The Hamilton Spectator

Arbitrator sets new deal for Ontario colleges

- ALLISON JONES

An arbitrator appointed to settle a contract dispute with Ontario college faculty after a five-week strike granted them a 7.75 per cent raise over four years in a decision issued Wednesday.

The 12,000 professors, instructor­s, counsellor­s and librarians were legislated back to work last month and outstandin­g issues were sent to binding mediation-arbitratio­n.

The arbitrator’s decision also includes new language on academic freedom, which had been the main outstandin­g issue between faculty and the colleges. Both sides cheered the wording of that new contract section.

The Ontario Public Service Employees Union, which represents the faculty, said it “will now allow faculty to speak freely about academic issues without fear of reprisal.”

The colleges, meanwhile, said the academic freedom section enshrines in a contract the policies that already exist at most colleges.

“Faculty have always had academic freedom from a policy perspectiv­e in the institutio­ns — all it’s done is put it in the context of the collective agreement,” said Don Sinclair, the CEO of the College Employer Council.

“The issue was that the language the union had tabled was such that they would have no accountabi­lity with respect to academic freedom. It would essentiall­y give the union — for lack of a better word — control over academic programmin­g. In other words, ‘I don’t even have to teach to the curriculum that I’ve been presented with because I’m going to exercise my academic freedom because I think I know better.’”

The salary increase is the same as what the colleges had offered before the strike.

Hundreds of thousands of students were kept from class during the strike, and about 27,500 of the roughly 250,000 full-time students decided to withdraw and receive a tuition refund rather than finishing their semester on a condensed timeline.

OPSEU said the deal could have been reached at the bargaining table and the strike avoided if the colleges had displayed “even the slightest concern for students and staff during negotiatio­ns.”

“With any reasonable amount of co-operation from the colleges, there would never have been a strike, students would not have had to worry about losing their semester, and faculty would never have lost five weeks’ pay,” JP Hornick, of the OPSEU bargaining team.

 ?? NATHAN DENETTE, THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Teachers and faculty staff walk the picket line at George Brown College last month.
NATHAN DENETTE, THE CANADIAN PRESS Teachers and faculty staff walk the picket line at George Brown College last month.

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