Montreal

Quebec Provincial Association of Teachers plan pressure tactics

Quebec teachers are planning a series of targeted actions against the provincial government this spring — including starting classes later and extending recess times — to protest against changes to their working conditions.

Province and its teachers are in the middle of negotiations to reach a collective agreement

The province and its teachers are in the middle of negotiations to reach a collective agreement.

Quebec teachers are planning a series of targeted actions against the provincial government this spring — including starting classes later and extending recess times — to protest against changes to their working conditions.

The province and its teachers are in the middle of negotiations to reach a collective agreement. 

The current agreement expires at March 31, 2015.

Richard Goldfinch, president of the Quebec Provincial Association of Teachers, said the actions will likely resemble a flash mob.

The association represents 8,000 teachers in English school boards across the province.

It worked with the larger federation of teachers unions to publish an action plan detailing a series of tactics the unions plan to use in their fight with the government. 

Goldfinch said they will be used only if his members feel they have no choice.

He said the government is looking at cutting away at gains teachers have made in previous contracts.  

"The class size maximums that we had, argued for and won, that's about to fall away," Goldfinch told Daybreak

"The codes that we use to help for the funding for our specials needs students that we integrate so well into the classroom, that's about to fall away."

Goldfinch said teachers will also be required to spend an extra three hours a week in the schools under the government's demands.