Moose Jaw Express.com

STF says 2022 budget represents further squeeze on education; MJ MLAs respond

By Gordon Edgar - Moose Jaw Express/MooseJawTo­day.com

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Moose Jaw’s Members of the Legislativ­e Assembly (MLAs), Greg Lawrence and Tim McLeod, supplied a joint statement rebutting claims from the Saskatchew­an Teachers’ Federation (STF) that the province’s 2022 budget cuts education funding.

The full statement from the STF can be read online. The Saskatchew­an School Boards Associatio­n (SSBA) has also complained with a statement available to read online.

The STF released their statement on March 23. The opening paragraph reads:

“The Saskatchew­an Teachers’ Federation is disappoint­ed that the Government of Saskatchew­an has again chosen not to make education funding a priority. An increase of 4.7 per cent was required to simply maintain the status quo of programmin­g and services. This budget results in a more than 3 per cent cut to K-12 operationa­l spending.”

The statement goes into detail to explain the needs of Saskatchew­an’s students and teachers and states that school divisions were already heading into 2022-23 with D ¿YH \HDU EXGJHW RI SHU FHQW

7KH VWDWHPHQW LQFOXGHV D FKDUW H[SODLQLQJ WKH ¿YH \HDU EXGJHW GH¿FLW DQG ZKDW ZRXOG EH QHHGHG WR PDNH XS WKDW GH¿FLW 7KH 67) SRLQWV RXW WKDW JRYHUQPHQW UHYHQXH is forecast to increase in 2022 and questions where that money will go.

In response to a request for comment, MLAs Lawrence and McLeod supplied a joint statement in which they pointed out that “the 2022-23 education budget provides a record investment of $2.88 billion that supports Prekinderg­arten to Grade 12 students, early learners and school and child care staff. This is an increase of $219.9 million or 8.3 per cent over last year, which is well above WKH UDWH RI LQÀDWLRQ ´

STF president and CEO Patrick Maze said in a phone interview with MooseJawTo­day.com, “There was a bit of

an increase in the capital budget. But the capital budget, of course, just goes to new schools or renovating schools. And that’s an important part of education… The operaWLRQV EXGJHW WKRXJK ZKLFK LQFOXGHV VWDI¿QJ DQG VXSSRUW for learning and different areas that actually affect students in the building – that area is vastly under sourced… $QG HDFK \HDU WKDW WKH EXGJHW GRHVQ¶W PHHW ZLWK LQÀDWLRQ basically translates into some form of cuts.”

Maze gave the example of fuel for school buses having increased 40-60 per cent over the last six months, and said that school boards just have to “eat that cost.”

The STF statement suggests that capital spending is more attractive to the province than operating spending because of public-private partnershi­p (P3) agreements, noting that between 2020 and 2022, school operating spending increased 1.6 per cent, while school capital spending increased by 45.7 per cent.

Saskbuilds.ca explains that P3 agreements are “longterm performanc­e-based agreements between government and business to deliver public infrastruc­ture such as…schools.”

The statement from Moose Jaw’s MLAs said that school operating funding in this year’s budget would increase by $29.4 million or 1.5 per cent, while school enrollment is projected to increase by 0.7 per cent.

Lawrence and McLeod pointed out that the increase provides an additional $6 million for learning supports for students and fully funds the 2 per cent salary increase mandated by the Teachers’ Collective Bargaining Agreement.

“In addition to this increase,” they said, “a new $7.0 million fund will allow school divisions to hire up to 200 additional full-time educationa­l assistants (EAs) for the 2022-23 school year.”

Maze said that cuts over the last few years have resulted in more mixed-grade classes in rural schools, and higher student/teacher ratios in urban schools. He said that the pandemic has had a measurable impact on the mental health of Saskatchew­an students and on their progress through the system. A budget that values education, he continued, would have a large spending increase following the pandemic to help kids cope with disruption­s and catch them up on their learning.

Maze acknowledg­ed that how education money is used in Saskatchew­an can be complicate­d because the combinatio­n of northern communitie­s, rural communitie­s, and big city schools.

“Yeah, I mean, it is a little bit complicate­d to understand. But at the same point, government does understand this. And they know exactly what they’re doing when they only fund education at a one and a half per cent operationa­l increase.”

Maze added, “I think the fact that the SSBA and the 67) DUH ERWK FULWLFDO RI WKH LQVXI¿FLHQW EXGJHW SURYLGHG indicates that the government clearly got this one wrong.”

Dr. Shawn Davidson, president of the SSBA, said on March 23 “The operating increase announced in the 2022-23 budget does not cover operating expenses for VFKRRO GLYLVLRQV 6FKRRO ERDUGV PD\ KDYH GLI¿FXOW GHFLsions to make, once again.”

 ?? ?? Kids getting on school bus (FatCamera/E+/Getty Images)
Kids getting on school bus (FatCamera/E+/Getty Images)

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