Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
National

More classes cancelled as B.C. teachers strike goes into second week of school

Darpan News Desk Canadian Press, 08 Sep, 2014 10:33 AM
    VANCOUVER - All half a million of British Columbia's public school students remain locked out of their classrooms at the start of the second week of the school year as the teachers strike continues.
     
    Over the weekend, the province rejected a deal that tried to end — or at least suspend — the  strike.
     
    Education Minister Peter Fassbender says he would not agree to binding arbitration after government negotiator Peter Cameron advised against the idea, saying the proposal was not serious.
     
    Cameron says the teachers did not put give government a written proposal and failed to guarantee the end of the strike.
     
    But Jim Iker of the BC Teachers' Federation says the union would have asked its members to vote to end the job action, and government was being inflexible.
     
    If both sides had gone forward with the deal, a third party would have been appointed to draw out contract details that teachers and government would have been forced to agree upon.
     
    Fassbender had previously given a cool response to the idea, but stopped short of "categorically" rejecting the proposal.
     
    However, since Cameron's suggestion, it appears arbitration is completely out of the picture.
     
    After government's rejection of the idea, Cameron said he believed the next step toward resolving the dispute would be to hold talks with veteran mediator Vince Ready.
     
    The teachers' union has also expressed openness to the idea on Twitter.
     
    Ready is regarded as one of Canada's top labour troubleshooters, but he said last week the two sides were too far apart for mediation to be effective.
     
    But Cameron says Ready is still monitoring the situation.
     
    The ongoing job action has prompted one school district to entertain its international students  because refunds for the annual admission fee will not be given for time lost during the strike.
     
    The Delta School District charges $13,000 for students from around the world to come learn English and attend its classes for a year.
     
    Spokeswoman Deneka Michaud (mi-show) says administrators will take students to see parks, lakes and do Canadian activities for several days this week.
     
    She says the district will monitor the strike situation and make plans on how it will handle the international students if job action keeps going.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Report Pleads For B.C. Government Funding To Help End Domestic Violence

    Report Pleads For B.C. Government Funding To Help End Domestic Violence
    VICTORIA - A new report that pleads with the B.C. government to invest in the fight against domestic violence highlights a brutal set of statistics in the province for 2014.

    Report Pleads For B.C. Government Funding To Help End Domestic Violence

    Canada Pension Plan’s Hidden Costs Make It Three Times More Expensive Than Reported

    Canada Pension Plan’s Hidden Costs Make It Three Times More Expensive Than Reported
    TORONTO - The Canada Pension Plan is hiding the fact that its administrative costs have more than tripled since 2006 because of transaction and external management fees, according to a new report from a conservative think-thank.

    Canada Pension Plan’s Hidden Costs Make It Three Times More Expensive Than Reported

    Mounties Consider Charges As ATV Crashes Into Okanagan Public Library

    Mounties Consider Charges As ATV Crashes Into Okanagan Public Library
    VERNON, B.C. - Two women may be facing charges after crashing an ATV into the front window of a public library in the North Okanagan.

    Mounties Consider Charges As ATV Crashes Into Okanagan Public Library

    Virgin Atlantic Drops Vancouver

    Virgin Atlantic Drops Vancouver
    VANCOUVER - Virgin Atlantic is dropping its only Canadian destination, Vancouver, when summer seasonal service ends Oct. 11. The service operated five flights per week.

    Virgin Atlantic Drops Vancouver

    PM Stephen Harper says divided UK not in global interest

    PM Stephen Harper says divided UK not in global interest
    LONDON, England - Stephen Harper says breaking up the United Kingdom would not serve the greater global interest, nor the interest of ordinary people throughout the country.

    PM Stephen Harper says divided UK not in global interest

    Few Jobless In Toronto Are Collecting Employment Insurance Benefits

    Few Jobless In Toronto Are Collecting Employment Insurance Benefits
    OTTAWA - Just 17 per cent of unemployed Torontonians are collecting employment insurance benefits, one of the city's lowest rates ever as it confronts a higher jobless rate than the provincial and national average.

    Few Jobless In Toronto Are Collecting Employment Insurance Benefits