Provincewide Teachers’ Strike on January 16

January 11, 2024
Saskatoon, Saskatchewan

Today, Saskatchewan teachers are announcing the beginning of a five-day countdown leading up to a one-day provincewide strike on Tuesday, January 16. The legal requirement for notice of job action is 48 hours. Teachers are initiating a five-day countdown to provide families with advance notice and extra time to prepare. Additional notice also provides government an opportunity to change course. Should government change course and allow their negotiating committee to bargain on critical issues impacting students and raising serious concerns among teachers and parents, the countdown will be stopped, and committees can return to the bargaining table.

“The last thing any teacher wants is for negotiations to impact the school year, so we are exhausting every possible option to get government back to the table,” says Saskatchewan Teachers’ Federation President Samantha Becotte. “At every turn, teachers have said that committees are getting us nowhere on these urgent issues, and a new deal must include items to address class size and complexity. Government remains intransigent, even after conciliation. This is not bargaining; they are making decisions based on politics and student learning is suffering for it.”

Government refuses to negotiate on class size and complexity, even after the Conciliation Board indicated support for teachers’ position that class size and complexity can be addressed through bargaining. If the government’s intransigence continues, additional job action will follow the strike on January 16.

A virtual Parent and Caregiver Information Night is being held at 7 p.m. on Sunday, January 14. STF President Samantha Becotte will provide information about the status of contract negotiations, STF proposals, the potential for teacher job action and the state of education in Saskatchewan. Registration is required through the STF website and space is limited to 5,000 registrants.

“Teachers and parents are united in wanting the best for their kids,” says Becotte. “We want to provide families with as much information as possible. This is a fight for the future of publicly funded education in Saskatchewan, and schools need the support of our communities. I encourage everyone across the province to reach out to your neighbours and friends, contact your elected officials, and let them know that the students of this province deserve a government that will provide them with the resources they desperately need.”

Supporters are invited to contact the Honourable Minister Jeremy Cockrill to voice their concerns through our action tool and to sign up for Tell Them Tuesday to take part in future advocacy actions to bring government back to the table with a new mandate before January 16.

Contact information

Lynn Redl-Huntington, BA | Manager, Communications

306-373-1660

306-221-4209