Nova Scotia

Parents rally for teachers on 2-month anniversary of work-to-rule

More than 200 people braved the cold Sunday at an event organized by a parents group to show support for public-school teachers.

More than 200 people braved the cold Sunday to show support for public-school teachers

A rally at Grand Parade on Sunday showed support for Nova Scotia's 9,300 public-school teachers. (Anjuli Patil/CBC)

On the two-month anniversary of work-to-rule by public-school teachers, more than 200 people in Halifax braved chilly temperatures Sunday to rally in support of the educators.

"I think it's a necessary evil," said Samantha Shaw, the parent of a Grade 10 student. "It needs to go on for as long as it has to, until this government wakes up and realizes that there are real problems with this education system."

More than 200 people attended the rally. (Anjuli Patil/CBC)

Work-to-rule is a tool the 9,300 members of the Nova Scotia Teachers Union are using to show the province it isn't satisfied with its latest contract offer. Teachers are doing only what's minimally required of them in their contracts, which means things like extra help after school, field trips and sports have been cancelled.

Teachers vote Feb. 8

The rally was organized by Nova Scotia Parents for Teachers, a Facebook group started in 2016. Organizers said it was important to hold the rally ahead of the ratification vote of the province's latest offer. The vote is scheduled to happen Feb. 8.

Samantha Shaw, a parent of a student in Grade 10, says work-to-rule is a necessary evil. (Anjuli Patil/CBC)

"I've seen firsthand working in the schools what these teachers are doing to support themselves: pulling from their own family time, pulling from their own resources, pulling from their own salary and buying their own supplies and they've reached a breaking point," said Shaw.

Lori Walton, one of the organizers of the rally and a parent of a daughter in Grade 7, said she doesn't think the teachers should accept the province's latest offer.

Lori Walton, an organizer with Nova Scotia Parents for Teachers, thinks teachers should reject the latest offer. (Anjuli Patil/CBC)

Work-to-rule 'small inconvenience'

"It doesn't address any of the issues they're asking for. I've talked to several teachers at this point and they feel it's not addressing the caps, it's not addressing the classroom issues and therefore it should not have been put on the table," Walton said.

John Munro, whose daughter is in Grade Primary, handed out buttons at the rally. (Anjuli Patil/CBC)

John Munro's daughter just started Grade Primary this year and he said while work-to-rule has been "a little bit of an inconvenience," he ultimately supports the teachers.

"I'm concerned about the state of public education in this province," Munro said. "I feel like that small inconvenience has been worth it as a tactic the teachers have to use to bargain for the very reasonable things that they're asking for."

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Anjuli Patil

Reporter

Anjuli Patil is a reporter and occasional video journalist with CBC Nova Scotia's digital team.