Close X
Friday, November 22, 2024
ADVT 
National

Students Back To School Monday After Union Ratifies B.C. Settlement

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 18 Nov, 2019 06:09 PM

    VICTORIA - A strike that kept students in the Victoria area from classes for three weeks is over after union members voted to accept a contract agreement reached over the weekend.

     

    Support workers, including education assistants and custodians at 18 schools in the Saanich district, were on strike over wages since Oct. 28, leaving about 7,000 students out of class.

     

    Canadian Union of Public Employees Local 441 president Dean Coates says CUPE members will be back in classrooms as schools reopen Monday morning.

     

    Coates did not provide many details about the deal, but says the union and school district were able to come significantly closer to wage parity within the region.

     

    Coates says in a union news release the agreement includes general wage increases of two per cent in each year of the three-year contract.

     

    He says the union represents 500 workers in the school district.

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Forest Industry Trade Mission To Asia Seeks To Calm Concerns About Downturn

    B.C. Forest Industry Trade Mission To Asia Seeks To Calm Concerns About Downturn
    VICTORIA - A forest industry trade mission to Asia faces fewer political tensions this year than last December after the arrest of a top Chinese executive, but concerns about supply issues are now on the table, says British Columbia's forests minister.    

    B.C. Forest Industry Trade Mission To Asia Seeks To Calm Concerns About Downturn

    One-Time Liberal Senators Rename Themselves The Progressive Senate Group

    One-Time Liberal Senators Rename Themselves The Progressive Senate Group
    OTTAWA - The last group of former Liberal senators in Parliament's upper chamber are rebranding themselves as the Progressive Senate Group.    

    One-Time Liberal Senators Rename Themselves The Progressive Senate Group

    Father Fights With Private School Over Alleged Bullying Among 7-Year-Old Girls

    The legal saga began with bullying allegations involving two former friends at the all-girls school that runs from kindergarten to Grade 12, but has escalated into a $5.5-million suit filed by the aggrieved father, Andrew Rogerson.

    Father Fights With Private School Over Alleged Bullying Among 7-Year-Old Girls

    B.C. Chief Ed John Faces Historic Sex Charges: Prosecution Service

    VANCOUVER - Ed John, a leader of the First Nations Summit and former British Columbia cabinet minister, is accused of four counts of sexual assault dating back to 1974.    

    B.C. Chief Ed John Faces Historic Sex Charges: Prosecution Service

    Today's Babies Won't Know Life Without Climate Change, New Report Warns

    Today's Babies Won't Know Life Without Climate Change, New Report Warns
    The Lancet medical journal's 2019 countdown on health and climate change has dire warnings about the kind of world we might be leaving to future generations.    

    Today's Babies Won't Know Life Without Climate Change, New Report Warns

    Supreme Court Sides With Naturopath In Manslaughter, Negligence Case

    Supreme Court Sides With Naturopath In Manslaughter, Negligence Case
    OTTAWA - A Quebec naturopath is not guilty of manslaughter or criminal negligence in the death of an elderly man, the Supreme Court of Canada has ruled.    

    Supreme Court Sides With Naturopath In Manslaughter, Negligence Case