Close X
Saturday, November 16, 2024
ADVT 
National

Private donation helps attract teachers to rural B.C. with $10,000 cash welcome gifts

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 07 Sep, 2023 10:36 AM
  • Private donation helps attract teachers to rural B.C. with $10,000 cash welcome gifts

A rural school district in the British Columbia Interior has filled a shortfall of teachers with help from an anonymous benefactor who donated $200,000 to welcome new educators.

At a time when schools across the province are struggling with staff recruitment and retention, the Gold Trail School District offered $10,000 incentives to attract new teachers, and $15,000 for those who agreed to move to the small town of Lytton which was devastated by fire two years ago.

Superintendent Teresa Downs says all 18 vacancies this year have been filled by the district, which manages eight small schools ranging in size from three to 350 pupils, with a total enrollment of 1,100. Thirteen new teachers qualified for the extra cash, and unused funds could go to future hires, Downs said.

Last year there was a shortfall of about 22 teaching staff, representing about 20 per cent of staff. 

"So, we were unable to have any of our non-enrolling positions like teacher-counsellor or inclusion specialist filled, and there were times when we didn't have classrooms filled," Downs said of last year's staff shortage.

"And so, it meant that there was a profound impact on the morale of all of the staff here in the district, but also on, I think, the confidence that our communities and families had in the services we were offering their children."

The recruitment bonuses, which the district calls "welcome to the community awards," were focused on bringing teachers to the small communities of Ashcroft, Cache Creek, Clinton, Lillooet and Lytton.

"It's night and day on how I feel personally (relative to last year) and the sense that I'm getting as I visited schools this week, there is a tangible difference in morale," Downs said in an interview last week. 

"There just seems to be far more optimism in the year that we are going to have and how we will be able to serve students to our best."

The money was distributed through the group Community Futures Sun Country. Its general manager, Linsie Lachapelle, said the anonymous donor wanted their donation to go toward economic development and had agreed with the group's suggestion to use it to attract teachers.

"They just had heard about the struggles we've had, basically everyone is having, retaining teachers. There's a shortage everywhere," she said.

Lachapelle said the money is being given to teachers in instalments and while there's no requirement for them to stay beyond the year, it's hoped they will grow to love the small communities and remain for the long term.

When asked if there were concerns about a district having to rely on a donation to attract staff, the Ministry of Education and Child Care issued a statement acknowledging "shortages across the entire public sector in a variety of key positions, including in B.C.’s K-12 education system."

The statement says the government announced a $12.5 million investment to support the recruitment and retention of teachers in rural and northern districts, as well as Indigenous teachers.

"Part of this funding has been established to support the implementation of hiring incentives to assist school districts with their hiring needs for hard-to fill positions in rural and remote schools," it says.

"So far, we are hearing that these incentives are making a difference to recruit teachers and fill vacancies for September in school districts like Kamloops-Thompson and Vancouver Island West."

In a statement, BC Teachers' Federation president Clint Johnston said the federation understands "the frustration felt in communities that do not have a sufficient number of teachers, and we share that frustration."

He said a recent sample survey of its members found 80 per cent reported feeling direct impacts from the teacher shortage.

"From the BCTF’s perspective, when it comes to issues affecting teachers’ terms and conditions of employment, including salary and signing bonuses, it is important for these issues to be negotiated with the union as the bargaining agent for all teachers in the province," the statement says.

Downs said using private donations to attract teachers "shows the complexity of this public education system."

"What I think that donation says to me, is the strength of rural communities," she said.

"That schools in rural settings are really often the hub and the heart of the community, and that every community member knows the value of the school, whether they have children or family members in it or not."

 

MORE National ARTICLES

Hot summer predicted for Western Canada

Hot summer predicted for Western Canada
He expects warmer-than-normal temperatures in Western Canada, which will likely keep western wildfires as "a major concern" later this year when the second fire season is expected to ramp up in July and August  

Hot summer predicted for Western Canada

Doctors at Surrey hospital raise alarm over staffing and patient-care crisis

Doctors at Surrey hospital raise alarm over staffing and patient-care crisis
Surrey Memorial's emergency doctors originally published their own complaint letter on May 15, followed two weeks later by a letter from 36 women's health physicians outlining a "critical scarcity of resources" that contributed to the death of a newborn baby.

Doctors at Surrey hospital raise alarm over staffing and patient-care crisis

B.C. names 10 cities for faster development to help address housing crisis

B.C. names 10 cities for faster development to help address housing crisis
Housing Ministry Ravi Kahlon said Tuesday the province will set construction targets for housing in Vancouver, the districts of West Vancouver and North Vancouver, Delta, Port Moody, Abbotsford, Victoria, Oak Bay, Saanich and Kamloops.

B.C. names 10 cities for faster development to help address housing crisis

Calls to remove video of Canadian Sikh woman's killing gather steam

Calls to remove video of Canadian Sikh woman's killing gather steam
Davinder Kaur, 43, was stabbed to death by her estranged husband Nav Nishan Singh in Sparrow Park, Brampton, on May 19. Emergency crews found the mother of four with "obvious signs of trauma", who died on the spot despite attempts by paramedics to save her life. 

Calls to remove video of Canadian Sikh woman's killing gather steam

Man accused of killing Indian student in Canada to stand trial

Man accused of killing Indian student in Canada to stand trial
Dante Ognibene-Hebbourn, 23, was apprehended under the Mental Health Act after the February 26, 2022, attack on 24-year-old Harmandeep Kaur at the University of British Columbia's Okanagan Campus. He is now expected to reappear in court on June 12 to fix a trial date. 

Man accused of killing Indian student in Canada to stand trial

Canadian accused of killing Indian-origin gangster extradited to Thailand

Canadian accused of killing Indian-origin gangster extradited to Thailand
Matthew Dupre, 38, who allegedly gunned down Jimi 'Slice' Sandhu in February 2022, arrived in Bangkok on a special air force flight on Sunday night. Sandhu, who grew up in Abbotsford, was connected to the United Nation Gang, which was founded in the Fraser Valley in 1997.

Canadian accused of killing Indian-origin gangster extradited to Thailand