Thursday, July 2, 2026
ADVT 
National

Thousands at Fort McMurray picket lines

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 07 Jan, 2025 05:20 PM
  • Thousands at Fort McMurray picket lines

Roughly 1,000 school support workers have hit picket lines in Fort McMurray, and union officials say the strike could go Alberta-wide by the spring if the province doesn't act.

The Canadian Union of Public Employees says the main sticking point is wages and that its members haven't seen a pay increase in well over a decade. School support workers encompass staffers from custodians and administration workers to tradespeople and education assistants.

The average school support worker in Alberta earns $34,500 per year, CUPE Alberta president Rory Gill said in an interview Tuesday. The number is closer to $27,000 for education assistants, he said.

The latest offer of a three per cent retroactive wage increase over four years isn't good enough, he said.

"The wages have been stagnant, not moved in near on a decade in education. We need much more than that," he said, adding it's common for workers to take out two or three jobs to make ends meet.

"We need to see serious wage increases."

He also said strike action could extend to roughly 7,000 workers from 41 union locals across the province in the next eight to 10 weeks if the government doesn't give more funding to school divisions.

The Catholic and public school divisions in Fort McMurray say their early childhood development programs are on hold and that both recognize the right to strike.

Education Minister Demetrios Nicolaides, in a statement, said the increases being offered are appropriate for this round of bargaining.

"It seems unreasonable that the union is demanding more," he said, adding these workers exceed the western Canadian average.

"We remain hopeful that the union will put students and families first by coming back to the bargaining table and working toward a deal that is fair and reasonable."

Gill said the province hasn't kept up its end of the bargain when Premier Danielle Smith promised during the 2023 election to hire more education assistants. Nobody is applying to the jobs because the wages are too low, he said.

While he applauds recent promises to build schools, he said there aren't enough staff to work in them.

"It's a problem with a very easy solution," he said. "Look at the system, properly fund it and we can go on from there.

"I'm absolutely hopeful that this (strike) will do it, but it's really up to the government at this point."

MORE National ARTICLES

B.C. judge to review police handling of Surrey constable caught drunk driving

B.C. judge to review police handling of Surrey constable caught drunk driving
The Office of British Columbia's Police Complaint Commissioner has ordered a review of the case of a Surrey Police Service officer it says asked to be let off when he was caught driving while impaired. It says an investigation by Surrey police confirmed two allegations of discreditable conduct and another of corrupt practice against Const. Rajbir Thaper, but proposed discipline amounting to five days of unpaid suspension was inadequate.

B.C. judge to review police handling of Surrey constable caught drunk driving

Richmond Hospital Foundation gets $10 M from owner of Dan-D Foods

Richmond Hospital Foundation gets $10 M from owner of Dan-D Foods
A Richmond business owner is donating 10-million-dollars to the city's hospital. Dan-D Foods founder and owner Dan On says he wants to contribute to the community where he lives and works after living in poverty in Vietnam before moving to Canada and forming his company.

Richmond Hospital Foundation gets $10 M from owner of Dan-D Foods

Residents offered bus visits to burned homes in and around West Kelowna

Residents offered bus visits to burned homes in and around West Kelowna
A statement from the regional emergeny operations centre says only people whose properties are completely destroyed or damaged to the point they're uninhabitable will be invited to participate at this time. 

Residents offered bus visits to burned homes in and around West Kelowna

Woman stabbed in Abbotsford

Woman stabbed in Abbotsford
Police say a woman is in hospital after being stabbed in Abbotsford. Police say officers responded to reports of suspicious activity in an area near Nadeau Park yesterday afternoon and found a 46-year-old woman suffering from stab wounds.

Woman stabbed in Abbotsford

Arrest made in cold-case sex assaults, suspect released by judge: Vancouver police

Arrest made in cold-case sex assaults, suspect released by judge: Vancouver police
Vancouver police say they have solved a series of cold-case sexual assaults dating back 14 years, leading to the arrest of a suspect in Saskatchewan. Deputy Chief Constable Fiona Wilson told a briefing that 45-year-old Arturo Garcia Gorjon has been linked to four "blitz-style" assaults in Vancouver from July 1, 2009, to Christmas Eve 2010.

Arrest made in cold-case sex assaults, suspect released by judge: Vancouver police

B.C. posts $704 million budget surplus for 2022-2023, say audited public accounts

B.C. posts $704 million budget surplus for 2022-2023, say audited public accounts
Finance Minister Katrine Conroy outlined the province's financial performance in the government's public accounts for the fiscal year ending March 31, 2023. The government's budget forecasts have been on an up-and-down ride for the past two years, with the 2022-2023 budget originally forecast in February last year to show a $5.5 billion deficit, before that was revised to a surplus of almost $6 billion, then downgraded to a $3.6 billion surplus.

B.C. posts $704 million budget surplus for 2022-2023, say audited public accounts