Ontario college strike ends as back-to-work legislation passed - Action News
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Ontario college strike ends as back-to-work legislation passed

Hundreds of thousands of college students are expected to be back in class after the province passed back-to-work legislation on Sunday to end a five-week strike by Ontario college faculty.

Thousands of college students expected to return to class Tuesday

Teachers and faculty staff of the Ontario Public Service Employees Union walk a picket line in Toronto. (Martin Trainor/CBC)

Hundreds of thousands of college students are expected to be back in class this week after the provincial government passed back-to-work legislation Sunday to end a five-week strike by Ontario college faculty.

The Liberal governmentfirst attempted to introduce the six-page page bill Thursday evening after college faculty overwhelmingly rejected the College Employer Council's latest offer by 86 per cent.

But unanimous consent of all parties was needed, and the NDP refused, leading the government to introduce the legislation Friday. All parties agreed to a special weekend sitting to debate the bill.

It passed in Queen's Park Sunday afternoon 39-18.

Ontario college strike ends after 5 weeks

7 years ago
Duration 2:23
Ontario's college strike is over after the provincial government passed back-to-work legislation during a rare weekend sitting. Hundreds of thousands of students are expected to return to class after the five-week strike by 12,000 college employees

NDP leader Andrea Horwath says while she's pleased students will be able to head back to class, she doesn't think this was the best option.

"For five weeks, Kathleen Wynne dragged her feet and didn't use the tools available to her and her minister to try to resolve this dispute earlier," she said after the vote.

But Advanced Education Minister Deb Matthews says intervening earlier was not an option.

"There is a very high bar. Collective bargaining is protected. The Supreme Court has ruled that you have to have a very, very good rationale, that the academic year [must be] in jeopardy. Had we gone before that final offer vote, this absolutely would have been challenged," she told reporters at Queen's Park.

Nonetheless, Horwath insists that this legislation won't assist with the underlying issues that led to the strike in the first place.

"We still have a broken college system to deal with where 70 per cent of the faculty are not earning decent wages, in other words, 70 per cent are working part-time and contract work, which is not the best for students in terms of their quality of education," she said.

Warren "Smokey" Thomas, president of the union representing college faculty, says he agrees but would still call the strike a win, referencinga task force the government has agreed to establishthat will look at issues like the college's staffing model and precarious work.

Ontario's striking college faculty voted to reject a contract offer from the College Employer Council on Thursday. (Martin Trainor/CBC)

"It's a victory in the sense we've got the task force, we've been able to highlight precarious work, equal work for equal pay," he said.

In a news statement released Sunday, the government says all outstanding issues are to be negotiated in binding mediation-arbitration.

"The College Employer Council and OPSEU have five days to agree on a mediator-arbitrator, or one will be appointed by the Minister of Labour," the statement reads.

Plan to refund students

The colleges and their faculty have been back and forth trying to negotiate a deal for about five months.

The 12,000 professors, instructors, counsellors, and librarians have been on the picket line since Oct. 16. Students fromacross Ontario's 24 colleges have been outspoken during the strike, calling for refunds for time loss.

Matthews saidthat is the plan.

"So we have directed the colleges to set aside the net savings from thestrikeas they have not been paying faculty through thestrike, and we will very soon be able to talk about how that money will be dispersed. It willbe returned to students and those who are facing the greatest financial needs," she said.

The minister didn't say how much funds and what the timeline for a decision of refunds were.

with files from The Canadian Press