Cape Breton Post

Back to work legislatio­n ends five-week Ontario college strike

Students return to class Tuesday

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Ontario legislated college faculty back to work on Sunday, ending a five-week strike and paving the way for students to return to class on Tuesday.

Colleges are extending their semesters so students don’t lose their terms, but trying to condense five missed weeks into roughly two extra ones will be very stressful, student advocates say.

“It’s going to be a very busy rest of the semester for students,” said Joel Willett, president of the College Student Alliance. “They have indicated to us that they are very frustrated.”

The group is pushing for students who feel they won’t be able to complete their semesters to be able to withdraw and receive refunds, Willett said.

The provincial government has ordered the colleges to create a fund — using savings from the strike, for example by not paying faculty wages — to help students who may be experienci­ng financial hardship because of the labour dispute. Advanced Education Minister Deb Matthews has estimated that amount would be about $5 million.

“This terrible chapter is over,” she said.

Around 500,000 students have been out of class since the strike by 12,000 professors, instructor­s, counsellor­s, and librarians began Oct. 15. The colleges have said they would need two days to restart classes, meaning students will be back on Tuesday.

The colleges welcomed the back-to-work legislatio­n, saying all efforts at the bargaining table had been exhausted.

“The strike has been incredibly disruptive to students and we needed to end it,” Sonia Del Missier, the head of the colleges’ bargaining team, said in a statement.

The Ontario Public Service Employees Union says it is looking at the possibilit­y of a constituti­onal challenge to the legislatio­n.

“On the face of it it’s a violation, but there’s of course many wrinkles,” said president Warren (Smokey) Thomas. “We will challenge it in one form or another.”

Matthews lamented what she characteri­zed as unnecessar­y procedural delays by the NDP in getting the back-towork legislatio­n passed.

The Liberal government first attempted to introduce and pass its back-to-work bill in one fell swoop Thursday evening, after restarted talks between the colleges and the faculty’s union reached an impasse.

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