Friday, July 5, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. Teachers Want Immediate Action On Supreme Court Win, Christy Clark Says Time Needed

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 15 Nov, 2016 12:46 PM
    VICTORIA — The president of the teacher's union in British Columbia said Monday he expects more teachers in classrooms as early as January after a Supreme Court of Canada decision that affects class sizes.
     
    But Premier Christy Clark said implementing the ruling will take some time.
     
    The Supreme Court agreed last week with the B.C. Teacher's Federation and overturned legislation from 2002 that prevented the union from negotiating certain provisions in its collective agreement, such as class sizes and the number of students with special needs in a classroom. 
     
    The court ruled the government must allow the union to negotiate the issues.
     
    "It will mean a massive human undertaking because it will ... involve several thousand of teachers having to be rehired," said federation president Glen Hansman. "They will need to be doing something sooner rather than later."
     
    He said he expects the government to start hiring more teachers for the start of the second semester at many secondary schools in January.
     
     
    "We should aspire to that," said Hansman. "It is doable. Certainly, we have a lot of members who are languishing on on-call lists who are available for full-time employment."
     
    The union said the legislation that was overturned by the Supreme Court allowed the government to underfund education for 14 years. Hansman said teachers want the government to bring back contract provisions to reduce class sizes and offer more support for students with special needs.
     
    The teachers' union estimates the court decision will cost the government between $250 million and $350 million annually, he said.
     
    Clark, who is in London, England, to accept an award for the preservation of the Great Bear Rainforest, said she expects the government and teachers to begin talks on class size and the composition of classes.
     
     
    "I know there is a lot of speculation about how much this will cost, but I would say this is the most important investment that we make as a society, so let's make it," she said.
     
    The premier said the government will put money in the next budget for the Supreme Court decision, but she wouldn't speculate on the cost, beyond the $100 million a year that has already been placed in a contingency fund in recent budgets.
     
    "We do need to make sure the money is there," she said.
     
    Clark said she cannot guarantee classroom changes will be in place for the start of next school year in September.
     
    "I think we all hope it will be," she said. "It really does depend on how the negotiations go."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Toronto Has Highest Child Poverty Rate Of Canadian Cities

    Toronto Has Highest Child Poverty Rate Of Canadian Cities
    The report, titled "Divided City: Life in Canada's Child Poverty Capital," says 133,000 children in Toronto — 27 per cent — were living in low-income families in 2014, the year the data were collected.

    Toronto Has Highest Child Poverty Rate Of Canadian Cities

    Man Killed By Vancouver Police In Botched Canadian Tire Robbery Identified

    Man Killed By Vancouver Police In Botched Canadian Tire Robbery Identified
    VANCOUVER — The BC Coroners Service has named the 38-year-old man fatally shot by Vancouver Police last week.

    Man Killed By Vancouver Police In Botched Canadian Tire Robbery Identified

    Toronto Removes Signs Urging White People To Mobilize Against Multiculturalism

    Toronto Removes Signs Urging White People To Mobilize Against Multiculturalism
    City councillor Janet Davis tweeted Monday that staff were also looking into who is behind the posters, which were spotted in her ward

    Toronto Removes Signs Urging White People To Mobilize Against Multiculturalism

    First Nation Accepts $50Million Settlement For Land In Nanaimo, B.C.

    NANAIMO, B.C. — Members of a First Nation on Vancouver Island have ratified a nearly $50-million settlement with the federal government, compensating the community for a piece of land in what is now downtown Nanaimo, B.C.

    First Nation Accepts $50Million Settlement For Land In Nanaimo, B.C.

    Mother Skeptical Of Investigation Into Son's Deadly Overdose At Treatment Centre

    Mother Skeptical Of Investigation Into Son's Deadly Overdose At Treatment Centre
    They Are Just Wanting To Wash Their Hands Of It,' Says Michelle Jansen, Mother Of Brandon Jansen

    Mother Skeptical Of Investigation Into Son's Deadly Overdose At Treatment Centre

    Researchers Worried Killer Whale Population Will Flatline With Female Deaths

    Researchers Worried Killer Whale Population Will Flatline With Female Deaths
    VANCOUVER — The death of a single wild animal is not usually significant, but for an endangered species of killer whales the loss of a young female has some experts worried that the population may reach a point where it stops growing.

    Researchers Worried Killer Whale Population Will Flatline With Female Deaths