The Standard (St. Catharines)

Ontario public high school teachers to hold one-day strike on Wednesday

- ALLISON JONES THE CANADIAN PRESS

TORONTO — Ontario’s public high school teachers plan to walk off the job for a day on Wednesday in a bid to turn up the pressure during tense labour negotiatio­ns with the provincial government.

Harvey Bischof, president of the Ontario Secondary School Teachers’ Federation, announced Thursday that the one-day strike set for Dec. 4 will only be called if significan­t progress isn’t made at the bargaining table before that date.

Bischof said the government is still trying to impose mandatory e-learning, larger class sizes and other measures that would degrade the quality of education in the province.

“The erosion of education is happening now,” he said.

“We can’t wait any longer for this to continue. We have been driven to this action.”

Education Minister Stephen Lecce noted that the announceme­nt of a strike comes just two days after high school teachers started a work-to-rule campaign.

“Strikes hurt kids,” he said. “For teacher unions to leave the table, to turn their back on our children, and to escalate to the point of compromisi­ng their education, is deeply troubling for parents and our government.”

Premier Doug Ford said he has confidence that Lecce can get a deal with the teachers. “We’re doing everything we can to strike a deal and I think we’ve shown good faith,” he said.

The administra­tive work-torule campaign — which elementary teachers also started on Tuesday — includes not putting comments on report cards, not participat­ing in standardiz­ed testing and not attending certain meetings.

The four major teachers’ unions, which have been trying to ink new labour deals since previous contracts expired on Aug. 31., have all expressed frustratio­n with what they say has been a lack of progress at the bargaining table.

Issues at the table with high school teachers include larger class sizes and new mandatory online learning classes.

The government has partially walked back both contentiou­s items, but Bischof has said that will just leave the education system “somewhat worse” instead of “much worse.”

The government announced in the spring that they were increasing average high school class sizes from 22 to 28 over four years and requiring four online credits to graduate. In recent weeks, it has offered a class-size increase to 25 instead, and dropped the e-learning requiremen­t to two courses.

But the teachers don’t want any mandatory online courses or any class size increases.

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