B.C. school support staff for K-12 ratify new three-year contracts | iNFOnews | Thompson-Okanagan's News Source
Subscribe

Would you like to subscribe to our newsletter?

Current Conditions Mostly Cloudy  26.6°C

B.C. school support staff for K-12 ratify new three-year contracts

A classroom is seen during a media tour of Hastings Elementary school in Vancouver, Wednesday, September 2, 2020. More than 40,000 school support staff in British Columbia have ratified new contracts.THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jonathan Hayward

VICTORIA - More than 40,000 school support staff in British Columbia have ratified new contracts.

Employees including education assistants, Indigenous support workers and custodians working in kindergarten to Grade 12 are now covered by 69 local agreements.

The Ministry of Finance says the deals stretch over three years, from July 1, 2022, until June 30, 2025.

The parties began local bargaining after the BC Public School Employers' Association, the K-12 Presidents' Council and support staff unions reached a tentative provincial framework agreement in last September.

The province says the deals were ratified under the provincial shared recovery mandate, which sets out specific wage increases, including inflation protection, while ensuring the government has the resources to protect services and support economic recovery.

The deal also includes a promise to participate in any discussions regarding standardized credentials for education assistants.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published March 17, 2023.

News from © The Canadian Press, 2023
The Canadian Press

  • Popular penticton News
  • Why Kelowna's first suspension bridge was only open for a year
    Pat McBride was looking for a business venture to start up when he moved to Kelowna in the 1960s. So, after buying 100 acres of land from the Kirschner family that overlooked Mission Creek,
  • Controversial Okanagan MLA doubles down on anti-Indigenous stance
    The Penticton Indian Band was outraged when an Okanagan MLA called the First Nation a threat to British Columbia, and now that MLA is doubling down. Tara Armstrong represents Kelowna-Lake Co
  • Charges against 'influencer' poachers in BC span four hunts
    Goats, sheep, elk and deer were all allegedly poached by four people named in dozens of wildlife charges announced by BC Conservation Officer Service last week. The illegal hunts spanned fro
  • Texting teacher gets B.C. licence suspension
    A Kootenay area teacher who over-personalized math lessons and got a bit too comfortable with students in 2018 has had his professional licence suspended for three days and must take a course on p
  • iN DISCUSSION: Hot takes on cold facts
    This is where cold facts yield to the hottest of takes. Here you'll find reader responses to stories and newsletter editorials, or letters to the editor for the week of May 5. They
View Site in: Desktop | Mobile