Close X
Saturday, November 30, 2024
ADVT 
National

Striking B.C. Teachers Offered $8 Million In Loans, $500,000 Donation

Darpan News Desk Darpan, 10 Sep, 2014 12:34 PM
    Nine unions have banded together in British Columbia to offer $8 million in interest-free loans to the province's striking teachers while the nurses' union is donating half a million dollars.
     
    The financial support comes on the same day teachers are set to vote on their union's proposal to use binding arbitration to resolve the labour dispute, though the government has twice rejected that option.
     
    B.C. Federation of Labour president Jim Sinclair says the $8 million in loans will help ensure the government cannot undermine teachers' rights through financial hardship.
     
    The contributing unions include the BC Government Employees Union, the Public Service Alliance of Canada, Unifor, the Hospital Employees Union, United Steelworkers, International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers, Canadian Office and Professional Employees Union, the Health Sciences Association and the Federation of Post Secondary Educators.
     
    B.C. Nurses' Union president Gayle Duteil (doo-TAY') says the union is giving teachers $500,000 to help them in their fight for quality public education as the government tries to "bleed them dry."
     
    The province's 40,000 teachers haven't been paid since they went on strike in mid-June over issues such as wages, class size and support staff levels.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Arctic Business Forum Has First Meeting, Fulfilling Canadian Promise

    IQALUIT, Nunavut - Canada will live up to promises it made two years ago when the first meeting of the Arctic Economic Council begins Tuesday in Iqaluit.

    Arctic Business Forum Has First Meeting, Fulfilling Canadian Promise

    Duelling Reports: Finance Rebuts Grim Analysis By Another Federal Department

    Duelling Reports: Finance Rebuts Grim Analysis By Another Federal Department
    OTTAWA - Finance Canada has issued a rebuttal of a politically embarrassing report on middle-class economic woes that was compiled last fall by experts in another federal department.

    Duelling Reports: Finance Rebuts Grim Analysis By Another Federal Department

    Growing Number Of Workers Choosing To Be Paid With Bitcoin: Payroll Firm

    Growing Number Of Workers Choosing To Be Paid With Bitcoin: Payroll Firm
    A small but growing — and surprising — number of workers are rejecting Canadian dollar salaries for Bitcoin, according to a Waterloo, Ont., payroll firm.

    Growing Number Of Workers Choosing To Be Paid With Bitcoin: Payroll Firm

    No Welcome Mat: Rob Anders Takes Second Crack At Conservative Nomination

    No Welcome Mat: Rob Anders Takes Second Crack At Conservative Nomination
    CALGARY - Controversial Conservative MP Rob Anders may not find the welcome mat out as he attempts to make the move from a big-city riding where he lost his nomination to a brand new rural one.

    No Welcome Mat: Rob Anders Takes Second Crack At Conservative Nomination

    Canada Talks Tough On Ukraine, But Cuts $2.7-billion From Defence In 2015

    Canada Talks Tough On Ukraine, But Cuts $2.7-billion From Defence In 2015
    OTTAWA - Stephen Harper has been one of the toughest-talking leaders throughout the Ukraine crisis, yet newly released figures show National Defence is expected to face an even deeper budget hole in the coming year than previously anticipated.

    Canada Talks Tough On Ukraine, But Cuts $2.7-billion From Defence In 2015

    What the US military wants for missile defence: multi-use sensors in the Arctic

    What the US military wants for missile defence: multi-use sensors in the Arctic
    PETERSON AIR FORCE BASE, Colo. - American military officials have shed some light on what Canada could contribute to the missile-defence program should it choose to join after a decade spent on the sidelines.

    What the US military wants for missile defence: multi-use sensors in the Arctic