarily end an ongoing strike and delay dealing with one of the union's largest grievances.
     
    Education Minister Peter Fassbender met with the B.C. Teachers' Federation and the government's lead negotiator Wednesday in Victoria, where he asked both sides to take a two-week break from strikes or lockouts if a veteran labour mediator agrees to get involved.
     
    But Fassbender's proposal would require the union to set aside the issue of class size and composition, which the teachers' federation has said is the main sticking point. Those issues were the subject of two important court rulings, both of which found the government violated teachers' collective bargaining rights.
     
    "If Mr. (Vince) Ready saw that we were close enough, by setting aside the grievance portion of the court case, which is still on going ... then we could get it done," Fassbender said, referring to a mediator who was brought into the process earlier this month.
     
    "It could be that if the BCTF was ready to accept that proposal overall, we could get into mediation as early as (Thursday). And if we got a settlement this weekend, then nobody would have to stand down anything."
     
    After the meeting, Iker did not indicate what the union planned to do, though he said he wanted mediation to start as soon as possible.
     
    "The minister has some ideas and I think those ideas should come to us through the bargaining table with Mr. Ready," he told reporters. "There wasn't any new idea proposed today that we haven't heard."
     
    The union said in an emailed statement that Iker hopes the government will demonstrate to Ready that it's willing to make "significant moves," including more funding to improve class size and composition.
     
    Fassbender declined to say whether the province is prepared to offer anything new. But he said the contract proposal put forward by the union, which includes $225 million a year to deal with the court grievances from the B.C. Supreme Court decision, should be put aside until the case winds through the appeals process.
     
    The court ruled earlier this year — for the second time — that the government acted illegally when it stripped issues related to class size and class composition from teachers' contract in 2002. The province is appealing.
     
    Iker was not immediately available for an interview.
     
    Fassbender said Iker told him he would need to consult the union executive before responding. The minister said Iker also told him teachers would need to vote before the strike would be suspended.
     
     
    Fassbender has repeatedly said the government will not use legislation to force the teachers back to work.
     
    The officials met as the union ramps up pressure by returning to the picket lines and planning protests and rallies, two months after teachers launched a full-scale strike in the final weeks of the school year.
     
    Wages, benefits, class size and class composition are among the major issues prompting the longest dispute in the province's history that began with several weeks of rotating walkouts.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. firefighters get a break as Ontario fire crews step in to help

    B.C. firefighters get a break as Ontario fire crews step in to help
    VANCOUVER - Firefighters in British Columbia will be getting a much-deserved break after crews from Ontario arrived in Prince George to help out in one of the busiest fire seasons in years....

    B.C. firefighters get a break as Ontario fire crews step in to help

    Saskatchewan beats B.C. 20-16 for fifth win in a row

    Saskatchewan beats B.C. 20-16 for fifth win in a row
    Two unheralded Saskatchewan players spoiled the B.C. Lions' guaranteed win night Sunday.

    Saskatchewan beats B.C. 20-16 for fifth win in a row

    Meagre pay, tough conditions: Health-care workers needed for Ebola response

    Meagre pay, tough conditions: Health-care workers needed for Ebola response
    TORONTO - The pay is a pittance, the conditions are gruelling, and the personal risks are all too real. The need for international health-care workers to help in the response...

    Meagre pay, tough conditions: Health-care workers needed for Ebola response

    Victoria conference teaches First Nations how to map territories on Google Earth

    Victoria conference teaches First Nations how to map territories on Google Earth
    VICTORIA - Google Earth may soon extend it global gaze to some of the most remote First Nations territories in Canada....

    Victoria conference teaches First Nations how to map territories on Google Earth

    Head of B.C. Teachers' Union Jim Iker Calls For Government To Enter Mediation

    Head of B.C. Teachers' Union Jim Iker Calls For Government To Enter Mediation
    KAMLOOPS, B.C. - The head of the BC Teachers' Federation is urging government to enter mediation with teachers in order to end an ongoing strike before the school year starts next week.

    Head of B.C. Teachers' Union Jim Iker Calls For Government To Enter Mediation

    Scientists study seismic line restoration in Alberta foothills to save Caribou

    Scientists study seismic line restoration in Alberta foothills to save Caribou
    HINTON, Alta. - Scientists studying the ravaged caribou habitat of Alberta's northwestern foothills say they have found so much disturbance from decades of industrial use that restoration will have to be selective.

    Scientists study seismic line restoration in Alberta foothills to save Caribou