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Waterloo Chronicle (Waterloo, On1868), 24 Jun 1998, p. 12

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OPEN 24 HOURS â€" Parkdale Plaza 1 460 Albert St. Watertoo 884â€"9486 ANNUAL SUMMER SIDEWALEK Coffee Time * HOMEMADE SOUPS * FRESHLY MADE SANDWICHES & SALADS FREE IN STORE REFILLS â€" ALBERT STREET ONLY OFEN 24 HOURS â€" SMOKE FREE SOUP, SANDWICH SPECIALS Merchants at City Hall and Around Downtown TUESDAYS ARE SENIOR‘S DAY 20% off Regular Prices CAPUCCINO| 3 FLAVOURS OF! SALE June 24 â€" 27 If the board asks for a noâ€" board report, and imposes terms, the teachers will be in a "We will then hold that strike mandate, a card which is in our hand, until we reach an agreement," said John Ryrie, the president of the local chapâ€" ter of the Ontario Secondary School Teachers Federation (OSSTF}. "We have no idea of when or if we‘ll have to play that card." But there are no guarantees that a potential labor conflict can be averted by September, which means that classrooms could be closed until an agreeâ€" ment is hammered out. With the first stage of negoâ€" tation over, and a concthator appointed last Thursday, local public teachers‘ umons are expecting to carry a strong strike mandate into the next round of contract negouations with the Waterloo District public school board as they try to reach a new collectuive barâ€" gaining agreement by the fall. Chronicle Staff Public school teachers have turned up the pressure on local school board officials with a strike vote today Teachqrs’ unions expecting strong strike mandate Bob Vrbanac "We‘re sort of in Iimbe a this pornt," she sard "It goes back to six out of eigh telasses}." sard Ruyric. "If w« can get that kind of commu ment from the board. then we think we can mamtam all thi valuable â€" programs â€" that sehoods offer CH we geon seven out of eight. there will be all sorts af negatice conse quences that we don‘t want to live with. and I don‘t thing the kids want to live with Teaching time is also a conâ€" cemn, but Cannon‘s more conâ€" cerned with the number ol teachers that might be taken out of the system because thes are teaching more classes Cannon understands thai local boards, as well as boards around the province,. have been dealing with shifting funding models, but that‘s left negotiations up in the air we al ately *All of that wonderful fundâ€" ing we thought was there isnt there anymore," said Pat Canâ€" non president of the Ontario English Catholic Teachers Association (OECTA), "We‘re left in a lurch wondering how Ryrie said that no one wants a strike, but changes brought on by Bill 160 mean that teachâ€" ers are once again heading lor a government imposed "crisis in education." "The government has set up these new rules, and given us almost impossible timelines to reach these brand new conâ€" tracts," he said. "If we end up in a bit of a muddle or a crisis situation, the government has almost set us up for it." The situation at the Waterâ€" loo District Catholic school board isn‘t any better as union officials wait for the appointâ€" ment of a conciliator before calling their own strike vote. "Otherwise you play the card until you get a good agreeâ€" ment, and you don‘t go back to the schools until you‘ve ratiâ€" fied the agreement that your negotiators work out with the board." "What we‘ve made clear to our members, as we‘ve gone out to schools, is the only reaâ€" son you wouldn‘t play the card is you‘re happy with what the board imposes," he said. ~You decide that‘s a reasonable setâ€" tlement. Teachers are looking to major concessions in the num ber of classes they have 1 teach at the high school leve] as well as staffing levels bourd wide Ryne said he‘s expecting a strike vote in the high 80 per cent range with the potenital for job action to start as early as August or as late as November strike position 17 days later are going to staff appropri

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