Monday, December 22, 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

    Growing support for inquiry, premiers, native leaders say ahead of meeting

    Growing support for inquiry, premiers, native leaders say ahead of meeting
    The federal government is rejecting renewed calls for a public inquiry into missing and murdered aboriginal women in advance of a meeting Wednesday between premiers and native leaders, one of whom says the prime minister is isolated in his position.

    Growing support for inquiry, premiers, native leaders say ahead of meeting

    Arctic rangers want better equipment to deal with climate change

    Arctic rangers want better equipment to deal with climate change
    A new report says global warming has so altered the Arctic that the Canadian Rangers — largely aboriginal reservists who patrol the North — need new equipment to navigate a vast terrain they barely recognize anymore.

    Arctic rangers want better equipment to deal with climate change

    Inquiry would delay action on missing, murdered aboriginal women: police chiefs

    Inquiry would delay action on missing, murdered aboriginal women: police chiefs
    The Canadian Association of Chiefs of Police has decided against endorsing a public inquiry into missing and murdered aboriginal women.

    Inquiry would delay action on missing, murdered aboriginal women: police chiefs

    B.C. company behind mine spill agrees to First Nations review of other project

    B.C. company behind mine spill agrees to First Nations review of other project
    A B.C. company behind a tailings spill earlier this month has signed an agreement with a First Nation to review the tailings facility in a separate project.

    B.C. company behind mine spill agrees to First Nations review of other project

    Court dismisses case claiming royal law discriminates against Catholics

    Court dismisses case claiming royal law discriminates against Catholics
    Ontario's top court says a Roman Catholic man can't challenge a royal succession law that he says discriminates against his religion.

    Court dismisses case claiming royal law discriminates against Catholics

    Rogers and Shaw launch video-on-demand service called 'Shomi'

    Rogers and Shaw launch video-on-demand service called 'Shomi'
    Two of Canada's top telecommunications companies have teamed up to launch a subscription video-on-demand service they say can rival the current industry titan Netflix without cannibalizing their own cable and television-on-demand services.

    Rogers and Shaw launch video-on-demand service called 'Shomi'