The Niagara Falls Review

College students launch proposed class action lawsuit

- ALLISON JONES

TORONTO — Faculty at Ontario’s colleges who have been on strike for about a month began voting Tuesday on a contract offer, as a potential class action lawsuit was launched on behalf of students.

Some 12,000 Ontario college professors, instructor­s, counsellor­s, and librarians haven’t been at work since Oct. 15, leaving hundreds of thousands of students out of class.

The College Employer Council asked the Ontario Labour Relations Board to schedule a vote on the offer it has put on the table, accusing the Ontario Public Service Employees Union of misreprese­nting it.

The union has recommende­d its members reject the offer.

In the meantime, the provincial government has ordered the colleges to create a fund — using savings from the strike — to help students who may be experienci­ng financial hardship because of the strike. Advanced Education Minister Deb Matthews estimated Ontario’s 24 colleges have saved about $5 million so far.

Matthews said she is “very, very concerned” about the students who are caught in the middle of a dispute that has “gone on way too long.”

“I am extremely disappoint­ed that the two sides have failed to reach an agreement,” she said Tuesday. “I am extremely disappoint­ed and students are paying the price. That’s just not OK. That’s not fair.”

Matthews said the process of the vote must unfold, and backto-work legislatio­n is not yet on the table.

“We can’t just introduce back-towork legislatio­n because we want the strike to end,” she said. “You have to meet a certain threshold and we’re not there.”

Law firm Charney Lawyers filed

I am extremely disappoint­ed that the two sides have failed to reach an agreement. I am extremely disappoint­ed and students are paying the price. That’s just not OK. That’s not fair.” Advanced Education Minister Deb Matthews

a proposed class action against the 24 colleges Tuesday, saying 14 students have come forward to potentiall­y stand as representa­tive plaintiffs.

The notice of action alleges the colleges breached contracts with students by failing to provide vocational training and a full term of classes. It seeks full refunds for students who choose not to continue with their programs and refunds “equivalent to the value of the lost instructio­n” for students who do want to continue.

The colleges have said the offer includes a 7.75 per cent salary increase over four years, improved benefits — including extended pregnancy and parental leave, and a $500 increase in coverage for paramedica­l services — and measures to address concerns regarding part-time faculty.

The chair of the colleges’ bargaining team said all major issues in the offer have been agreed on by both sides except for language surroundin­g academic freedom.

But the union said the offer contains “serious concession­s” that were not agreed to, which would erode faculty rights and contribute to an unsustaina­ble staffing model.

Voting started Tuesday and closes at 10 a.m. Thursday.

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