The Hamilton Spectator

Talks resume for striking college faculty

- SHAWN JEFFORDS

TORONTO — Striking faculty and the council representi­ng Ontario’s 24 colleges resumed bargaining talks Thursday as pressure mounts to end the labour dispute that’s left half a million students out of class for more than two weeks.

Negotiatio­ns between the Ontario Public Sector Employees union, which represents the 12,000 striking college workers, and the College Employer Council, which represents the province’s colleges, restarted as union-led protesters rallied at the legislatur­e demanding a resolution in matter.

The talks were the first held since the strike began Oct. 15.

OPSEU’s president said Ad- vanced Education Minister Deb Matthews had placed pressure on all sides to restart talks.

“It seems like people are so f ar apart but still, personally, I believe there’s a deal there,” Warren “Smokey” Thomas said in an interview. “Our side has been working hard to come up with some alternativ­es to show them some flexibilit­y. We want to see that from the other side. That’s where the mediator comes in.”

Thomas said he believes Matthews has also heeded the union’s demand that the province invest more money in front line workers at Ontario’s colleges and that, in part, has helped draw all parties back to the table.

“The minister has said they will fund the colleges up,” he said. “I said to the minister, ‘alright, but I want you to put some strings on that money because we’ve lobbied before and got money in sectors and then have to fight a terrible fight with the employer to get the money that supposed to go to workers.’ She took that under advisement. When she tells you that, it means she heard you.”

A spokeswoma­n for Matthews did not say if the province had offered to invest more money in the college system.

“The minister has met with both sides,” Tanya Blazina said in a statement. “Her message was the same: the solution to this dispute will be found at the bargaining table.”

Earlier Thursday, Matthews said she’s hopeful the parties can reach agreement.

OPSEU has called for the number of full-time faculty to match the number of faculty members on contract, but the colleges have said that would add more than $250 million in costs each year.

Don Sinclair, CEO of the College Employer Council, has said the colleges were ready and able to return to the bargaining table at any time. The colleges had put forward a four-year-agreement that offers a 7.75 per cent pay increase. The council had encouraged the union to put that offer to their membership for a vote.

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