ONTD Political

BC government considering legislation to remove teachers right to strike.

12:04 pm - 02/29/2012

B.C. legislation to remove teachers' right to strike

BCTF calls legislation 'the height of political cynicism'

B.C.'s 40,000 teachers have been granted the right to strike by the Labour Relations Board, but the government has introduced legislation that could take away that right and impose a six-month cooling-off period and a mediator to settle the contract dispute.

The rapidly developing situation has left many parents wondering whether they will have to scramble to arrange child care or time off work, as both sides jockey for position in a highly polarized dispute.

The legislation is expected to take to up to a week to pass in the legislature, meaning the teachers could legally exercise their right to strike in the meantime.

The province's Labour Relations Board ruled Tuesday afternoon that teachers can strike for three days in one week as part of their expanded job action, and then one day each subsequent week, though they must give two days notice before striking.

The strike ruling from the board came down just hours before the provincial government introduced its own legislation aimed at ending the dispute.

The legislation introduced by the government would not impose a new contract, but does include a cooling-off period that would end the current job action until Aug. 31, making the teachers' current job action and any future strikes illegal, once it has passed into law.

B.C. Teachers' Federation president Susan Lambert criticized the legislation Tuesday, saying Education Minister George Abbott should have waited for the mediation process to play out.

"We've been working very hard … to dissuade the government from legislating a collective agreement and we felt … that this is the worst possible outcome and yet, Minister Abbott has persisted."

The BCTF is expected to hold a strike vote on Wednesday and Thursday, meaning the earliest possible date for a strike may be next week.

The BCTF will not be allowed to set up picket lines, the board ruled. The board also said it will review its ruling on a weekly basis. The teachers required the board's ruling to strike legally because they have been designated as an essential service by the government.

Mediator appointed by legislation

The government legislation also puts in place harsh financial penalties for teachers, unions and union representatives who take illegal strike action during the cooling-off period.

  • Teachers: $475 a day.
  • Union reps: $2,500 a day.
  • BCTF organization: $1.3 million a day.

At a news conference Tuesday afternoon, Lambert was highly critical of the fines in the legislation.

"This act is the height of political cynicism. It's much more of a political act than it is an education act," Lambert said. "The punitive fines for contravention of the act are outrageous and a deliberate attempt to intimidate, bully and bludgeon."

Since September, teachers have been conducting a limited legal job action, which has included refusing to meet with administrators, supervise recess or fill out report cards.

The government legislation would impose a mediator who will report back with non-binding recommendations by June 30. If the parties fail to reach an agreement with the mediator, the government could in separate legislation impose a new contract.

The legislation also extends the current BCTF contract, which expired last June, through the cooling-off period.

Net-zero mandate

Under the terms of the legislation introduced Tuesday afternoon, any settlement will have to meet the government's net-zero mandate, which essentially means the province is not prepared to consider any wage or benefit increases.

Lambert said the government killed the collective bargaining process with the bill.

"This act legislates the net-zero mandate for teachers and that will mean, just in terms of compensation alone, probably a cut of about $1,400 per year per teacher — so on the backs of the profession of teaching is the balancing of this government's budget."

The federation is asking for a 15 per cent wage increase over the three-year contract. They have been without a contract since June 2011.

Meanwhile, frustrated Metro Vancouver students have turned to Facebook in an attempt to organize a walkout on Friday afternoon.

According to postings on the social media site, some students are proposing to leave class an hour early on Friday to meet at the Vancouver Art Gallery for a rally.

Source is the CBC

UGH. this government...

tabaqui 29th-Feb-2012 10:37 pm (UTC)
Jayzus.

WTH is it with governments just lately deciding that teachers and schools are 'the enemy'?
krazykat88 29th-Feb-2012 10:43 pm (UTC)
This. I don't understand the contempt people/the government has for teachers. Its not an easy job (many burn out within 5 years of starting) or overpaid (you could argue the opposite, teachers to a lot of work (specifically, coaching, clubs) they're not paid for)

Edited at 2012-02-29 10:43 pm (UTC)
romp 1st-Mar-2012 08:30 pm (UTC)
I really think it's because most in the field are women. I hear the same arguments about librarians: they do it because they love it, they don't need to be paid, they just work for pin money while their husbands bring in the real income, they'd be happy just to volunteer,...
armless_phelan 29th-Feb-2012 11:17 pm (UTC)
What is the BC government thinking? This is so draconian. I can't with these fuckers. Since the Conservatives took control, Canada seems to be going backwards as a pace almost equal to the US!

Oh, and Fuck Harper. Just because.
angelus7988 29th-Feb-2012 11:42 pm (UTC)
Dear Canada,

Please stop imitating America. We get it: we are backwards and uncivilized. There is no need for further parody.

Sincerely,
The United States of America.
nikoel 1st-Mar-2012 04:24 pm (UTC)
They're lashing back for all the years we've made fun of their accents.
star_maple 1st-Mar-2012 01:28 am (UTC)
My friend is a teacher in BC and her Facebook posts are so heartbreaking. The government really has no respect for them whatsoever. I mean, there's the big legislative moves like this, but they also forgot to BCC in a giant e-mail communication and now she's getting spammed by people who think teachers are whiners. She complained about the breach of privacy and just got a "so what do you want us to do about it" from them. :P
krazykat88 1st-Mar-2012 01:37 am (UTC)
Ugh, that's awful.
vanishingbee 1st-Mar-2012 02:12 am (UTC)
gtfo, if that passes I will be so enraged.
romp 1st-Mar-2012 05:03 am (UTC)
I hate the game-playing. I hate the disrespect teachers (i.e. women) get as if their jobs aren't important. I don't know if this is the time to go for another raise that size but that is how the game is played.

I'm not sure how I feel about this but thought it was interesting:
Rising Call to Change Way We Bargain with Teachers: Critics say 17 years of negotiation failures means government has to change tactics
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