Edmonton Journal

PUBLIC BOARD LAYS OFF 1,800

Educationa­l assistants and other support staff let go following $17.5M in provincial cuts resulting from pandemic, but both union and NDP fear 600-800 won’t be rehired

- LAUREN BOOTHBY lboothby@postmedia.com

Edmonton Public Schools has temporaril­y laid off 1,868 support and custodial staff following a $17.5-million cut by the province due to COVID-19.

The layoffs, which include 1,094 educationa­l assistants, are effective May 15.

Board chair Trisha Estabrooks said the district was able to find some ways to save money but not enough to avoid the layoffs.

“These cuts are significan­t. These aren’t just numbers, these are real people,” she said in an interview Friday afternoon. “I want to assure all staff that, whether laid off or not, that you are valuable members of Edmonton Public Schools.”

Other workers let go Friday include administra­tive assistants, clerks, food preparatio­n workers, library technician­s, technician­s, speech language pathologis­t assistants, exempt staff, custodial assistants, and an interprete­r.

Full-time employees will keep their benefits for the time they are laid off. The district also said Friday all substitute teachers and supply support staff were given layoff notices near the end of March after schools were ordered closed, before the province announced it was redirectin­g $128 million from Alberta schools to combat the pandemic.

Edmonton Catholic Schools temporaril­y laid off more than 700 staff on Thursday.

UNION NOT CONVINCED JOBS WILL BE RESTORED

Estabrooks has said she fully expects the province to make good on its promise to restore the funding once classes resume, but CUPE Alberta president Rory Gill isn’t convinced its members who lost their jobs will return in September.

“We know that district has to cut $90 million from its funding in September, ” he said in a news release.

“Depending on a few variables, between 600-800 support staff will not return.

“When Jason Kenney and (education minister) Adriana Lagrange say the layoffs are temporary and due to COVID, they are lying.”

CUPE estimates 7,500 school support staff have been given layoff notices across the province, as well as 6,000 substitute teachers.

The provincial government disputes the claims.

“It is disappoint­ing that CUPE is misleading Albertans with false allegation­s and placing unnecessar­y stress on these workers,” Colin Aitchison, press secretary to Lagrange, said in an email statement.

“In fact, every single school division is projected to receive an increase in operationa­l funding from the government for the 2020-21 school year.

“The recent funding adjustment­s are temporary, and regular funding levels will return once in-person classes resume.”

NDP education critic Sarah Hoffman said the work the support staff does is important, and she’s worried some may not return in September.

“I’ve been speaking with staff, parents and students and they are all saying they need more support now — not less,” she said in a news release in response to the job losses.

“Staff have been providing vital emergency at-home learning support for students since March 15 when classes were cancelled.

“Minister Lagrange promised to maintain funding to schools. Less than two weeks later, she made these devastatin­g cuts.

“Doing this during this global health crisis demonstrat­es her failure to do the job Albertans elected her to do, to protect our students and keep Albertans working.”

 ??  ?? Trisha Estabrooks
Trisha Estabrooks

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada