Peterborough Blogs
CUPE Education Workers Protest During First Day of Strike
/Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE) education workers protest outside MPP Dave Smith’s office on Water Street as their strike for wage increases takes off on Friday.
CUPE workers are striking for a 6 per cent wage increase, down from their original ask of 11.7 per cent. “Ford and Lecce have got to go!” chants were made from the crowds as education workers picketed and receive honks of encouragement from passing vehicles.
Similar protests were held outside the offices of Haliburton-Kawartha Lakes-Brock MPP Laurie Scott in Lindsay, and Northumberland-Peterborough South MPP David Piccini in Port Hope.
The Peterborough, Victoria, Northumberland and Clarington Catholic School Board (PVNC) and Kawartha Pine Ridge District School Board (KPRDSB) have both opted to closing schools during the strike, saying in a statement that “without CUPE workers on-site, (they) simply cannot ensure safe conditions for all students and staff.”
Students have been transitioned to at-home, asynchronous learning for the day on Friday as CUPE strikes.
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Peterborough School Boards to Close Friday If CUPE Staff Strike Cannot Reach Agreement
/Peterborough public and Catholic school boards could be closed on Friday to in-person learning as Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE) plans to engage in a full withdrawal of services from schools on Friday.
The closures will occur if school boards cannot reach an agreement by Friday.
The Peterborough, Victoria, Northumberland and Clarington Catholic School Board (PVNC) and Kawartha Pine Ridge District School Board (KPRDSB) have release the following statement regarding school closures:
“Please know, we do not make this decision lightly and we understand the impact this will have on families. Without CUPE workers on-site, however, we simply cannot ensure safe conditions for all students and staff.”
The statement continues that this course of action is appropriate based on the following considerations:
supervision of students;
medical support and care for all students;
safe operation of water and sanitation systems, including required water flushing;
conditions of school buildings and classrooms, and
overall safety and security.
CUPE represents 55,000 employees that represents custodians, maintenance staff, secretaries, educational assistants, early childhood educators, learning commons specialists, paraprofessionals, central IT employees and more. They are looking for an 11.7 per cent increase in wages and are in a legal strike position starting Thursday. School boards must be given five days’ notice of any possible strike action.
Both school boards believe negotiations between the province and CUPE could go into late Thursday night.
Stephen Lecce, Ontario minister of education is adamant about keeping kids in the classroom and wants CUPE to withdraw their strike.
“In response to CUPE’s decision to strike, our government introduced legislation that will keep kids in class,” said Leece. “I’m again calling on CUPE to immediately withdraw this strike and work with us to keep kids in the classroom. Otherwise, to make sure schools don’t close, we have no choice but to proceed with legislation.”
I'm calling on CUPE to immediately cancel this strike that will only hurt our kids. pic.twitter.com/Sd851X2tyN
— Stephen Lecce (@Sflecce) November 2, 2022
If schools close on Friday, PVNC and KPRDSB will have students will transition to remote, asynchronous learning from home.
Both boards are beginning to collect information from families who require additional technology and distributing technology to students prior to Friday according to a statement issued by PVNC and KPRDSB.
On Friday, classroom teachers will connect with students through their regular communication platforms (e.g. Google Classrooms). The asynchronous model provides flexibility for families as teachers will be providing work that can be completed by students at any time during the day.
For students enrolled in virtual schools, programming will proceed as usual.
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James Strath Intermediate Students Got Hands on Experience with Take TECH! Week
/Intermediate students at James Strath Public School participated in Take TECH! Week, a program that encourages youth to explore careers in tech, on Thursday.
19 schools in the Kawartha Pine Ridge School District applied to participate in Take TECH! Week, presented by the Pathways Team, and three were chosen.
Prior to ‘Build Day’ on Thursday, students at James Strath identified a need in their classroom or school, brainstormed ideas to help meet that need, then built a prototype.
On Thursday, with the help of construction teachers from high schools in the board, the parking lot at James Strath was transformed into a construction zone.
Students brought their prototypes to life on a full-size scale, using drills, power sanders, table saws and some elbow grease.
Their creations included a compost cart to wheel between classrooms, outdoor first aid kit boxes, water bottle holders and outdoor chalk boards.
“We’re learning how to be resourceful,” said grade eight student Akshila Amarasinghe. “Every moment is a moment where we’re learning, whether it’s math, tools or just how to be a good team.”
Students learned how to scale up their prototypes into life sized creations, used fractions when measuring and cutting wood as well as angles when creating joints.
“Usually at school it would be getting the textbooks and then listening to what the teachers says. Teachers often say that math is really important but we never see that, we never see math in real life so correlating that into building has really helped us see why math is really important and I think it’s also really helped us understanding it better than just using a text book.”
A student from each class was chosen to be the media person and take pictures at Build Day, which will later be uploaded to a website. Students will vote on the winning creation.
“This is a fantastic opportunity,” said Eric Bloomke, a construction teacher with KPR. “We need to expose more of our students to the skilled trades, there’s a skilled trade shortage in North America and the sooner we can introduce the thought of skilled trades as a viable career the better.”
Take TECH! Week was funded by the Ministry Expansion Funds.
When students reach grades 11 and 12 they have the option to take a Specialist high Skills Major Course, which allows them to focus on a specific industry like construction, transportation, computer science and more.
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The PCVS Report Has Been Released
/The Report to the Minister on Kawartha Pine Ridge District School Board's review process can be now found online.
Facilitator Joan Green does not recommend the review be redone. According to a release, "Although Green does not recommend that the board redo the accommodation review, she recommends that the Kawartha Pine Ridge District School Board strengthen its policy to support more deliberative accommodation review processes in the future. Green also expresses confidence that secondary schools and students in the City of Peterborough will be well served with the excellent facilities and programming being planned."
In a nutshell, she says the board did its job. More coverage here.
[Contributed by PtboCanada's Evan Holt]
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The Truth About Why Closing PCVS Would Be A Huge Blow To Our Community
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Once again the public, and private, discussions about the closing of a Peterborough high school have sunk into anecdote and vitriol. Virtually all of the discussion surrounds loyalties—neighbourhood, school, alumni—or mythical nostalgia. As the final decision by the publically elected Board at the Kawartha Pine Ridge District School Board (KPRDSB) approaches, it is time to refocus the discussion on financial and economic realities.
Before addressing these issues, it is important consider the role of the Board and the role of its senior management. The Board is elected to see that the KPRDSB has the strategies, policies, facilities, finances, and administration are in place so that the organization—overseen by the senior managers it employs—can provide the best education possible given the resources. Importantly, the Board is responsible to its funders—property taxpayers (residential and business) in Peterborough and the taxpayers of Ontario. The Board’s senior administration must take these resources and deliver the required educational services. There is a clear distinction between the role of the publically elected Board and the role of the administrative staff it employs.
The Board now finds itself in a position where the facts show that there is declining enrolment in Peterborough high schools and more schools than are necessary to deliver its educational services. With very similar education services being delivered at the existing schools for several decades, it is difficult to argue that one fewer high school would put the Board in a position where it would be unable to fulfill its mandate.
In financial terms, declining high school enrolment and an abundance of property and facilities puts the Board in a position where it has the opportunity to consolidate its operations, sell some valuable property, and use the funds to deliver educational services, and, perhaps, provide taxpayers with some relief from ever-increasing educational property taxes.
After the contentious review process was completed, I was pleased to see that the Board added its offices to be part of the mix. With little commercial land available in the industrial parks in the City, the Board could sell its property (a value in the millions of dollars) in the industrial park and consolidate its operations in an existing high school. This is a creative response to a complex decision. However, after this creative financial option was offered by the Board, the pubic debate became increasingly entrenched in anything but the financial, economic, and administrative realities.
In economic terms, the issue centers on the future of PCVS. Beyond the issues of its property value (which is the lowest—according to Board’s own property evaluations—of all the properties being considered, and the least likely to lower education property taxes), the significance of the school in terms of its value to the community and its role in economic development were practically ignored. Many of the initiatives to renew and expand the infrastructures of the downtowns of Ontario communities are to increase, not decrease, the downtown’s population density. More importantly, a high school in the downtown represents a source of current and future creative talent.
Just over 100 kilometres from downtown Peterborough, at the University of Toronto, is an internationally recognized leader in economic development—Richard Florida. His research describes the significance of the "creative class" and its ability to interact at a social level in city cores as a key contributor to local economic growth. Even with him being an advisor on economic growth to the British Prime Minister, David Cameron, it seems as though his message is more readily heard further away, rather than closer to home.
There is little doubt that a downtown high school contributes in many ways to the economic development of a city. I have yet to come across any evidence, from Richard Florida’s point of view, or any other approach to economic development that would suggest that removing a downtown school would contribute to a community’s economic development in a positive way.
Basically, as much as there are compelling, anecdotal and nostalgic arguments to close PCVS, there is little substance—financial, economic, or administrative—to the arguments. This must be recognized as the Board’s takes its decision.
Earlier this year, I was given the opportunity to present this case in a ten minute presentation to the KPRDSB’s Accommodation Review Committee (ARC). After that presentation, I was given some feedback from a member of the committee that my presentation would have had more credibility if I had not been, "clearly," a PCVS alumnus and supporter.
On that point, I need to set the record straight. I did graduate from PCVS. However, I disliked high school immensely. In hindsight, my five years of high school were insignificant given my subsequent academic pursuits. The fact that those five years were spent at PCVS has nothing to with the case I am making. My position comes from my community and professional perspective, not a nostalgic view. I trust that the Board’s decision will be made in the same spirit.
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[Contributed by PtboCanada's Tom Phillips Ph. D. Phillips is Economist & Sustainability Director - Greater Ptbo Innovation Cluster.]
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