HALIFAX, N.S. - Nova Scotia Teachers Union president Liette Doucet says the union has a "very strong strike mandate" from its membership.
Doucet and other members of the NSTU executive held a press conference Feb. 21 outside of union offices in Halifax to announce results of the Feb. 20 vote.
Ninety three per cent of eligible voters cast a ballot, she said, with 82.5 per cent of those who voted supporting a strike.
However, Doucet said the NSTU wants the provincial Liberal government to sit down and talk with the union before instituting recommendations of the Avis Glaze report on education.
Three of the most contentious recommendations the goverment says it plans to adopt are: the elimination of English-language school boards, the removal of principals and vice-principals from the union and the creation of a college of teachers to govern licensing and discipline of the profession.
MLAs are expected to begin their spring sitting of the legislature Feb. 27.
Read more
- NSTU executive meets to discuss strike vote, possible action
- What could happen if NSTU votes yes on strike Feb. 20
- Public forum for Cape Breton teachers set for Thursday, provincial strike vote called for Tuesday
- Nova Scotia teachers set strike vote for Feb. 20
With files from Stuart Peddle, Chronicle Herald