Saskatchewan legislature members spar over impasse with teachers
Debate over a labour dispute between Saskatchewan teachers and the province heated up in the legislature Monday, with the Opposition demanding the government get a deal done.
The education minister, however, said it’s the teachers union that needs to return to the bargaining table.
On Monday, Saskatchewan teachers paused volunteering in extracurricular activities for the next three days as part of job action, resulting in cancelled athletics, field trips, travel and school club meetings.
It’s the latest in a series of moves the Saskatchewan Teachers’ Federation says are necessary to get the province to come to the table and negotiate on smaller classroom sizes and additional supports.
On Thursday, teachers in some school divisions plan to not volunteer for noon-hour supervision.
The province has refused to negotiate those items into the collective agreement. It has instead signed a separate agreement with school boards, which are to allocate $45 million in new funding for classroom supports.
The dollars are part of the budget, set to be introduced March 20. The province also plans to spend $180 million more in operating funding for education this year.
“The job interruptions that we have right now, that is solely the choice of the Saskatchewan Teachers’ Federation, solely the choice of Saskatchewan Teachers’ Federation leadership,” Education Minister Jeremy Cockrill told the assembly.
“They’re interrupting classes, interrupting extracurriculars. That’s not what’s good for our kids, and we need them to come back to the bargaining table.”
Opposition NDP education critic Matt Love said it was the government’s choice to attack the autonomy of school boards over the last 10 years.
“Will the minister do the bare minimum and show respect to teachers? And will he sign his commitment into a contract?”
Love later told reporters the agreement with school boards doesn’t ensure the new funding remains in place, as it’s subject to budget appropriation.
He said the public can’t trust the Saskatchewan Party government to follow through on the commitment. He noted the province made cuts before, and in 2018 didn’t fully fund an expected contract with teachers.
Cockrill told reporters budget appropriation happens every year and he’s committed to the funding being offered.
He said the government won’t put the terms outlined in the school boards agreement into the teachers’ contract.