Monday, December 15, 2025
ADVT 
National

Labour expert questions why Alberta government delayed lockout of teachers

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 09 Oct, 2025 09:15 AM
  • Labour expert questions why Alberta government delayed lockout of teachers

As an Alberta-wide teachers strike drags into its fourth day, a labour relations expert doesn't see why the group in charge of bargaining delayed their lockout.

Earlier this week, the Teachers’ Employer Bargaining Association, or TEBA, notified the Alberta Teachers' Association that a lockout would begin later Thursday.

Jason Foster, a labour relations professor at Athabasca University, said the move, which he called "unusual," effectively stops teachers from changing how they strike, taking options like rotating job action off the table.

It also means school boards would now have the option to start laying off workers, such as educational assistants and custodians, who have been working since the strike began Monday, he said.

"That would be the second major impact of this coming into effect," Foster said Wednesday.

He also said TEBA's delay in issuing the lockout made him furrow his brow.

"They had plenty of notice," he said. "They could have easily issued their lockout notice to align with the strike deadline, so I'm not sure why they didn't."

In a statement, bargaining association chair Scott McCormack said the rotating strikes by educational assistants earlier this year created "tremendous uncertainty," and a lockout makes sure that doesn't happen again.

The job action by 51,000 Alberta teachers — considered the largest walkout in provincial history — stems from a dispute with Premier Danielle Smith's government over long-standing concerns, such as wages, overcrowded classrooms and student complexities.

The government's latest offer, rejected in a vote by teachers, included a 12 per cent wage increase over four years and hiring 3,000 more teachers.

The strike affects more than 740,000 students across 2,500 schools.

Jason Schilling, president of the Alberta Teachers' Association, has said classrooms have been decimated by what he has called chronic underfunding by the province. Smith has said in order to restart negotiations, teachers have to come back with a proposal they approve of.

Foster said there are remarkable parallels between the current job action and the last time teachers went on strike in 2002, noting how the main issues remain the same.

He doesn't see the job action ending quickly through a deal and expects the government will inevitably order teachers back to work.

But doing so is dangerous, he said, because a back-to-work order wouldn't resolve the underlying conflict with teachers and could hurt any political popularity the government has with the Albertans supporting them.

"That may come back to hurt the government politically quite significantly," he said.

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jason Franson

MORE National ARTICLES

Shooting at Abbotsford, B.C., home leaves residents 'shaken' but uninjured

Shooting at Abbotsford, B.C., home leaves residents 'shaken' but uninjured
The department says in a news release that officers quickly found that the residence had been struck by bullets.

Shooting at Abbotsford, B.C., home leaves residents 'shaken' but uninjured

Strike deadline passes for public service staff

Strike deadline passes for public service staff
Paul Finch, president of the BC General Employees' Union and public service bargaining committee chair, announced Friday that a 72-hour notice of a potential strike had been issued, meaning strike action could come as early as this morning.

Strike deadline passes for public service staff

Majority of Canadian youth have been bullied, child poverty on the rise: report

Majority of Canadian youth have been bullied, child poverty on the rise: report
The Raising Canada report says more than 70 per cent of Canadian youth between the ages of 12 and 17 experienced bullying in the last year, and more than 13 per cent of children were living in poverty by the end of 2024.

Majority of Canadian youth have been bullied, child poverty on the rise: report

Ottawa sets 100-day timeline to fix CRA call centre delays

Ottawa sets 100-day timeline to fix CRA call centre delays
François-Philippe Champagne set the timeline in a letter to Liberal MP Karina Gould, chair of Parliament's finance committee, which was posted to his X account Tuesday morning.

Ottawa sets 100-day timeline to fix CRA call centre delays

Vancouver police investigate death of pedestrian who was struck by car

Vancouver police investigate death of pedestrian who was struck by car
The department says in a news release that first responders attempted to save the man's life but he died at the scene.

Vancouver police investigate death of pedestrian who was struck by car

Prime Minister Mark Carney huddles with cabinet in Toronto ahead of fall sitting

Prime Minister Mark Carney huddles with cabinet in Toronto ahead of fall sitting
Carney’s first cabinet retreat at Meech Lake in Quebec in May was a secretive, two-day postelection planning huddle.

Prime Minister Mark Carney huddles with cabinet in Toronto ahead of fall sitting