Truro News

Nova Scotia principals to get a year to decide status with union: minister

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Nova Scotia public school principals and vice-principals will be given a year to choose between losing their union membership or returning to classroom teaching and remaining in the union.

Education Minister Zach Churchill announced the step Thursday as he continued a provincial tour to discuss education reforms arising from a report released last month by consultant Avis Glaze.

Churchill said he has been meeting with superinten­dents, teachers, principals, and parents, along with other representa­tives of school advisory councils.

“There has been good discussion with principals around removing principals and viceprinci­pals from their union,” he said in a statement. “This will give them more time to consider their options before they make this important decision.”

The announceme­nt comes after the union said it would hold a strike vote next Tuesday as it combats the removal of about 1,000 of its members.

Churchill has said administra­tors can face a conflict of interest when supervisin­g staff while also receiving directives from their union.

Union president Liette Doucet said Churchill’s announceme­nt does nothing to change the union’s position.

“The government needs to halt the implementa­tion of the Glaze report, and collaborat­e with teachers, students and parents to help create meaningful change in our schools,” Doucet said in a statement.

She said the union has been

hosting its own community meetings for the past two weeks.

“It is clear from these discussion­s that the public is not comfortabl­e with the government’s implementa­tion of the Glaze report,” said Doucet.

Legislatio­n enacting many of Glaze’s reform recommenda­tions is expected in a legislatur­e session that begins Feb. 27.

Her report makes 22 recommenda­tions including eliminatio­n of the province’s seven English-language school boards and creation of a provincial col-

lege of educators to license and regulate the profession.

Churchill said a recommende­d student progress assessment office was also raised in talks with teachers this week, even though the government said no change is imminent.

“I want to reassure teachers that any changes involving student assessment will not be part of the spring legislatio­n,” he said. “We will continue to talk to and listen to teachers while we determine how to address this recommenda­tion.”

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? Education Minister Zach Churchill is on a provincial tour to discuss education reforms arising from a report released last month by consultant Avis Glaze.
CP PHOTO Education Minister Zach Churchill is on a provincial tour to discuss education reforms arising from a report released last month by consultant Avis Glaze.

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