Saturday, December 20, 2025
ADVT 
National

First Day Jitters Erase Animosity As School Year In B.C. Starts After Strike

The Canadian Press , 22 Sep, 2014 02:55 PM

    VANCOUVER - Snapping cameras and children buzzing with nervous excitement replaced animosity outside schools where B.C. teachers had been picketing for the first three weeks of the new school year.

    Many schools across the province were holding a shortened day with the first instructional day to begin on Tuesday.

    Parents accompanying children were all smiles at Elsie Roy Elementary school in Vancouver after the longest ever provincewide teachers' strike.

    Dorinha Reynolds says it is an emotional day for her and her sons, ages four and six, because it's like returning home to family members after living in another country.

    Donald Kumpf, who walked his 11-year-old son to school, says they're elated that the uncertainty is over and he believes that although the teachers' contract didn't get huge rewards, the stand educators took will help improve B.C.'s education system.

    Public school teachers greeted some 558,000 students after walking off the job two weeks before the end of the last school year, cancelling summer school and postponing this term until ratifying a negotiated contract late last week.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Mountie Who Complained He Couldn't Smoke Medicinal Marijuana Guilty Of Assault

    Mountie Who Complained He Couldn't Smoke Medicinal Marijuana Guilty Of Assault
    FREDERICTON - A New Brunswick Mountie who pleaded guilty Wednesday to assaulting four fellow RCMP officers says he hopes his case brings attention to the issue of post-traumatic stress disorder.

    Mountie Who Complained He Couldn't Smoke Medicinal Marijuana Guilty Of Assault

    Nunavut One Step Closer To Opening First Beer And Wine Store

    Nunavut One Step Closer To Opening First Beer And Wine Store
    OTTAWA - Nunavut wants to deal with its alcohol problem by opening the territory's first beer and wine store. Soon Iqaluit residents will have their say and, if there's enough support for the idea, the government plans to open up a store on a trial basis.

    Nunavut One Step Closer To Opening First Beer And Wine Store

    Canada Prepared To Take On ISIL But Will Do So On A Budget: PM Harper

    Canada Prepared To Take On ISIL But Will Do So On A Budget: PM Harper
    LONDON - Canada will take further action to combat the rising threat of Islamic extremism in the Middle East, but it will only do within the confines of a sensible, frugal budget, Prime Minister Stephen Harper said Wednesday.

    Canada Prepared To Take On ISIL But Will Do So On A Budget: PM Harper

    Nova Scotia To Introduce Legislation To Ban Fracking For Onshore Shale Gas

    Nova Scotia To Introduce Legislation To Ban Fracking For Onshore Shale Gas
    HALIFAX - The Nova Scotia government will prohibit high-volume hydraulic fracturing for onshore shale gas, saying Wednesday the ban will remain in place until the province's population is ready to embrace the industry.

    Nova Scotia To Introduce Legislation To Ban Fracking For Onshore Shale Gas

    Catering CEO, Desmond Hague, resigns amid allegations of animal abuse in B.C.

    Catering CEO, Desmond Hague, resigns amid allegations of animal abuse in B.C.
    VANCOUVER - A man alleged to have abused a dog while being video taped in a Vancouver hotel elevator has resigned from his post as CEO of a high-profile catering company.

    Catering CEO, Desmond Hague, resigns amid allegations of animal abuse in B.C.

    Reports contradict PM's view on aboriginal women victims

    Reports contradict PM's view on aboriginal women victims
    Dozens of federal, provincial and community studies compiled by the Conservative government appear to contradict the prime minister's contention that the problem of missing and murdered aboriginal women isn't a "sociological phenomenon."

    Reports contradict PM's view on aboriginal women victims