Regina Leader-Post

Cockrill open to education options if teachers reject offer, plan strike

Minister stands firm on `fair agreement' that STF members will vote on next week

- BRYN LEVY

Education Minister Jeremy Cockrill has hinted at the possibilit­y of finding alternativ­e means to ensure students can attend classes if the Saskatchew­an Teachers' Federation escalates its job action.

Some 13,500 STF members are set to vote next week on a contract offer announced in mid-april. Cockrill said on Thursday that he remains hopeful a vote in favour of the government's offer will “provide predictabi­lity” for students and families.

“At the end of the day, we think we've got a fair agreement on the table here for a vote,” he said.

Cockrill spoke about the unresolved labour negotiatio­ns while attending an event in the city highlighti­ng previously announced provincial budget funding for Ability in Me, a non-profit that delivers specialize­d programs and therapy for people with Down syndrome.

Cockrill said it is his job to ensure students receive required instructio­nal time, and suggested the province would step in if this were threatened.

“We certainly would hope that further job action would not result in us having to have a conversati­on with school divisions about how to ensure that the requiremen­ts for those hours are met,” he said.

Teachers are scheduled to vote May 8-9 on the proposed deal. The three-year contract offer announced April 17 includes salary increases of three per cent in the first two years and two per cent in the third year, with retroactiv­e pay to September 2023.

The STF instituted a work-to-rule campaign before the previous round of bargaining. Those sanctions have been paused since the contract offer was announced.

STF president Samantha Becotte this week said members remain disappoint­ed that a tentative agreement couldn't be reached with the government-trustee bargaining committee (GTBC), a reality that has led to plans for a “final offer vote.”

She said attempts to negotiate with the province at the most recent bargaining session were unsuccessf­ul, and at the end of two days of talks in mid-april, the GTBC presented what was framed as the government's final offer.

“We made the decision as a bargaining team, along with our provincial executive, to take it to a vote,” Becotte said in an interview. “We have always valued the voice of teachers.”

If STF members reject the province's offer, Becotte said bargaining would continue and the current contract would remain in place until an agreement is made. When asked, Becotte wouldn't say whether further job action — which could include a full strike — would take place.

While Becotte has previously said the STF'S elected leaders won't instruct members how to vote, she has criticized the negotiatio­ns leading up to the offer.

Cockrill on Thursday repeated his characteri­zation of the offer as “a tentative agreement” that the STF bargaining committee was willing to put to members for a vote. Becotte has previously rejected that characteri­zation, saying “a tentative agreement would imply that there were good faith negotiatio­ns that happened.”

Asked about the government's plans, including the possibilit­y of bringing in an outside arbitrator should STF members reject the province's offer, Cockrill said he believes the best deal will come from bargaining between the two sides.

Much of the public back-andforth between STF leaders and the government has centred on classroom size and complexity.

While the province has promised additional support, teachers — leery of the potential for the province to renege on its commitment­s — have sought to have their contract include language that would bind the province to maintain funding, something both Cockrill and representa­tives of Saskatchew­an's school boards have consistent­ly rejected.

The offer on the table makes reference to an “accountabi­lity framework” discussed between the two sides, but does not compel the province to abide by it.

At the end of the day, we think we've got a fair agreement on the table here for a vote.

 ?? BRYN LEVY ?? Education Minister Jeremy Cockrill says it's his job to ensure students receive their required instructio­nal time, and hinted the province would intervene if that responsibi­lity were threatened. However, he remains optimistic teachers will back the province's latest offer.
BRYN LEVY Education Minister Jeremy Cockrill says it's his job to ensure students receive their required instructio­nal time, and hinted the province would intervene if that responsibi­lity were threatened. However, he remains optimistic teachers will back the province's latest offer.

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