Monday, March 23, 2026
ADVT 
National

B.C. Teachers' Union To Ask For Higher Salaries To Help With Shortages

The Canadian Press, 19 Mar, 2018 12:20 PM
    VANCOUVER — The union representing British Columbia teachers will look to boost salaries, when their contract negotiations open later this year.
     
    B.C. Teachers' Federation president Glen Hansman told a crowd at the union's annual general meeting Saturday night that the province's low starting salaries mean that B.C. still isn't attracting enough qualified teachers to fill a shortage that continues to reverberate across the province.
     
    B.C. starting salaries are $10,000 to $15,000 lower than Ontario or Alberta, he said in an interview before his speech. That makes B.C. and Quebec the lowest in Canada, he said.
     
    "We don't set our (bargaining) objectives until the fall, but it could be fair to assume that given affordability issues in British Columbia, salary is going to be very important to look at, as well as unaddressed issues around class size and composition," Hansman said.
     
    Public sector bargaining begins in less than 10 months for the BCTF, he said. It is one of several unions that will renegotiate their contracts, which expire in June 2019, with the province.
     
    British Columbia school districts have been since the Supreme Court of Canada ruled in favour of restoring language around class size and composition. About 3,500 positions have been filled and 300 remain open.
     
    Hansman said that doesn't tell the whole story. The shortage of substitute teachers remains a problem, especially in Metro Vancouver. It means that when a teacher is absent, there is a domino effect in classrooms, with special-education and English-language teachers being pulled from their assignments to fill in.
     
    "It's disruptive for the students who are supposed to be getting their support; it's disruptive for the other teachers at the school, who depend on kids coming and going throughout the day," Hansman said.
     
    He also said the current class size and composition standards may not be up to standard — another area that union members will discuss before heading into bargaining.
     
    "We won in the Supreme Court of Canada in November of 2016, but what has been restored is language that hasn't changed, more or less, for a quarter century,"Hansman said. "So had that language around class size and composition never been unconstitutionally legislated away in the first place, presumably it would have continued to have evolved over subsequent rounds of bargaining."
     
    Early this month, Education Minister Rob Fleming announced an additional $571,000 to train more than 100 teachers in the highest-demand fields such as special education, French, math and physics.
     
    Fleming added that last year's hiring spree was the largest in a generation and the province is continuing to make improvements to recruit and retain more teachers.
     
    The extra funding for spaces came in response to a task force appointed to identify challenges facing school districts across the province, Fleming said.
     
    A report by the task force determined 54 school districts had difficulty finding and retaining learning assistance teachers, teacher librarians, counsellors, and science, math and French teachers.
     
    The BCTF annual general meeting continues through Tuesday and includes an address by Premier John Horgan that day.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Winnipeg Man Credited With Inventing The Pizza Pop Dies At 89

    Winnipeg Man Credited With Inventing The Pizza Pop Dies At 89
    The family of Paul Faraci says he died Feb. 6 in Vernon, B.C., at the age of 89.

    Winnipeg Man Credited With Inventing The Pizza Pop Dies At 89

    'It's funny:' Calgary Councillors Listed As Journalists On Chicago News Site

    'It's funny:' Calgary Councillors Listed As Journalists On Chicago News Site
    CALGARY — Five Calgary city councillors have found their faces on a purported Chicago news website.

    'It's funny:' Calgary Councillors Listed As Journalists On Chicago News Site

    Transportation Minister Says Coquihalla Crash Area Plowed Minutes Before Crash

    Transportation Minister Says Coquihalla Crash Area Plowed Minutes Before Crash
    Transportation Minister Claire Trevena is sending wishes of sympathy to people who were involved in a major crash on the Coquihalla Highway on Sunday night.

    Transportation Minister Says Coquihalla Crash Area Plowed Minutes Before Crash

    Plan Ahead: Parking Changes Amid Construction At Vancouver Airport

    Plan Ahead: Parking Changes Amid Construction At Vancouver Airport
    This week marks the start of significant parking changes at Vancouver International Airport as the parkade closest to the terminal is being torn down to make way for a new six-level facility and car rental centre.

    Plan Ahead: Parking Changes Amid Construction At Vancouver Airport

    Computer Issues Temporarily Shut Down Air Canada Check-In, Call Centre Operations

    Computer Issues Temporarily Shut Down Air Canada Check-In, Call Centre Operations
    Air Canada says it has resolved a computer issue that disrupted web and mobile check-ins and call centre operations, and temporarily delayed boarding on some flights.

    Computer Issues Temporarily Shut Down Air Canada Check-In, Call Centre Operations

    PM Trudeau Says Official's Theory That Indian Factions Sabotaged Trip Is 'TRUE'

    PM Trudeau Says Official's Theory That Indian Factions Sabotaged Trip Is 'TRUE'
     Justin Trudeau is standing by a senior government official who suggested factions within the Indian government were involved in sabotaging the prime minister's visit to India last week.

    PM Trudeau Says Official's Theory That Indian Factions Sabotaged Trip Is 'TRUE'