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Vulnerable students in Provincial Schools to suffer from layoffs

“The Ministry is moving this work to contingent part-time workers, and away from support workers who have over 20 years’ experience and who have made significant impacts in the lives of parents and students with disabilities,” Warren (Smokey) Thomas, OPSEU President.

Toronto (12 June 2013) – The layoff of 56 full-time staff from Ontario’s Provincial Schools will hurt the province’s most vulnerable students with disabilities and severely impact the families’ rights to accessible education.

Ontario government reduces full-time workers who teach students with disabilities

Warren (Smokey) Thomas, President of the Ontario Public Service Employees Union (OPSEU/NUPGE) said that the these students, who are blind, deaf, deaf-blind and learning disabled deserve far better from the Ministry of Education.

“The Ministry is moving this work to contingent part-time workers, and away from support workers who have over 20 years’ experience and who have made significant impacts in the lives of parents and students with disabilities,” Thomas said. “The move to part-time work will cheapen important programs that accommodate students in Ontario. Meanwhile, full-time social workers, residence counsellors, maintenance workers and support staff will be forced out the door.”

Premier Wynne ignoring proof that part-time work is a problem

Chris Cormier, OPSEU Region 4 Vice-President, said that the government agreed that part-time work was an issue and agreed during the latest contract talks to discuss this problem.

“Before these talks can even occur, senior management in the Ministry is clearing out full-time workers,” Cormier said. “Premier Wynne recently supported a study that proved part-time work is a huge problem in Ontario and is preventing an economic recovery. Apparently the Provincial Schools Branch disagrees and is willing to dispose of long-time full-time workers. This will not only weaken Ontario's ability to accommodate vulnerable students, but the economy as well.”

Students thrive with experienced, full-time teachers

OPSEU/NUPGE is calling on the Minister of Education to stop these cuts, and is asking the Premier to support her own beliefs of full-time vs. part-time work.

“Let's talk about building quality public education for students with disabilities,” Cormier said. “That includes full-time support services for these students…services by dedicated people with the experience in the schools. These students deserve no less.”

 

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The National Union of Public and General Employees (NUPGE) is one of Canada's largest labour organizations with over 340,000 members. Our mission is to improve the lives of working families and to build a stronger Canada by ensuring our common wealth is used for the common good. NUPGE