Toronto Star

Ontario Education Minister Stephen Lecce will announce plans to scrap a controvers­ial hiring rule that gives preference to supply teachers with the most seniority,

Supply list, coronaviru­s, added diversity among issues that led to change

- KRISTIN RUSHOWY

The Ontario government is going to move “aggressive­ly” and scrap a controvers­ial hiring rule that tt gives preference to supply teachers with the most seniority, the Star has learned.

After years of complaints from boards and principals about Regulation RR 274 — which essen- tially forces them to hire from among a small group of teachers who have spent the most time on the supply list — Education Minister Stephen Lecce is poised to make the announceme­nt on Thursday, sources said.

Since taking over the ministry,

Lecce has repeatedly said he does not support Regulation 274 and prefers that schools hire the best fit for the job.

Prompting the change at this time is the hiring challenges boards are now experienci­ng with ww COVID- 19, with the reg- ulation putting an additional burden on administra­tors, sources said.

In addition, a recent report on systemic ss racism in the Peel Dis- trict School Board identified a need for more teachers from diverse background­s — an issue of concern in other boards as well, sources also said.

The change is “going to be addressing the problem ( and) moving quite a bit more aggressive­ly,” said one source familiar with the announceme­nt.

Regulation 274 gives preference to the five qualified teachers who have been on the supply list the longest when they are aa applying for new long- term a and full- time positions. It was first negotiated by the Ontario English Catholic Teachers’ Associatio­n and the Liberal government in 2012 as a way to address nepotism.

Principals complained that they were not able to hire the person best suited to the position and the school’s needs.

During the last round of negotiatio­ns, only the Ontario English Catholic Teachers’ Associatio­n aa was able to come to an agreement about Regulation 274, agreeing to a watereddow­n version that allowed boards to exempt about onethird of new hires.

That will remain in place until the contract expires, sources said, and then become an issue during dd the next round of bar- g gaining talks.

Changes to the hiring rules will ww not come into effect imme- diately, but will be implemente­d over time, sources said.

Both the Elementary Teachers’ Federation of Ontario and the Ontario Secondary School Teachers TT Federation left Reg- ulation 274 out of their most recent collective agreements, saying no consensus could be reached with the province.

Both acknowledg­ed at the time that the government could at some point impose changes, but the elementary union had advised its members if that happened, it would “consult with legal counsel regarding options.”

Last December, after sending in troublesho­oters to examine racism and dysfunctio­n in the

Peel District School Board, Lecce said he had personally heard from families who were concerned that teachers don’t reflect the diversity of the students they serve.

“What is really the challenge that impedes the ability of boards to make decisions based on merit or equity is Regulation 274, which creates some impediment­s to hiring talented educators based on their qualificat­ions,” Lecce told the Star.

He said the rule “eliminates the ability of boards to find, to choose, merited candidates that happen to be ( diverse) or of specific background­s to better reflect the communitie­s they represent. Their advice to me was ww to very seriously look at removing those impediment­s and aa I committed to them to do- ing so.”

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