Some
schools affected by civic strike; School district, union say
picketers will not interfere with teachers or students
The Province
September 2, 2007
By: Matthew Little
It's back to school this Tuesday for 547,840 elementary and
high-school students -- but some Vancouver students will be
without full services.
Vancouver schools that share facilities with city community
centres or public libraries won't have access to books and gymnasiums.
Thunderbird Elementary, Lord Strathcona Elementary, Britannia
Elementary, Britannia Secondary and King George Secondary all
share picketed facilities with the city.
On Friday, the Vancouver school district and union came to an
agreement at the Labour Relations Board that picketers won't
interfere with teachers or students getting to school.
But the recreation facilities will still be off limits…
Paul Faoro, president of Local 15 of the Canadian Union of Public
Employees, which represents 3,500 striking inside workers, said
the union's fight was with the city and it did not intend to
close schools.
But that doesn't help where shared facilities are still locked
out.
"Our school will be without a library," said Greg
Barnes, principal of Britannia Elementary. "Our gym is
a community centre gym, so we are expecting we won't be able
to use it."
Barnes said there are some books in the school and students
can use a field for phys-ed on sunny days. But if the strike
doesn't end soon, students will miss out, he said.
One new program at Britannia aimed to give students a sampling
of the community centre's programs including swimming, skating,
hockey and badminton lessons.
The five-day program is part of provincial efforts to keep kids
active.
"We were looking forward to that," said Barnes.
How much students are affected will depend on the length of
the strike…
He was also worried about the parents of approximately 40 students
who depended on before- and after-school care normally provided
by city workers.
"We just need to wait and see how it plays out," he
said…
Besides sports, those services include child-care programs for
some 1,350 children. Parents relying on child-care services
provided by city workers need other arrangements.
Teachers also note the loss of services, but stand firmly behind
striking city workers.
"We're in this situation because the city hasn't been bargaining
with city workers," said Jody Polukoshko, vice-president
of the Vancouver Elementary School Teachers Association.
"When things are taken away from students, when opportunities
aren't there, it's a reflection of how much students need all
members of the community." |