The Province

Some B.C. school boards struggle to find teachers

- LINDA GIVETASH THE CANADIAN PRESS twitter.com/Givetash

The need to hire 3,500 teachers in a rush to reduce class sizes in British Columbia is underminin­g the recruitmen­t effort at the most expensive and remote districts, the province’s teachers union says.

B.C. Teachers’ Federation president Glen Hansman said a surge in job openings resulted in a “domino effect” with teachers moving around the province to more desirable districts.

“As early as May and June, we had a lot of our current members in northern and remote school districts in the province apply for and accept jobs in the Okanagan and the Lower Mainland and likewise, current members who perhaps live in Vancouver applying for jobs elsewhere,” he said.

The hiring frenzy across B.C. public schools is the result of a Supreme Court of Canada decision last year that restored former rules around class size and compositio­n that the previous B.C. Liberal government oversteppe­d with legislatio­n that the courts deemed unconstitu­tional.

The province’s northernmo­st school district, Stikine, lost about half its teachers who took advantage of the opportunit­y to move to bigger urban centres or closer to other friends and relatives, Hansman said.

More than half of Vancouver teachers live in other cities in the region, and Hansman said the losses in that district are also believed to be the result of teachers wanting a shorter commute.

The Vancouver school board said it had 342 full-time equivalent positions created by the new class-size requiremen­ts and it lost 125 teachers who took jobs in other school districts.

Superinten­dent John Lewis said the decision for some teachers to transition to districts closer to where they live was “understand­able” and despite all the vacancies, the board was down to 72 postings last week.

Lewis said the high cost of living and housing affordabil­ity in Vancouver is an issue and competitio­n with openings in nearby, more affordable, districts such as Langley and Surrey have added to the challenge.

Shane Johnson, a recently-hired substitute teacher in North Vancouver, said location was a major factor in his decision in applying for jobs this fall.

“I wasn’t willing to spend three hours a day in a commute,” he said.

Johnson said he considered applying in Vancouver, but word of instabilit­y at the district deterred him.

The Vancouver district was among those in the province exploring options for school closures to meet budget demands last year, and its trustees were fired by the previous Liberal government after failing to pass a balanced budget.

Lewis said substitute and district-placed specialize­d teachers are being re-assigned to fill the gaps at the head of the classroom while the other positions are being filled.

 ?? JASON PAYNE/PNG FILES ?? B.C. Teachers’ Federation president Glen Hansman said remote areas of the province and Vancouver have been hardest hit by teacher shortages.
JASON PAYNE/PNG FILES B.C. Teachers’ Federation president Glen Hansman said remote areas of the province and Vancouver have been hardest hit by teacher shortages.

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