Close X
Friday, November 22, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. school support staff have tentative deal

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 16 Sep, 2022 06:41 PM
  • B.C. school support staff have tentative deal

VICTORIA - A tentative framework agreement has been reached for 40,000 unionized elementary and secondary support staff in British Columbia.

The Finance Ministry says the deal is between the Public School Employers' Association and school presidents' councils representing 57 locals of the Canadian Union of Public Employees.

The tentative agreement covers workers in a variety of jobs in the public sector, including education assistants, custodians, maintenance workers and Indigenous support staff in the kindergarten-to-Grade 12 sector.

The ministry says the provincial framework represents one part of local agreements for staff and now negotiations at the district level will get underway.

The deal is part of the government's so-called shared recovery mandate, which applies to all public-sector employers with unionized employees whose collective agreements expire on or by Dec. 31.

The Canadian Union of Public Employees is the largest union representing support staff in the kindergarten-to-Grade 12 sector.

MORE National ARTICLES

Rain, cooler weather aid B.C. wildfire crews

Rain, cooler weather aid B.C. wildfire crews
Rain in southwest B.C. also dampened the two wildfires east and southwest of Hope, including the five-square kilometre blaze that affected eastbound traffic on Highway 1, and the BC Wildfire Service says both fires are now ranked as "being held," meaning neither is likely to spread.

Rain, cooler weather aid B.C. wildfire crews

Burnaby RCMP need the public's help in finding missing man Rajesh Verma

Burnaby RCMP need the public's help in finding missing man Rajesh Verma
Burnaby RCMP is asking for the public’s assistance in locating 65-year-old Rajesh Verma. Rajesh was last seen by family in the 8800-block of Armstrong Avenue at 3:30 p.m. Thursday, September 15, 2022.  

Burnaby RCMP need the public's help in finding missing man Rajesh Verma

Former PMs to attend queen's funeral in London

Former PMs to attend queen's funeral in London
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, Gov. Gen. Mary Simon and their spouses are leading the delegation, which departs Friday, though it's unclear whether all guests will travel on the same aircraft. The group will include former governors general Michaëlle Jean and David Johnston as well as former prime ministers Kim Campbell, Jean Chrétien, Paul Martin and Stephen Harper.

Former PMs to attend queen's funeral in London

B.C. gondola operator sues security company

B.C. gondola operator sues security company
A notice of claim filed in B.C. Supreme Court this week by Sea to Sky Gondola argues an alarm system designed and installed by Unified Systems Inc. failed when an unidentified person cut the cable for the second time in September 2020.

B.C. gondola operator sues security company

B.C. toxic drug deaths double since 2016

B.C. toxic drug deaths double since 2016
The BC Coroners Service recorded 192 drug-related deaths in July, a 31 per cent increase from June and equating to about 6.2 deaths per day. The new figures show the death rate across the province this year is 42 per 100,000, twice what it was in April 2016 when the public-health emergency was declared.

B.C. toxic drug deaths double since 2016

Supply is answer to housing crisis: Falcon

Supply is answer to housing crisis: Falcon
Opposition leader Kevin Falcon says a Liberal government under his leadership would increase supply as a way to help first-time buyers. He says he would also back "direct" supports for renters, but he hasn't "fleshed out" exactly how that would look.

Supply is answer to housing crisis: Falcon