Schools across Alberta are preparing to resume classes on Oct. 29 for thousands of teachers and students after the provincial government passed back-to-work order legislation.
The Calgary Board of Education says members of the Alberta Teachers’ Association (ATA), the union representing teachers in the province, will return to work on Oct. 29, noting that they will be “focused primarily on teaching and learning in classrooms.”
The school board expects buses could be delayed and says extracurricular activities may be delayed, rescheduled, or cancelled. It expects a full return to “normal operations” to “take some time.”
The Edmonton Public School Board (EPSB) also says its students and teaching staff will be welcomed back to their classrooms on Oct. 29, but expects buses to run on their normal schedule.
Back to School Act
Alberta teachers went on strike on Oct. 6 after a months-long contract dispute between the ATA, which represents 51,000 educators in the province, and the Teachers’ Employer Bargaining Association, which bargains on behalf of the school boards. The ATA called for the province to address issues related to the classroom size and demanded higher salaries.With the legislation, the province brings in a 12 percent salary increase over four years, and commits to hire 3,000 more teachers and 1,500 more educational assistants. The ATA says these are not enough, and that the teachers haven’t been receiving sufficient raises in previous years.
The ATA vowed in an Oct. 28 statement to “pursue all legal alternatives” to challenging the legislation, calling it an ”egregious assault on the collective bargaining rights of teachers and, by extension, all workers.”
‘Duty to Act’
Education Minister Demetrios Nicolaides told the provincial legislature during the bill’s debate that the province faced an “undeniable moral imperative” to stop the three-week strike that left more than 740,000 students out of class across the province. He said the strike was harming students’ social and educational development.“As Premier, I have a duty to act when the well-being of Alberta’s children is at risk,” Smith wrote. “As I’ve said before when you get to a point where irreparable harm is being caused to kids, that’s where we must draw a line. We cannot allow this strike to continue.”
ATA President Jason Schilling says the union will abide by the back-to-work order and will not engage in illegal actions such as work-to-rule, which would lead to fines. However, he says he’s urging his colleagues to rethink how they spend their voluntary time at school.
Smith’s government has promised to address class sizes and complexities with a panel. Schilling says the union is expected to be full partners in the process.







