369 Peel teachers learn they won’t have permanent spots in September
More than 360 teachers with the Peel District School Board have learned they will no longer have permanent positions heading into the new school year.
The board’s director of communications confirmed to CBC News that 176 elementary and 193 secondary teachers were informed about the change Tuesday — amid an attempt by Education Minister Lisa Thompson to downplay the cuts as “an annual exercise.”
The cuts are the result of “changes to class sizes, cuts in local priorities funding and other reductions in funding,” Carla Pereira said.
“This is not routine,” Mike Bettiol of the Ontario Secondary School Teachers’ Federation’s District 19 said in a statement.
‘Entirely the government’s fault’
“In fact, secondary has not had any surplus teachers since 2013 … and then it was 40 teachers. The layoffs are all due to budget cuts and entirely the government’s fault.”
“Students will experience more crowding and less choice,” he said.
Asked about the cuts in the Legislature Tuesday, Thompson accused the opposition, Andrea Horwath’s NDP, of playing politics and “perpetuating fear.”
“The Ford government’s cuts in our classrooms continue to erode the quality of our children’s education,” Horwath said at Queen’s Park.
“Year in and year out, school boards across this province take a look at their roster, they take a look at how many people are retiring, they take a look at how many people are coming back into the classroom from coaching … That’s what’s happening right now,” Thompson countered.
Move comes after memo signalling thousands of cuts
“This is a regular occurrence,” she said.
The memo, which was sent by the Ministry of Education to school board administrators, also clarifies that the positions will be shed through attrition — meaning teachers that quit or retire and are not replaced — as well as changing student enrolment numbers and bumped-up class sizes.
Fears of job losses and larger class sizes have dogged Doug Ford’s Progressive Conservative government since March, when the province unveiled its education plan.
Thompson has said no teacher in Ontario will “involuntarily” lose their job.
Also on Tuesday, Ford made no secret of his position on teachers’ unions, saying they’d “declared war on” the PCs even before they formed government.
The premier made the remarks at an announcement in Markham, Ont., where he expressed frustration over the fact that provincial teaching contracts are set to expire August 31, right before the start of the school year — something he said will never happen again under his government.
Ford also warned the teachers’ unions not to try to strike.
Thompson, meanwhile, took a more reserved approach, saying while she respects the premier, she also respects the “consultation process and the importance of making sure we have good faith conversations with our labour partners and our education partners.”
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