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N.B. government reviewing labour board's order to rescind school layoff notices

N.B. government reviewing labour board's order to rescind school layoff notices

CTV Newsa day ago
Many New Brunswick librarians are uncertain if they will have jobs in September.
Laid off library workers and school support staff in New Brunswick are still unclear about their future, a week after an order was issued for their pink slips to be rescinded.
The New Brunswick Labour and Employment Board found the provincial government didn't bargain in good faith with the Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE) earlier this year when it 'failed in its duty to disclose government decisions that would and did have a significant impact on the negotiations process.'
The board ordered the province rescind layoff notices, as well as rescind the decision to reduce working hours for school administrative assistants, until the ratification of a tentative agreement.
A total of 69 workers in Anglophone School District West were issued layoff notices in April, including:
32 library workers
19 education assistants
10 administrative assistants
seven district administrative support staff members
one student attendant
Layoff notices were also sent to 13 full-time and five part-time library workers in Anglophone School District South, with District scolaire francophone Sud also confirming lay off notices.
Theresa McAllister, president of CUPE Local 2745 Educational Support Staff, said the union hasn't heard anything directly from the provincial government since the board's order was issued.
'I know I have some feelers out there trying to find out some information as to how and when we start to move forward,' says McAllister.
Education Minister Claire Johnson responded to the board's order on Friday, telling reporters she had no new information to share with affected workers. A written statement from the department on Monday said it would 'be taking time to review' the board's decision without offering a timeline on when that might be completed.
When layoff notices were first issued this past spring, Johnson said every school district was being directed to prioritize money for literacy and numeracy skills while finding $43 million in savings. In June, the province budgeted an additional $14.6 million for school districts but didn't tie the money to hiring back laid off workers.
Interim Progressive Conservative Leader Glen Savoie says the labour and employment board's decision is clear, questioning what exactly that government has to review.
'(The provincial government) has been found guilty in a sense,' says Savoie. 'So here we are, now having to wait, while the government decides whether or not it wants to take responsibility.'
Green Party Leader David Coon says the provincial government is trying to delay the inevitable.
'I don't understand why they're treating it as complicated, it's very straightforward,' says Coon. 'I don't see what choice they really have here.'
School library
Students sit in a school library. (CTV News)
For more New Brunswick news, visit our dedicated provincial page.
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