Ottawa Citizen

Last teachers’ union, province reach deal

- SHAWN JEFFORDS

The Ontario government has brought a contentiou­s round of bargaining with the province’s teachers to an end, reaching a tentative deal with the final major union without a contract.

The province and Ontario Secondary School Teachers’ Federation announced the tentative agreement Monday, bringing to a close a round of negotiatio­ns highlighte­d by strikes and walkouts.

Union president Harvey Bischof said the teachers did not get everything they wanted in the agreement but said the deal will provide stability in the province’s schools, which have been shuttered because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

“While this tentative agreement does not satisfy all of our concerns, we recognize the current environmen­t we are in and the need for students to have stability once this emergency is over,” Bischof said.

Bischof said the public health crisis changed the dynamics around the talks.

“These are extraordin­ary times,” he said in a statement. “When we began negotiatio­ns nearly a year ago, no one could have anticipate­d the situation we face today.”

In recent months, the province has reached tentative contracts with three other teachers’ unions: the Elementary Teachers’ Federation of Ontario, the Ontario English Catholic Teachers’ Associatio­n and the Associatio­n des enseignant­es et des enseignant­s franco-ontariens.

Education Minister Stephen Lecce said the deal advances the priorities of both parents and students.

“During this entire process, our aim was to ensure our young people receive the best education we can offer, so they can develop the skills they need to succeed in the classroom and in the jobs of the future,” he said in a statement Monday.

Details of the tentative agreement were not immediatel­y available, but the union’s 60,000 members could vote on it early next month.

The union returned to the table with the government in April after only conducting informal talks since December.

OSSTF had previously said it was fighting against the Progressiv­e Conservati­ve government’s moves to increase class sizes and mandatory online learning — proposals the Tories largely reversed several months ago.

Lecce maintained the talks were about compensati­on, with the government offering teachers a oneper-cent salary increase and the teachers’ asking for about two per cent.

Last month, The Canadian Press obtained a memo of highlights that the Elementary Teachers’ Federation of Ontario sent to its members about the tentative contract deal it recently reached with the provincial government.

Ontario’s elementary teachers have agreed to salary increases of one per cent a year for three years, but will get higher benefit increases than the government originally sought.

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