• Place an order, or for other inquiries:
  • 416-923-3567 ext. 3325
  • content@newsmediacanada.ca
CommunityWireCommunityWireCommunityWireCommunityWire
  • Home
  • Why CommunityWire
  • How It Works
  • Services & Rates
✕

Frontline education workers share back-to-school review list for Minister Lecce

28 August 2023
Categories
  • Education
  • English
  • Finance / Business
  • Government / Public Policy
  • Media Release
Tags
  • Canadian Union of Public Employees
https://cupe.ca/

Below is a list of questions for Ontario Education Minister Stephen Lecce as he prepares to avoid students, workers, and real classrooms for another year

TORONTO, ON –/COMMUNITYWIRE/– As Premier Doug Ford’s most reliable minister of spin and selfies announced his first photo-op for the 2023-2024 school year, frontline education workers are sharing a back-to-school review list for the education minister in the form of eight questions to which they – and all Ontarians – deserve straight answers.

“It is crucial for Education Minister Stephen Lecce to answer these questions directly to demonstrate that he has a solid understanding of his portfolio, current affairs, constitutional conventions, and the reality facing students and workers in the schools that are funded by his ministry,” said Laura Walton, president of CUPE’s Ontario School Boards Council of Unions (OSBCU).

Question #1: Which is less:

  1. Inflation since the 2018, when the Ford government first took power; or
  2. increases to per-student funding from the Ontario government over the same period of time?

Answers:

CCPA Research Report “Taking inflation into account, school boards will receive, on average, $1,200 less per student in the 2023-24 school year than what they received in 2018-19. The chart below shows that funding dropped in the first year of the Ford government, then increased between 2019-20 and 2020-21 due to one-time pandemic funding. But now that money is almost gone, and funding is dropping steeply.”

https://monitormag.ca/articles/inflation-adjusted-school-funding-is-down-1-200-per-student-since-the-ford-government-came-to-power/

Official Opposition Critic Video “CPI has increased 17.3% since 2018. … Do you know how much per student funding has increased since 2018? … The answer is 6.8%. … funding [has been increased] significantly less than the rate of inflation every single year.”
https://twitter.com/ChandraPasma/status/1668984043436736512

Question #2: Why do you think financial literacy should be a requirement for students when you and your government do not seem to understand the effect of inflation on the value of a dollar over time – and the resulting school board service cuts when you fail to increase funding enough to keep up with the rising cost of expenses?

Question #3: Have you asked Steve Clark, the housing minister and your cabinet colleague, to resign in response to the release of the auditor general’s damning report about collusion with billionaire developers?

Question #4: If you answered no to Question #3 (or didn’t provide a clear answer), when will you ask Minister Clark to resign as a demonstration of ministerial accountability and a bare minimum effort to restore Ontarians’ faith in your government’s ability to govern in the public interest?

Question #5: If, in the next cabinet shuffle, you’re appointed minister of housing, will you rescind the Greenbelt giveaway and restore the Greenbelt to its boundaries before parcels of land were removed at the behest of Conservative-friendly developers to financially benefit them last year?

Question #6: Bill 98, which became law in June, gave you broad powers to compel school boards to sell off school buildings and properties with little oversight. What school lands are you planning to sell off to developers?

Question #7: When was the last time you spent a day in a public school or classroom shadowing a frontline education worker (e.g. an educational assistant, early childhood educator, custodian, secretary, etc.)?

Question #8: If invited by a frontline education worker to spend a full day at work with them this school year, to experience the reality facing students and workers in Ontario schools, will you accept?

The Ontario School Boards Council of Unions (OSBCU) unites 55,000 members of the Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE) who work in the public, Catholic, English, and French school systems throughout Canada’s largest province. OSBCU members are educational assistants, early childhood educators, school library workers, child and youth workers, administrative assistants, secretaries, custodians and tradespeople, instructors, nutrition service workers, audio-visual technologists, information technology professionals, school safety monitors, cafeteria workers, social workers, and more.

-30-

Contacts

For more information or to arrange an interview, please contact:

Ken Marciniec, CUPE Communications
kmarciniec@cupe.ca
1-416-803-6066 (cell)

Share
ENGLISH
FRANÇAIS

Submit Your News

EVENTS CALENDAR

  • https://ochu.on.ca/
    MEDIA ADVISORY: Five years into Ford government’s privatization of hospital services: longer wait-times, unequal access, and public opposition
    13 June 2025
  • https://ochu.on.ca/
    MEDIA ADVISORY: Five years into Ford government’s privatization of hospital services: longer wait-times, unequal access, and public opposition
    13 June 2025
  • https://ochu.on.ca/
    MEDIA ADVISORY: 78 per cent of people in Western Ontario want provincial government to prioritize spending on public hospitals instead of private clinics: new poll
    11 June 2025

RECENT RELEASES

  • CUPE members at Bruce Telecom could take strike action
    13 June 2025
  • https://ochu.on.ca/
    Most people in Waterloo Region face reduced access to privatized hospital services: new report
    13 June 2025
  • https://ochu.on.ca/
    Most people in London face reduced access to privatized hospital services: new report
    13 June 2025
  • UCDSB education workers will not back down!: CUPE education workers push back after UCDSB management tries to silence petition
    10 June 2025
  • https://ochu.on.ca/
    Most people in Cornwall face reduced access to privatized hospital services
    10 June 2025

CATEGORIES

Be seen where the audience is looking
News Media Canada
2-610 Ford Dr., #218
Oakville, Ontario L6J 7W4

416-923-3567 or toll-free 1-877-305-2262
content@newsmediacanada.ca

© Copyright 2024 News Media Canada. All rights reserved.