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Militant union; incompetent government – students lose both ways
A plague on both of their houses. But a bigger plague on the house of the B.C. Teachersâ Federation (BCTF), which has to bear the brunt of the blame for the dysfunctional education system we have in the province now, depriving the provinceâs children â the forgotten victims in this dispute â of their right to be educated because of dereliction of duty by teachers and a government thatâs lost its way.
I can explain.
B.C.âs education system began to go off the rocks in 1972, the year the NDP came to power for the first time aided by the BCTFâs infamous âapple campaign,â when federation members openly campaigned for the NDP and were given credit for helping bring Dave Barrettâs crew to power.
But once teachers got their feet wet in politics they quickly got addicted and theyâve been a political force ever since. Then, in 1987, the Social Credit government of the day passed legislation forcing teachers to choose between an association or a union model for the BCTF with only the union model having the right to strike. The government move was designed to split the BCTF and gain power over it. Instead, the move backfired and close to 99 percent of teachers chose the union model and the rest, as they say, is history.
Youâd think the Socreds would have known better in 1987 because the teachers had already participated in an illegal three-day strike as part of the Operation Solidarity movement which came perilously close to triggering a general strike in 1983. But like the Clark Liberals today, they didnât, and once again education in the province is being held hostage by a rogue union and a bumbling, incompetent government incapable of showing decisive leadership. And the big loser? I donât need to tell you because thereâre 450,000 of them from K to 12.
In October 2005, the BCTF went on strike – illegally again – this time against an NDP government, which shows if nothing else, they donât discriminate politically in getting what they want. And what they want is always gussied up in talk about class size and composition, but it always boils down to the same thing â money. You be the judge.
Under the last province-wide contract (June 30, 2010) that I was able to find, salaries of fully qualified teachers in the province ranged from $43,099 to $83,195. Now in a perfect world that may not be enough because teachers are in charge of educating our children and itâs hard to underestimate the importance of that responsibility and the great job most teachers do.
But gentle reader, I donât think I need to remind you that we most assuredly donât live in a perfect world and these days the world has been looking even less perfect than usual with most of the globe still in recession, the European economy collapsing and Israel and the U.S. engaging in ominous war rhetoric with Iran. Indeed, most of us are just glad to hold onto the jobs we have and hope sanity returns to the world scene. And many of us would be damn glad to have a job that pays what teachers get and comes with more than two months vacations, a generous pension plan, classroom assistants, paid professional days off, and in the case of Cranbrook teachers, almost every second Friday off.
Nice work if you can get it. Little alone a 15 per cent raise no other government worker is getting.
âItâs not about the money,â teachers are fond of saying, but Iâm sorry because I have trouble believing that. If it truly wasnât about the money 450,000 B.C. students would have been safely in their desks all this week soaking up knowledge instead of falling further behind in an already badly truncated educational year or being looked after by a parent at home missing days of work or â and this is the one that really bothers me â being shamelessly exploited by their teachers and participating in illegal demonstrations against a stupid, incompetent and apparently somewhat leaderless government.
Yep, and once again B.C. is the laughing stock of Confederation. Canât you hear the tongues wagging? âB.C., what a place. Not only do the teachers strike, the students strike with them.â I donât blame the students. Theyâre caught in the middle. But we know who to blame, donât we? Teachers whose priorities are askew and a government incapable of setting priorities.
The obvious way to end this dispute is to impose binding arbitration and salvage whatâs left of the school year. But that would take maturity by both sides, something sadly lacking in B.C. politics.
Above image: Teacher demonstrate in Fernie March 5. Carrie Schafer/ Through My Eyes Photography photo