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B.C. Teachers Rally In Vancouver, Repeat Call For Binding Arbitration

Darpan News Desk Darpan, 06 Sep, 2014 01:51 AM
    VANCOUVER - The head of British Columbia's teachers' union has turned the screws on the provincial government to agree to binding arbitration and settle a teachers strike that has kept half-a-million students out of class.
     
    Jim Iker addressed masses of teachers, their supporting unions and members of the opposition New Democrats at a rally in downtown Vancouver Friday evening.
     
    He repeated his call for binding arbitration after getting a negative response by Education Minister Peter Fassbender to the union's proposal.
     
    Friday was the first time the teachers' union has proposed such a settlement method in its decades of combative history with B.C. governments of all political stripes. 
     
    If the government agrees, both sides would mutually agree on a person who would hammer out contract details that everyone would be compelled to accept.

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    Tired but triumphant ball hockey team breaks record for longest game

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    Better lighting, more patrols greet UBC students arriving for fall term

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    Hitchhiking robot enters final leg of its Halifax-to-Victoria journey

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