Skip to content
Canadian National Multimedia Newsgroup Canadian National Multimedia Newsgroup
  • Home
  • About Us
    • Privacy Policy
  • Your Preferences
    • Editorials
    • Gastronomy
    • Health & Medicine
    • Interviews
    • Community
    • News Updates
    • Opinion
    • Podcasts & Videos
    • Politics
    • Show Biz
    • Sport
  • Contact Us
Canadian National Multimedia Newsgroup
Canadian National Multimedia Newsgroup

TECT suspends planned labour strike as negotiations continue

Priscilla Pajdo, January 30, 2022August 25, 2023

TORONTO – Thousands of Toronto families can breathe a sigh of relief. There will be no disruption to classroom instruction for Catholic elementary school students in Toronto this week.


The ongoing labour dispute between the Toronto Elementary Catholic Teachers (TECT) and the Toronto Catholic District School Board (TCDSB) prompted TECT to issue formal notice of a strike (January 25) which would have started January 31.

However, late Friday afternoon, Julie Altomare-DiNunzio, TECT president, issued an official statement saying they decided not to go ahead with the planned strike. “In a show of good faith and as a result of constructive dialogue with the TCDSB, Toronto Elementary Teachers have decided to pause our full withdrawal of services”, the TECT president said.

She continued to thank parents, students and communities for their continued “patience and understanding”. The local union maintains it is “dedicated to ensuring the best possible learning environments for our students”, and called for community support as TECT continues to work with the TCDSB to “reach a fair agreement that supports the needs of our teachers and students”.

Following TECT’s statement, the TCDSB sent a message to families that stated they “continue to engage in ongoing and constructive dialogue” and “remain committed to reaching a fair and just collective agreement with TECT”.

Unfortunately, the labour dispute between both parties persists with no resolution in sight. That could mean TECT could decide again to withdraw instructional services at any point in the future. The local union, which represents nearly 5,000 teachers at more than 100 Catholic school have been working without a contract since 2019.

Understanding how a potential full withdrawal of services could impact thousands of families, the TCDSB said they will “continue to ask TECT to provide five days’ notice of which schools will be affected and when”. That is little consolation for students and families that have experienced so much instructional disruption in the last two years of the pandemic.

Photo credit: Kelly Sikkema, Unsplash

Education Matters English Featured Toronto continueeducationenglishfeaturedlabourmattersnegotiations,plannedstrikesuspendstecttoronto.

Post navigation

Previous post
Next post

Related Posts

Canada

Transparency and accountability forgotten at TCDSB

August 16, 2022August 25, 2023

…

Read More

Ottawa, the police evict the “Freedom Convoy”

February 21, 2022August 25, 2023

…

Read More
Education Matters

Unanimous Supreme Court bombshell decision in the “flag debate”

May 31, 2021August 25, 2023

…

Read More

Latest Articles

  • Fentanyl, tensions États-Unis–Canada : « Le point névralgique est le port de Vancouver » May 13, 2026
  • Fentanyl, US-Canada tensions: “The key hub is in Vancouver” May 13, 2026
  • CORRIERE CANADESE / Abruzzo’s Undefeated Son, Rocky Marciano May 13, 2026
  • CORRIERE CANADESE / Rocky Marciano, il figlio imbattuto dell’Abruzzo May 13, 2026
  • CORRIERE CANADESE / Canadesi in bancarotta: mai così tanti dal 2009 May 13, 2026

Search Articles by Date

May 2026
M T W T F S S
 123
45678910
11121314151617
18192021222324
25262728293031
« Apr    

Our Sponsors

Lido Construction Pascale_Di_Poce
©2026 Canadian National Multimedia Newsgroup | WordPress Theme by SuperbThemes