Catholic teachers to resume talks following Friday’s large protest

Over 200,000 teachers and education workers protested across Ontario Friday. Cynthia Mulligan with how their unions are hoping the massive protest sends a strong message to the Ford government.

By News Staff, Allison Jones and Shawn Jeffords, The Canadian Press

The union representing Catholic teachers across the province says it is suspending rotating strikes planned for next week as talks are scheduled to resume with the Ford government on Monday.

OECTA president Liz Stuart says in a statement issued Friday afternoon, “we have been assured that the discussions will continue to be meaningful.”

“Catholic teachers have demonstrated that we will do what is necessary to stand up against this government’s cuts to publicly funded education. Should negotiations cease being productive, further strike action will be announced.”

The province held talks this week with both the Ontario English Catholic Teachers’ Association and the union representing French-language teachers. Stuart said there were “meaningful” conversations with the Catholic teachers, but big stumbling blocks remain.

The announcement comes after thousands of teachers and supporters marched along the streets surrounding the Ontario legislature on Friday during a provincewide strike to put bargaining pressure on the provincial government, sending what union leaders hoped was a message of strength and unity.

The joint walkout by all four major teachers’ unions marked the first time since 1997 that educators from all the labour groups were on strike on the same day, they said.

Teachers and education workers picketed at schools and other sites across the province, but the largest demonstration by far took place at the provincial legislature in Toronto.

The road encircling the building was shut down to accommodate the massive protest. Teachers slowly walked nearly shoulder to shoulder around the roughly one to 1 1/2-kilometre loop surrounding the building, carrying signs decrying the Doug Ford government’s education agenda.

“It’s a demonstration that we’re not divided from our members or from the public in this province,” said Harvey Bischof, president of the Ontario Secondary School Teachers’ Federation.

“It’s time the government listened to front-line educators and to parents because they are speaking with largely one voice about what they want.”

Gus Ritacca, a father of two kids in elementary school, walked slowly against the flow of the picket line so marching teachers could see a sign of support he was holding.

He’s seen firsthand the dedication of teachers in the school system and he supports them in this contract dispute with the government, he said.

“I think this is truly about the level of education and the quality of education our kids are going to receive,” Ritacca said. “I do believe that if push came to shove on the salary issue, a deal could be had there. I don’t believe that’s the core issue.”


The teachers, particularly those at the secondary level, have repeatedly spoken out against government education plans unveiled last March. The Progressive Conservatives announced they would increase average high school class sizes from 22 to 28 – which would lead to thousands of fewer teachers in the system – and require students to take four e-learning courses to graduate.

The government has partly backed off on both issues, offering to instead increase average high school class sizes to 25 and require two online learning courses, but the unions say the softened position doesn’t go far enough.

All of the teachers’ unions are asking for around two per cent in annual salary increases, while the government won’t budge beyond offering one per cent. It passed legislation last year capping wage hikes for all public sector workers at one per cent for three years, which the unions are challenging in court.

Elementary teachers say their key issues include guaranteeing the future of full-day kindergarten, securing more funding to hire special education teachers, and maintaining seniority hiring rules.

Premier Doug Ford has suggested, without providing evidence, that front-line teachers don’t support the union leaders. Sam Hammond, the president of the Elementary Teachers’ Federation of Ontario, issued a challenge Friday to Ford and Education Minister Stephen Lecce.

“Come out of this building today and talk to the 30,000 people, our members who will be here,” he said. “If you think the four of us are orchestrating what’s happening today, Come and talk to them and they’ll tell you exactly what’s happening.”

Watch: One-on-one with education minister as teachers protest across the province

Speaking from inside the legislature, Lecce noted that some progress had been made this week at the bargaining table with some unions and said it was unfortunate the strike went ahead anyway.

“The fact that they opted to pause that momentum, in effect, to strike today I think is really unfair to kids,” he said. “We should have been negotiating today.”

Watch: ETFO president Sam Hammond on what the union is planning for next week

Bargaining with high school teachers has been stalled for two months. The elementary teachers have said they were close to agreements on key issues in late January, but the government negotiators changed positions at the last minute.

Teachers from all four unions not only oppose the higher class sizes and mandatory e-learning courses, but are angered that those proposals came outside the bargaining process. The labour groups contend those are issues that should have been presented and negotiated at the table.

Lecce would not say Friday if he thought that approach – announced by the former education minister – was a mistake.

“Right now my focus is to get a deal that keeps kids in class and I’m happy to provide an element of punditry when this is done,” he said.

OSSTF announced Friday that it would resume its weekly, rotating strikes next week by walking out at several boards, including Ottawa-Carleton, Durham, Hamilton-Wentworth, Upper Grand, Upper Canada, Bluewater and several northern boards.

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