Ontario government proposes 2% raise for lower-paid education workers

Education support workers have been offered a 2 per cent raise by the province of Ontario despite asking for an 11 per cent raise. Richard Southern with the latest.

By Allison Jones, The Canadian Press

Ontario is offering to give education workers who make less than $40,000 raises of two per cent a year and 1.25 per cent for everyone else in a proposed four-year deal.

The proposal, tabled Monday in bargaining with the Canadian Union of Public Employees, marks the first indication of what the Progressive Conservative government is looking for in deals also being negotiated with the four major teachers’ unions.

The previous contracts were subject to legislation known as Bill 124, introduced by the government in 2019, that capped wage increases to one per cent a year for three years for public sector workers.

CUPE and other unions have said they are pressing for increases to both compensate for the wage restraint as well as to address the rising cost of living. Statistics Canada said the annual inflation rate in June was 8.1 per cent.

The union says it is “disheartened” with the government’s proposal, which it says won’t allow workers to pay rising rent costs or put food on their tables.


RELATED: What Ontario parents need to know ahead of the start of the school year


CUPE represents 55,000 workers, including early childhood educators, school administration workers, bus drivers and custodians.

Deals for the five major education unions expire on August 31, and the terms of the first deal struck in a round of bargaining often set the standard for the rest.

CUPE has asked the province for annual wage increases of 11.7 per cent – or $3.25 per hour – arguing workers’ wages have been restricted over the last decade and inflation is expected to rise further.

ontario

Ontario is offering to give education workers who make less than $40,000 raises of two per cent a year and 1.25 per cent for everyone else in a proposed four-year deal. Photo: Jason Sung.


Education Minister Stephen Lecce said in a statement that the government’s proposal is reasonable, fair and provides stability.

“As students return to normal classes this September with the full school experience, including sports and extracurriculars, we are committed to landing a fair deal with all education unions and a good deal for Ontario students and their families,” he wrote.

A four-year deal, as proposed, instead of three, would ensure the subject of education bargaining doesn’t come up again before the next scheduled election in 2026.

A spokeswoman for Lecce noted that CUPE is also asking for five additional paid days before the start of the school year, 30 minutes of paid preparation time each day, and increasing overtime pay from a multiplier of 1.5 to 2.

If the terms of CUPE’s proposal were applied to all education contracts, it would cost taxpayers $21.8 billion over the proposed three years, Caitlin Clark said in a statement.

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