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BC teachers vote to end strike
By Keith Jones
25 October 2005
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British Columbias 40,000 public elementary and secondary
school teachers voted last weekend to accept the recommendations
of a mediator and end their two-week-long illegal strike.
Seventy-seven percent of the teachers voted, in accordance
with the recommendation of the BC Teachers Federation executive,
to accept the mediators proposals. Most, however, did so
with little enthusiasm.
Close to 7,000 other teachers voted to continue the strike
despite a series of court rulings that robbed teachers of their
strike pay and the threatreiterated by BC Supreme Court
Justice Brenda Brown on Fridaythat strike leaders and even
individual teachers could be found in criminal contempt of court
if the strike continued.
BCTF President Jinny Sims conceded that the agreement falls
far short of teachers demands. Teachers rights to
strike and to bargain collectively over such issues as class sizes
and class composition, rights the Liberals abolished under antiunion
laws adopted in 2001 and 2002, have not been restored. The government
has promised to amend the Schools Act to establish maximum class
sizes for Grades 4 through 12, but these limits will be fixed
at the governments discretion, and in all likelihood, the
BCTF will have no means of grieving or otherwise forcing school
boards to adhere to them.
Teachers wages will be frozen for two years, from June
2004 to July 2006, just as the Liberals decreed under the legislation
they rushed through the legislature earlier this month to impose
a new contract on the teachers, Bill 12.
Under the mediators proposal some C$100 millionsignificantly
less, as Premier Gordon Campbell was quick to point out, than
the C$150 million the government saved by not having to pay teachers
during the strikewill be re-allocated to address various
teachers concerns. Forty million dollars will be allotted
to harmonizing teachers salaries across the province, and
the government will make a one-time payment of the same size to
the teachers long-term disability fund. The government has
also accepted the mediators recommendation that it give
C$20 million more to school boards to reduce class sizes and provide
support for students with special needs.
Thus far, the government has not said whether it will adhere
to a request from the BC School Trustees Association that local
school boards be allowed to keep any monies saved during the strike
over and above the money needed to fund the settlement with the
teachers, an estimated C$45 million.
When mediator Vince Ready first released his report, the BCTF
leadership demanded written guarantees from the government as
to how it would address the class-size issue and the lack of support
for students with special needs. But ultimately the BCTF executive
caved in to pressure from the BC Federation of Labour (BCFL) and
their allies in the social-democratic New Democratic Party and
agreed to put the mediators proposals to a vote without
any firm assurances from the government that the class-size and
class-composition issues will be addressed.
The BCFL leadership, in particular, moved aggressively to end
the strike, which had sparked sympathy walkouts across the province
and demands that the BCFL organize a province-wide general strike.
Over the heads of the BCTF leadership, BCFL President Jim Sinclair
announced Thursday that teachers would be voting on the mediators
recommendations, and then, to underline that the BCFL was determined
to put an end to the strike, he announced that the federation
was canceling any action in support of the teachers on Friday.
The message was clearif the teachers rejected the mediators
report and continued to challenge the government, the BCFL would
work alongside the courts to isolate and break the strike.
The agreement ending the strike not only does not call for
the lifting of a C$500,000 fine imposed on the BCTF Friday, it
leaves the union and teachers open to further reprisals. Speaking
Friday, the governments special prosecutor in the teachers
strike, Len Doust, said he had yet to decide whether to ask the
court to rule that the strike constituted criminal contempt, action
that would make the union, strike leaders and even individual
teachers liable to massive fines and jail terms.
See Also:
Canada: BC Federation of Labour moves
to end teachers strike
[22 October 2005]
British Columbia teachers strike in grave
danger
[20 October 2005]
As support, walkouts grow
Union and NDP leaders conspire to close British Columbia teachers
strike
[19 October 2005]
British Columbia teachers strike poses
need for a working-class political offensive
[17 October 2005]
British Columbia: Courts seize union assets,
but teachers remain defiant
[15 October 2005]
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