Tight timeline on education funding offer criticized by STF, Opposition NDP
CBC
The process leading up to an education funding agreement between the government and Saskatchewan school boards is being criticized after trustees were reportedly given 24 hours to make a decision.
Saskatchewan Teachers' Federation (STF) president Samantha Becotte said local trustees made her aware of the tight deadline and said it was concerning.
"With such little time and opportunity to pose questions and contradict that, they really didn't have any other opportunity than to follow the direction of their provincial leadership," she said.
The deal was touted last week by the province as providing school boards with $356.6 million dollars in annual funding for four years beginning in the 2024-25 school year. However, Becotte has pointed out that it only works out to about $45 million per year in additional funding — some of which has already been announced by the province, such as a specialized support classroom pilot program.
The deal also stipulates that the funding beyond this fiscal year is subject to appropriation, meaning it could be removed as part of the budgeting process.
Becotte has called the deal an attempt by the government to side-step the bargaining process with the STF and "avoid making real commitments." However, she said last week that if the government brought an amended proposal to the bargaining table and put commitments in the contract, a deal could be possible.
She said she's been told that school board trustees were persuaded to quickly approve the agreement.
"That small time frame doesn't provide the opportunity to really think about it critically," she said. "We have seen time and time again that this government puts school divisions in difficult positions."
Teachers began job action in mid-January with one-day provincewide strikes, followed by a series of rotating strikes and withdrawals of voluntary duties, after talks at the bargaining table stalled. Teachers want to negotiate class size and complexity issues, but the province refuses, saying those issues should be dealt with at the local school board level.
During question period on Tuesday, Official Opposition Leader Carla Beck said the government was "bullying" school boards.
"Bullying boards into a funding deal is no way to fix our schools and certainly no way to run a province," Beck said.
"This premier should be listening to the concerns of school boards and teachers, not pushing them around. He needs to swallow his pride and get a deal done already. It shouldn't always be Moe's way or the highway."
In an interview, Saskatchewan School Boards Association president Jaimie Smith-Windsor did not confirm the timeline given to trustees, but said "every school board was given the opportunity" to consider the deal.
"As a representative organization we can say that we have the unanimous agreement of all school boards to move forward with that," she said. "I understand that there are other individual opinions out there — that is part of the democratic process."
While his party has made a cause célèbre out of its battle with the Speaker, Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre has periodically waxed poetic about the House of Commons — suggesting that its green upholstery is meant to symbolize the fields of the English countryside where commoners met centuries ago before the signing of the Magna Carta.