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Canada: Teachers take action against B.C. government
By Lee Parsons
29 January 2002
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The Liberal government of British Columbia last week launched
a legislative assault against workers in the province, imposing
a contract on 45,000 teachers and tearing up agreements affecting
over 100,000 public sector workers. Teachers responded immediately
by announcing a one day strike on Monday in protest against the
government action.
This latest assault comes only a month after the announcement
of massive budget cuts and the slashing of up to one third of
public service jobs over the next three years in British Columbia.
The Liberal government of Gordon Campbell has launched a big business
offensive against workers since coming to power last June, attacking
union rights and cutting taxes in answer to the demands of big
business.
Premier Gordon Campbell, who was at the provincial premiers
conference in Vancouver when the bill imposing a new contract
on teachers was passed on Friday, recalled the legislature for
an emergency session on the weekend to introduce legislation affecting
health-care and other public sector workers. In addition to the
contract legislation, a bill was passed returning authority over
class sizes to local school boards, flying in the face of teacher
demands in ongoing contract talks. Over 500 workers showed up
to demonstrate against the government at the provincial legislature
on Saturday.
The one-day strike by teachers is in defiance of legislation
passed last year by the provincial Liberals, outlawing strikes
by teachers, and could be followed by further actions. The British
Columbia Teachers Federation (BCTF) were nevertheless reluctant
to say whether teachers would continue to withdraw from extra-curricular
activities once they returned to work. They have said that they
will stage rallies in 36 centrs across the province to publicise
their fight.
The government imposed the contract in face of growing support
for teacher demands, particularly by students, in their contract
battle with the province. Demonstrations against the government
had been growing in recent days as thousands of high school students
in a number of communities joined the protest.
The new contract provides a total wage increase of 7.5 percent
over three years, far below the 18 percent teachers were seeking.
In addition to smaller class sizes, teachers had been seeking
guarantees for specialised and special needs teaching positions.
Teachers had been in negotiations with the government since their
contract expired last June.
The other new law, Bill 29, the Health and Social Services
Delivery Improvement Act, replaces existing agreements made under
the previous NDP government, gutting job security provisions and
severance benefits. Union leaders representing health-care workers
have claimed that the governments actions are unconstitutional
and have vowed to fight them in the courts. At a news conference
on Saturday, Chris Alnutt of the Hospital Employees Union (HEU)
declared, Were going to go all the way.... This piece
of legislation is draconian and unacceptable in a democratic society.
It is the fourth contract the Liberals have imposed on workers
since coming to power, and by the premiers own admission
breaks election promises. The Liberals hold all but two of the
79 seats in the province and have a free hand in legislating their
right-wing agenda following the massive defeat of the NDP in the
last election.
See Also:
British Columbia to ravage public and social
services
[19 January 2002]
Canada: British Columbia
to slash civil service by one-third
[14 December 2001]
British Columbia government
slashes corporate taxes, breaks strikes
[4 August 2001]
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