The Welland Tribune

College strike nears its end

- - with files from Grant LaFleche

The end of the Ontario college strike is in sight, and students could be back in classes by Tuesday.

Ontario tabled legislatio­n Friday to end a five- week strike by college faculty, which could mean hundreds of thousands of students can return to class next week.

The Liberal government tried to both introduce and immediatel­y pass the bill Friday, but they needed all parties’ unanimous consent to do so and the NDP refused.

“The NDP is not trying to delay students from getting back to class,” said Welland NDP MPP Cindy Forster. “Part of this is that we have to have time to debate the legislatio­n and get the concerns of MPPS on the record.”

The legislatio­n, which has the support of the Liberal government and Progressiv­e Conservati­ve opposition — will now be debated through rare sittings on Saturday and Sunday. If it is passed on Sunday, classes could resume Tuesday, the colleges said.

Once classes at Ontario’s 24 colleges have resumed, the schools will be likely either extending the semester until Dec. 22 or using the first week back in January to complete the fall term, said Don Sinclair, the CEO of the College Employer Council.

“The commitment from the colleges is to get the academic year in,” he said. “I appreciate this is the longest work stoppage we’ve had in our history, but we will want to recover from it and to ensure that they do get their academic year.”

Around 500,000 students have been out of class since the strike by 12,000 professors, instructor­s, counsellor­s, and librarians began Oct. 15.

The Liberals first attempted to introduce the legislatio­n Thursday evening after restarted talks between the colleges and the union reached an impasse, but the NDP blocked that attempt, saying they couldn’t support legislatio­n that takes away workers’ rights. Unanimous consent by all parties was needed to introduce the bill because it was outside the normally scheduled time period for that.

The Liberals also tried Friday to get required unanimous consent to introduce the bill and start debate on the same day, but the NDP denied that as well. Debate will now begin Saturday at 1 p. m.

The New Democrats say they believe the majority Liberal government has the ability to get the bill passed on Sunday.

Premier Kathleen Wynne had asked the colleges and the union to return to the bargaining table Thursday after workers voted to reject a contract offer, but within several hours the two sides reached an impasse when they could not agree to binding arbitratio­n.

The back- to- work legislatio­n would end the strike and send all outstandin­g issues to binding mediation- arbitratio­n.

The colleges have said the offer included a 7.75 per cent salary increase over four years, improved benefits and measures to address concerns regarding part- time faculty, with language surroundin­g academic freedom remaining as the only major outstandin­g issue.

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

“When the union made what I think can be considered a categorica­l refusal of the ( colleges’) offer, the premier decided she had to step in,” said St. Catharines Liberal MPP Jim Bradley.

Sam Oosterhoff, PC MPP from Niagara West- Glanbrook, said while his party supports the back-towork legislatio­n, he thinks the government should have acted sooner.

“The premier could have done this weeks ago,” said Oosterhoff. “I have friends who are very anxious to get back to classes. When you are dealing with the kind of compressed semester that these students will be dealing with, even if the semester is extended to Dec. 23 as some colleges are talking about, every day does matter. We have to get these students back to class as soon as possible.”

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 labour dispute. Matthews has estimated Ontario’s colleges have saved about $ 5 million so far.

Many students have demanded tuition refunds, but Sinclair said the colleges are focusing right now on the hardship fund.

Law firm Charney Lawyers filed a proposed class action against the 24 colleges Tuesday, alleging the colleges breached contracts with students and seeking refunds.

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