
94% of Nova Scotia School Support Staff Vote to Strike
HALIFAX-KJIPUKTUK, Nova Scotia--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Oct 23, 2024--
School support staff in eight CUPE locals across the province have voted in favour of job action, with 94% of workers who cast their ballot voting yes to a strike mandate. Strike votes concluded last week, and this strong result confirms that these 5,000 workers are resolute in their demands, and in their solidarity.
'The treatment of school support staff is indicative of the state of public education in Nova Scotia,' said Nan McFadgen, President of CUPE Nova Scotia. 'Even working full-time, the province is not paying these workers enough to live. On top of that they are overworked, understaffed, and as we know, at risk for workplace violence every single day.'
Wage adjustments are one key issue, with the employer pushing for a percentage-based increase instead of a flat-rate increase, meaning bigger increases would go to higher-paid workers and the lowest-earning workers would get the smallest increases—deepening existing economic disparities in this sector.
Also on the table are recruitment and retention, workload concerns, leave benefits, and meaningful language to address violence in the workplace. The latter, as well as proposals on staffing issues and workload, would address the risk factors for violence in schools, a priority for workers in this sector as they experience the majority of violent incidents.
'It's time for the Province to recognise the value and contribution of school support staff,' said Nelson Scott, Chair of the Nova Scotia School Board Council of Unions (NSSBCU). 'For us workers, for parents, and for kids, I hope our employer will meet us at the table in good faith and negotiate a fair deal. If they don't, they know our proposals have 5,000 fed up workers behind them.'
:so/cope491
View source version on businesswire.com: https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20241023431362/en/
CONTACT: Nan McFadgen
President, CUPE Nova Scotia
902-759-3231Nelson Scott
Chair, NSSBCU
902-574-1380Haseena Manek
CUPE Atlantic Communications Officer
[email protected] KEYWORD: NORTH AMERICA CANADA
INDUSTRY KEYWORD: EDUCATION PUBLIC POLICY/GOVERNMENT LABOR PRIMARY/SECONDARY
SOURCE: Canadian Union of Public Employees
Copyright Business Wire 2024. PUB: 10/23/2024 11:31 AM/DISC: 10/23/2024 11:32 AM
http://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20241023431362/en
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
17 hours ago
- Yahoo
CUPE Alberta Calls on Minister Nicolaides to Prevent Education Crisis After Federal Funding Cuts
EDMONTON, Alberta, June 06, 2025--(BUSINESS WIRE)--CUPE Alberta is sounding the alarm over a looming crisis in the province's K–12 education system as hundreds of educational assistants (EAs) across the province face job losses following the withdrawal of most of the federal Jordan's Principle funding for non-reserve schools. Jordan's Principle is a federal policy intended to ensure First Nations children receive the services they need without delay, including in education, health care, and social services. In Alberta, this funding has helped support educational assistants in public schools, benefiting both Indigenous and non-Indigenous students. In a powerful open letter sent to Minister of Education and Childcare Demetrios Nicolaides, Wendy Harman, President of CUPE 5543, warned that the cuts would be "catastrophic" for students with complex learning needs, behavioural challenges, and those on Individualized Education Plans. "This will devastate our Alberta schools," wrote Harman. "Now, we are actively choosing to let more children fall through the cracks, and those cracks are growing into chasms." Harman cited alarming figures from Parkland School Division, where some schools will see their EA staffing slashed by more than half, dropping from 11 assistants to just 5 for student populations of over 600. "Our EAs are not 'extras,'" she continued. "They are qualified professionals who de-escalate crisis situations, manage diverse learning needs, and play a critical role in allowing classroom teachers to teach." CUPE Alberta President Raj Uppal echoed the concerns and called on the provincial government to immediately step in with targeted funding to protect front-line education supports. "Educational assistants are the backbone of inclusive classrooms," said Uppal. "When we cut EAs, we fail students who need support the most. The Minister must act now, because these cuts affect every student in Alberta who relies on additional help to succeed." CUPE Alberta is urging the province to demonstrate real leadership by reversing the EA cuts, restoring jobs, and investing in a public education system that supports all children. clc/cope 491 View source version on Contacts Erin RolfsonCommunications Representativeerolfson@ | 403.795.5678 Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data


Business Wire
17 hours ago
- Business Wire
CUPE Alberta Calls on Minister Nicolaides to Prevent Education Crisis After Federal Funding Cuts
EDMONTON, Alberta--(BUSINESS WIRE)--CUPE Alberta is sounding the alarm over a looming crisis in the province's K–12 education system as hundreds of educational assistants (EAs) across the province face job losses following the withdrawal of most of the federal Jordan's Principle funding for non-reserve schools. Jordan's Principle is a federal policy intended to ensure First Nations children receive the services they need without delay, including in education, health care, and social services. In Alberta, this funding has helped support educational assistants in public schools, benefiting both Indigenous and non-Indigenous students. In a powerful open letter sent to Minister of Education and Childcare Demetrios Nicolaides, Wendy Harman, President of CUPE 5543, warned that the cuts would be 'catastrophic' for students with complex learning needs, behavioural challenges, and those on Individualized Education Plans. 'This will devastate our Alberta schools,' wrote Harman. 'Now, we are actively choosing to let more children fall through the cracks, and those cracks are growing into chasms.' Harman cited alarming figures from Parkland School Division, where some schools will see their EA staffing slashed by more than half, dropping from 11 assistants to just 5 for student populations of over 600. 'Our EAs are not 'extras,'' she continued. 'They are qualified professionals who de-escalate crisis situations, manage diverse learning needs, and play a critical role in allowing classroom teachers to teach.' CUPE Alberta President Raj Uppal echoed the concerns and called on the provincial government to immediately step in with targeted funding to protect front-line education supports. 'Educational assistants are the backbone of inclusive classrooms,' said Uppal. 'When we cut EAs, we fail students who need support the most. The Minister must act now, because these cuts affect every student in Alberta who relies on additional help to succeed.' CUPE Alberta is urging the province to demonstrate real leadership by reversing the EA cuts, restoring jobs, and investing in a public education system that supports all children. clc/cope 491
Yahoo
a day ago
- Yahoo
Trump ties his legacy to steamrolling Musk on his megabill
President Donald Trump's second-term success rests in large part on signing his megabill as soon as possible. He's acting accordingly. At the heart of Trump's ugly row with former right-hand man Elon Musk is the Tesla CEO's public lambasting of the 'big, beautiful' legislation. Beyond that, the president is laboring behind the scenes to quell dissent while publicly lobbying GOP senators in meetings, gaggles and his social media feed, even amidst the battle with Musk. Trump's team is working furiously to keep the bill going on other fronts, too: seeking to discredit Congress's nonpartisan scorekeeper while savaging Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., for resisting the bill and its debt ceiling increase. After a shock-and-awe run of asserting executive power — much of it now tied up in the courts — Trump's full attention is now on the Capitol, where lawmaking is in short supply this year. It's an acknowledgment that his fate, and his party's in the midterms, is now inextricably linked to the megabill. 'Failure would be not just a blow to the country and economically, but also a blow politically to all of us. We won't fail,' Sen. Shelley Moore Capito, a member of party leadership, told Semafor. She spoke recently to Trump, saying of his role: 'He knows his powers of persuasion are pretty strong.' Other than rollbacks of Biden-era regulations and a handful of other bills, the Republican Congress has not produced much for Trump to sign. In part that's by design, since Trump always wanted his top priorities stitched together into one piece of legislation. It's a high-risk, high-reward strategy. His second-term legacy is now in the hands of the Senate's 53-seat majority; it's going to take a lot of muscle for him to get the bill through, whether that's by July 4, as his team wants, or deeper into the year. 'He wants his deal closed,' said Sen. Rick Scott, R-Fla., who met privately with Trump earlier this week to discuss Scott's pursuit of steeper spending cuts. 'I want to get a bill done. I want to get the economy going,' Scott said, signaling he's ready to get to yes despite conservative frustration with the megabill's deficit impact. 'I like his agenda, but I want to balance the budget.' Trump's work is starting to pay some dividends on the gargantuan legislation, which touches everything from tax cuts to health care to artificial intelligence, a sprawling legislative patchwork that is both difficult to explain and easy for Democrats to attack. The president is clearly quieting one of the loudest critics of the effort, Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wis. Johnson spoke to Trump privately this week and attended a White House meeting on Wednesday with Senate Finance Committee Republicans. The Wisconsinite said it's apparent that Trump was paying close attention to his media tour trashing the bill; Trump told Finance panel Republicans that Democrats are comparatively united compared to the GOP. 'I'm taking to heart that he'd like me to be a little more positive. I think that's appropriate. There's a lot of good stuff in the bill; it doesn't increase taxes,' Johnson said of finding more spending cuts. 'I probably have been too negative.' Scott said he's open to finding spending cuts through other means, like next year's government funding talks — though that will be tough to achieve given how much leverage Democrats are likely to have. And Johnson said he understands it's not realistic to completely bend the deficit curve all on one bill. Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa said Trump's talks with senators are too sensitive to even talk about. 'I don't think I can comment on any of that stuff,' Grassley said of Wednesday's Finance panel confab. 'They don't even let us take our telephones into that meeting.' Among Senate Republican critics of the House-passed megabill, Trump has largely kept his fire trained on Paul. The libertarian-leaning Kentuckian has drawn rhetorical fire from Trump's staff and Trump himself, who called Paul's ideas 'crazy.' (Paul has also amplified Musk's criticisms of the bill.) Trump and Paul had a private conversation last week about the bill. Asked if the tenor was more cordial than the president's public fusillades, Paul responded it 'was about the same.' On the other side of the spectrum are Republicans who dislike some of the House-passed bill's changes to Medicaid. That camp includes Sen. Josh Hawley, R-Mo., who speaks to Trump frequently about avoiding benefit cuts, and moderate Sens. Lisa Murkowski of Alaska and Susan Collins of Maine. Murkowski said Thursday she's in close contact with the administration and Senate Majority Leader John Thune about her state's issues with implementing work requirements and eligibility verification for Medicaid. 'Folks in the administration and the president himself know that I'm going to make sure that Alaska's interests are represented,' Murkowski said. 'If it works for Alaska, he's not going to need to pressure me.' The White House official affirmed the administration's media strategy is almost entirely focused on the bill, from TV hits to press calls to lobbying individual members. 'The president is very confident about where this bill is headed. Obviously there's a process that has to take place, but the entire team feels good about where this is going,' the official said. Trump wooed House holdouts to support the bill during a visit to the Capitol and a meeting at the White House. Senators don't succumb as easily to strong-arming; they serve six-year terms, meaning that some will next appear on a ballot after Trump leaves office. The good news for Trump is he can lose three of them and still pass the bill. If he continues making progress on the party's right flank, and if Thune can quell moderates' Medicaid concerns, Trump could have the bill on his desk by August recess or even before. Senators are split on whether they can hit the White House's July 4 target, but leaders always try to set aspirational goals to motivate their members. Then Republicans can move on to a similarly herculean task: Building a midterm campaign around tax cuts and defending Democrats' attacks on their health care changes. No amount of presidential fury or social-media posts is likely to dislodge Paul from his central case against the megabill: it increases the debt ceiling. 'They say you're not over the target if you're not getting flak,' Paul told Semafor on Thursday. 'There's one inescapable fact of this bill: If you raise the debt ceiling $5 trillion, you are responsible … this is no longer Biden spending, this is Republican spending.' A White House official said the reason the president has focused solely on Paul is it appears he's 'the only one who can't be moved on it.' Still, Paul has left the door open to supporting the bill if Trump and GOP leaders remove the debt limit increase. That's a victory of sorts in itself: Paul is among the least likely Republicans to succumb to pressure from Trump. Dating back to the president's first term, Paul was often a lonely 'no' on his priorities and some of his nominees.