Close X
Thursday, January 16, 2025
ADVT 
National

Education support workers in and near Edmonton could walk off job as soon as Monday

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 09 Jan, 2025 03:12 PM
  • Education support workers in and near Edmonton could walk off job as soon as Monday

More than 3,000 educational support workers in Edmonton and some nearby communities could walk off the job as early as Monday.

The Canadian Union of Public Employees says locals representing workers with the Edmonton Public School Board and the Sturgeon Public School Division were to serve strike notice on Thursday.

School support workers include education assistants, librarians, cafeteria workers and administration staff.

In an interview, CUPE Local 3550 president Mandy Lamoureux said the union plans to escalate job action until the Alberta government addresses low wages. The union and the province have been at a standstill on a new deal since 2020.

Lamoureux, whose local represents the 3,000 workers at roughly 250 Edmonton public schools, said the average educational support worker earns $34,500 in Alberta. No one will take these jobs at those wages, she said.

Officials often tell her members that schools can't run without them, but those words aren't enough, she said.

"We don't need praise, we need a raise," she said. "Our school board superintendent has said he appreciates and values us, and we get that, but we also need to be appreciated financially."

Roughly 1,000 school support workers have been on the picket lines in Fort McMurray since Tuesday, following rotating job action that began in November. Union officials there warned the strike could go Alberta-wide by the spring if the province doesn't act.

CUPE Alberta president Rory Gill previously told The Canadian Press those workers were recently given an offer of three per cent retroactive to 2020. It works out to just 1.75 per cent for 2023 and 1.75 per cent for 2024.

Lamoureux said her members are being offered 2.75 per cent for the same time frame, which equals 1.25 per cent for 2023 and 1.50 per cent for 2024.

Working as an education support worker was sustainable 10 years ago, but that's no longer the case, she said.

"Many of our members work two to three jobs to earn a living wage," she said, adding some also make use of food banks.

"It is a hard decision to vote to strike, but if we take no action, a bad situation for students will get even worse in the long run."

Finance Minister Nate Horner accused CUPE of misleading members and the public. In a statement, he said the union had members reject the offer, despite purportedly accepting similar deals for workers in other parts of the province.

Horner said school boards are responsible for negotiating with CUPE and that the province merely provides the funding to those boards. 

"The work of educational assistants is important, but only takes place part-time and only during the school year," he said. "No one would expect to earn a full-time salary for 10 months of part-time work."

Horner said going on strike is not a solution and blaming the government isn't either.

“CUPE leadership needs to stop misleading its members, students, parents and the public and get back to the bargaining table with creative solutions," he said.

Edmonton public schools spokeswoman Carrie Rosa said the division is disappointed by the strike notice but is "committed" to reaching an agreement with the union.

"We have worked incredibly hard over the past two years to reach an agreement that would avoid any disruption to student learning," she said in a statement. 

"We have tabled everything we possibly can, including a longer-term eight-year deal that provides certainty and stability for support staff."

Rosa said schools have been working on contingency plans if the strike goes ahead. It may include students having to rotate in-person learning throughout the week or be supported in learning from home, she said.

Sturgeon Public Schools did not immediately return a request for comment.

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C.'s new cabinet to be sworn in Nov. 18 after this week's judicial recounts

B.C.'s new cabinet to be sworn in Nov. 18 after this week's judicial recounts
British Columbia's new cabinet is expected to be sworn in on Nov. 18, almost a month after the provincial election that gave Premier David Eby's New Democrats the slimmest of majorities, pending recounts.

B.C.'s new cabinet to be sworn in Nov. 18 after this week's judicial recounts

Tunnel under Stanley Park coming

Tunnel under Stanley Park coming
The Metro Vancouver regional district says construction will begin this month on a new 1.4-kilometre-long water supply tunnel deep under Stanley Park. A statement from the district says the tunnel will replace a water main that was built in the 1930s with work expected to stretch into 2029.

Tunnel under Stanley Park coming

B.C. business groups urge end to port lockout as labour dispute halts shipping

B.C. business groups urge end to port lockout as labour dispute halts shipping
British Columbia's businesses leaders are urging port employers and more than 700 unionized workers to resolve their dispute immediately as a lockdown paralyzes shipping along Canada's west coast. The BC Maritime Employers Association says no negotiations are scheduled a day after it launched what it calls a defensive lockout against members of the International Longshore and Warehouse Union Local 514.

B.C. business groups urge end to port lockout as labour dispute halts shipping

Eby wants all-party probe into B.C. vote count errors as election boss blames weather

Eby wants all-party probe into B.C. vote count errors as election boss blames weather
Premier David Eby is proposing an all-party committee investigate mistakes made during the British Columbia election vote tally, including an uncounted ballot box and unreported votes in three-quarters of the province's 93 ridings. The proposal comes after B.C.'s chief electoral officer blamed extreme weather, long working hours and a new voting system for human errors behind the mistakes in last month's count, though none were large enough to change the initial results.

Eby wants all-party probe into B.C. vote count errors as election boss blames weather

'It feels very bad': Brampton reels after two nights of tense protest outside temple

'It feels very bad': Brampton reels after two nights of tense protest outside temple
Monday night saw hundreds of demonstrators gather outside the Hindu Sabha Mandir in Brampton, Ont., where police allege people in the crowd were carrying weapons and objects were being thrown.  That demonstration came after violent protests on Sunday outside the same temple spilled over to two other locations in Mississauga, Ont. 

'It feels very bad': Brampton reels after two nights of tense protest outside temple

Fatal crash on Vancouver Island

Fatal crash on Vancouver Island
Police say they're investigating a head-on crash that killed one person on Vancouver Island over the weekend. R-C-M-P say witnesses to the crash on Highway 18 west of Duncan told police that a compact pickup truck was heading west when it drifted into the oncoming lane and struck a one-tonne pickup.

Fatal crash on Vancouver Island