Scrap Innovation Fund, save jobs: teachers

Published Friday July 3rd, 2009

Union to meet with minister, wants money used to reverse recent job cuts

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FREDERICTON - The New Brunswick Teachers' Federation hopes to convince government to reverse recent cutbacks and scrap a controversial fund the union says is mired in bureaucracy and required the province to hire additional employees to administer the program.

Officials from the union will meet with Education Minister Roland Haché this morning to ask him to direct the money in the $3.4-million Innovative Learning Fund towards rehiring the 580 employees, which include library assistants and teaching assistants, who recently received lay-off notices. The cuts saved government $2.9 million.

"The funding in the ILF was taken from classrooms -- it needs to go back," said Brent Shaw, co-president of the federation. "We need the resources in place."

The $5-million fund was created to give grants to teachers who develop innovative ways to teach literacy, science and numeracy. Although former education minister Kelly Lamrock refused to scrap the fund, he reduced it to roughly $3.4 million this year.

After the fund was created, government hired 16 employees to work at the school district level to help administer the program. The new employees spend half of their time working on the fund and the rest of their time on other duties. There are also two employees listed in the provincial government's directory who work on the fund out of Fredericton.

"The process, they've made it so complicated at the department level that they had to hire all those half-time people out there," said Shaw. "That half-time person is out there helping teachers go through all the foolishness of having to apply for the money that was already theirs at one time. That's part of the problem with this; it's bureaucracy at its finest."

Haché is refusing to comment on the fund until he wraps up meetings with unions next week.

The Department of Education was unable to provide the salaries of the program's employees. However, a spokeswoman said money from the fund isn't being used to pay the employees.

"They are teachers who help other teachers," said spokeswoman Hillary Casey. "They help guide the teachers through creating and developing their programs to apply for ILF funding."

Despite government's earlier statements that it would refuse to scrap the fund, Shaw said he remains optimistic that the recent cutbacks will be reversed.

Any grants promised to teachers should be honoured as plans are already under way to spend the money or a portion of a grant may have already been spent, he added.

"How optimistic am I? I'm very optimistic," he said. "If anybody will listen to reasoning and process it and move forward, then this is one of those things that's pretty motherhood and apple pie."

Although pink slips have already been given to a number of employees, Shaw said he doesn't expect it would be too difficult to reverse the cuts, even if some employees have been bumped out of their positions.

"I personally wouldn't see anybody having a major issue with getting their jobs back."

Opposition leader David Alward said he supports the teachers.

"I'm certainly supportive of what the message has been from the teachers and other organizations including various parents as well. We've been saying the same thing all along: that it makes sense to have the supports in the classrooms."

 

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Comments (16)

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Thank you NBTA! Teachers know best what is needed in the classrooms and schools. It is about time that the Government of NB begins to listen to them.
This is one group whose voice cries in the wilderness. It is heard but not listened to. The teachers in the classrooms experience the reality daily.
Heed their cry for the education of the children. Oh, by the way, where is the MCkay Report?
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J P, Shediac on 03/07/09 07:03:28 AM AST
Scrap music, innovation fund and sports programs before you scrap TAs and librairians. When it comes to music and sports, the 'majority' of families enroll their kids in community sports anyway.
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P. Experience, Moncton on 03/07/09 08:11:26 AM AST
Thanks to the NBTA for speaking up! I'm hopeful that our new Minister is less stubborn than our last one and will choose the basics over the frills.
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Anonymous Librarian, Moncton on 03/07/09 08:19:27 AM AST
Any help to get this awful decision reversed is going to be good. But I have to wonder where CUPE is on this? NBTA doesn't represent TA's or LA's. Shouldn't Hache be meeting with the CUPE leadership first, or have they already done this?

Either way, the ILF does need to be re-directed to putting those lost positions back in place. If it takes the NBTA to apply pressure where CUPE cannot, so be it.
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J J, Moncton on 03/07/09 08:27:35 AM AST
The damage is done; how will Graham's gov't reverse this very nasty public relations dilemia so Graham's bandits can save face!! Oh, let's see if anybody in the Communication NB department can 'spin' the story in favour of Gov't afterall they got a $4.4 million budget increase (347%) last budget!!

Surely the District Heads (Superintendents) did not have the (intestinal fortitude) to confront Lamrock when his assine scheme surfaced.

If the District Heads (Superintendents) did try to reason with that hard head and failed then they should have began a 'public' lashing of Lamrock's program. If any Employee in the Education Dept should know what is going to be a negative it is the Superintendents!!

Because Superintendents had no guts to protect the Students of NB, our CHILDREN were going to be bullied & injured by an idiot like Lamrock!!
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T. Wright, Greater Moncton on 03/07/09 08:36:45 AM AST
The ILF fund is a great idea in theory. It is hard to be innovative in the classroom though if teachers don't have the support they need to deal with the behaviour issues, and students with exceptionalities. If and when the economy rights itself, and the there is a surplus, revisit the notion, but get rid of the apparent manual required to apply for it... if you need an online manual and mentors just to apply for the funding, its too complicated.

It would also be worth a thorough review of the expenses of the department of education to see if there is any fat that can be trimmed there... I am betting like every other government department, the answer is yes.

If this minister chooses to listen to the NBTA and the public who have been so vocal about these cuts, and the whole issue now looming around bus transportation, it is then our job to ensure that the school districts reinstate those workers who were laid off. Be sure to call the district office and ask them if they have.
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K. Chapman, Moncton on 03/07/09 08:36:57 AM AST
Who will help the students who need a TA while the teachers are busy helping the rest of the classroom? The TA's are there for a reason and to take them out of the school system will be leaving students without the help they need to succeed in life. PUT THEM BACK IN THE SCHOOLS!!
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A. 3, MONCTON on 03/07/09 08:44:12 AM AST
"Who will help the students who need a TA while the teachers are busy helping the rest of the classroom"

Who will help the 'average' students when the teachers are busy dealing with those who have lost their TA's.


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Celtic Myst, Saint John on 03/07/09 09:14:46 AM AST
On the topic of TA's (and interventionists) can someone explain why the funding for those positions comes from the Education budget?
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T Eln, Saint John on 03/07/09 09:55:17 AM AST
The teachers union created the problem in the first p;lace by refusing to compromise and cancell the reduction of one student per class to avoid the layoffs of TA s, etc. The teachers union have nothing wit the re-instatement of the TA and others. The government listened to the people and will accordingly. Thank the government, not the selfish teachers union.
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J. R, Moncton, NB on 03/07/09 11:32:01 AM AST
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