Penticton Western News, May 28, 2014

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NEWS PENTICTON WESTERN

www.pentictonwesternnews.com

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VOL. 48 ISSUE 42

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14 page

WEDNESDAY, May 28, 2014

entertainment Jazz Café Quartet tunes up

Cutjar and Brown get nod to run Challenge Penticton

Service to clients and community drive Lyle into Top 40

for Dream Café

15

sports Mustangs primed to host

provincial soccer championship

PICKETS LEAVE STUDENTS IN LIMBO Joe Fries

Western News Staff

NEWS PENTICTON WESTERN

PENTICTON TEACHERS Marsha Saldat and Philipp de Loi wave to drivers on Eckhardt Avenue near Penticton Secondary School during Monday’s first in a series of scheduled rotating strikes by the B.C. Teachers Federation who were joined on the picket lines by members of the Canadian Union of Public Employees.

Mark Brett/Western News

In the wake of one-day strikes and with less than a month left in the school year, some parents are worried about how it will end for the most senior students. “The biggest and strongest concern that I’m hearing currently is: What about grad?” said Derek Hurst, president of the Okanagan Skaha district parent advisory council. Graduation ceremonies are among the extra-curricular activities currently in limbo due to the partial lockout of teachers by the B.C. Public School Employers’ Association. Under terms of the lockout, teachers have been ordered to show up for work no more than 45 minutes before class begins, and to leave school property within 45 minutes of the final bell. High school teachers will then be fully locked out June 25 and 26, while all teachers will be off the job June 27. That throws a wrench into plans for graduation ceremonies here, but administrators are working to ensure the shows go on, said Okanagan Skaha superintendent Wendy Hyer. “At the moment, in speaking with all of the high school principals, grad ceremonies will continue,” she said Tuesday. “They may look different, but they’ll continue.” The ceremonies begin locally with Penticton Secondary on June 13, followed by Princess Margaret on June 26 and Summerland Secondary on June 27. Hyer said the events will likely be scaled-down affairs that rely on help from parents and administrators from

other schools; Summerland’s ceremony has already been bumped from the morning to late afternoon to make it easier for volunteers to attend. Some other school events have, however, been cancelled outright by teachers. Hyer said a handful of elementary schools’ swimming programs were scuttled this week, as was a middle school’s year-end camping trip, even though the lockout is not meant to not apply to extra-curricular activities. But the president of the Okanagan Skaha Teachers’ Union said members are concerned about liability and health insurance coverage while engaged in extra-curricular activities outside regular school hours. “Our legal advice is that we follow that lockout until we hear differently,” explained Leslea Woodward. She said teachers’ continued involvement in volunteer activities and the possibility or further strikes will depend on what happens this week during contract talks and at a hearing with the Labour Relations Board in regard to a 10 per cent wage cut intended to reflect their reduced duties during job action. “We’re taking it day by day,” Woodward said. “If (teachers) are going to be expected to do all of their jobs and be locked out and have their pay cut by 10 per cent, they’re not going to be feeling too happy about it.” Teachers have been without a contract since June 2013. According to BCPSEA, its last offer was a six-year deal with a 7.3 per cent wage increase, while the counterproposal was a fouryear agreement with a 16 per cent pay hike.

Centre at Naramata management closes doors amidst labour dispute Joe Fries

Western News Staff

Some bookings at the Centre at Naramata have now been cancelled as a result of the ongoing labour dispute there. Members of the Canadian Union of Public Employees went on strike May 15, but the facility was able to continue operating through the use of replacement workers. CUPE later applied to the Labour Relations Board to have the replacement workers declared illegal, but prior to a formal

THE PLANT PLACE IS

hearing, the Centre’s management acknowledged it was in the wrong, then closed the doors Monday. “We’ve currently ceased operations while we review what our options are,” said Jim Simpson, director of development and strategic partnerships. He said events up to six weeks out, representing 2,800 person-nights at the Centre, have been cancelled, resulting in a major hit to revenue. Simpson said the options management are reviewing include shutting the facility for good or staying closed until a deal is reached with workers. CUPE national

representative Tom O’Leary said the Centre, which is aligned with the United Church of Canada, should also consider a wholesale change of management. “We didn’t want to see the Centre cease operations at all; we want it to see it managed properly,” he said. “Managed properly, it’s a great facility.” O’Leary said no contract talks are scheduled and the workers are planning a rally at the venue on Saturday from 12-2 p.m. The Centre’s last offer to workers proposed contracting out six of 30 positions in a bid to reduce costs.

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