@CheriDiNovo@Sflecce 1. A little flashback to what happened when an Ontario government tried to pull this with #Bill115:
Ontario Superior Court Judge Thomas Lederer ound that the provincial government “substantially interfered” with teachers’ right to collective bargaining.
@CheriDiNovo@Sflecce 2. The government was forced to pay:
- $103.1 million to the province’s elementary teachers
- $50 million to the Ontario Secondary School Teachers’ Federation
- $56.7 million to the Canadian Union of Public Employees.
AND
@CheriDiNovo@Sflecce 3.
- $2.75 million to the Ontario Public Service Employees’ Union.
ALTOGETHER:
The Putting Students First Act — which forced contracts, froze pay and ended the practice of banking sick days — has cost the province more than $212.5 million.
@CheriDiNovo@Sflecce 4. Worse yet, the settlement terms for elementary school teachers were handed down in February OF THIS YEAR, so @FordNation and @Sflecce already know this is illegal and costly but, they're doing it anyway.
2. He promised⬇️, after waiting ~2 weeks to get up off his lazy, unaccountable backside to "stand shoulder to shoulder" in dismantling the Ottawa Occupation... but less than a week later, he flip-flopped and gave a free pass on "severe consequences" .
3. Doug Ford is making it very clear that he tolerates lawlessness for some (occupiers and terrorizers of Ottawa) but won't respect a basic Charter right to strike for others (those who educate your children).
RE: @felixtennis is setting himself up very nicely to be named this year's winner of the #LionelConacherAward, given annually to Canada's male athlete of the year by the sports writers of the @CanadianPress.
While Felix is doing well (now ranked #9 in the world), Denis Shapovalov has advanced to his second final this month (to go along with a semi-final, as well, and now ranked #16).
1. To all the Conservatives and pro-CON journalists saying the EA wasn't necessary because Trudeau.
To all #TheLoudmouths calling the dismantling of the Ottawa Occupation the worst violation of human rights in Canadian history.
Flashback to 2010.
2. Flashback to when, thankfully-former-PM Harper was in charge...
Stuff like this didn't need get to the 4th weekend before police had a very clear plan and plenty of resources for kettling, riot gear, cages for protestors, tear gas...
3. Culminating in a class action suit, settled for $16.5M, because pretty much everything about how this was handled was wrong...
Journalists, pundits, member of the CPC? Have you all been stricken with #Harpernesia?