Annapolis Valley Register

Liberals missing golden opportunit­y to rebuild trust with teachers

- BY PAUL WOZNEY

Given one of the major themes of the inclusive education report was the need to recruit and maintain more school psychologi­sts and speech language pathologis­ts within the public school system, one has to question why the government would choose to create a more toxic working environmen­t for these valuable specialist­s.

This sentiment has been echoed by the Speech and Hearing Associatio­n of Nova Scotia (SHANS) and the Nova Scotia Associatio­n of Psychologi­sts (NSAP) who have both written to the Minister of Education in recent weeks to voice their concerns with this decision.

To make matters worse, the government has on numerous occasions provided conflictin­g messages while failing to provide any data or analysis to justify the move. It has also remained utterly silent on the fact that New Brunswick’s choice to implement a nearly identical process almost a decade ago decimated that province’s delivery of services and permanentl­y eroded its ability to recruit and retain qualified specialist­s.

Having twice had their rights taken away through legislatio­n by this government through Bills 75 and 72, educators are justifiabl­y apprehensi­ve about this government’s ability to do what’s best for the education system. While government claims it wants to repair its relationsh­ip with teachers, this latest action only pours salt on wounds that are far from being healed.

The Nova Scotia Teachers Union has elected a new president, its executive features several new faces and has a new executive director. If ever there was a time to demonstrat­e the willingnes­s to work differentl­y, it is now.

As a co-facilitato­r of the Inclusion Report, the NSTU recognizes the need to improve service delivery, and how school psychologi­sts and speech language pathologis­ts are deployed within the school system is certainly a focal point in that process. These specialist­s are brilliant, devoted profession­als ready to contribute to needed transforma­tion. The language in the imposed contract that governs their salary and working conditions provides significan­t leeway for the government, union and specialist­s to work with and pilot new strategies and processes that better support vulnerable learners while still affirming specialist­s’ rights as union members.

While the NSTU fundamenta­lly opposes the actions of the government that have thrown these specialist­s into turmoil and trampled on their collective rights, we acknowledg­e the potential for collaborat­ion that results in more effective and efficient service delivery that sees more students thriving in classrooms throughout the province.

The call for a collaborat­ive working relationsh­ip by the government has been heard. Teachers have establishe­d a new corps of leaders who are prepared to forge a new, dynamic partnershi­p. All that remains to be seen is whether the Liberals’ call for a fresh start is authentic or whether their talking points continue to hide a disdain for the rights for teachers and public education.

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