-

Education Workers Launch New Videos, $1.4 Million Advertising Campaign

EDMONTON, Alberta--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Striking education support workers are taking to the airwaves with two new video ads in support of their campaign for better classroom supports. The videos, produced for the Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE), are part of a $1.4 million campaign the union has launched.

Over 4,000 education support workers are on strike in the Edmonton region and Fort McMurray, with over 2,000 more taking strike votes this weekend across Alberta.

CUPE Alberta President Rory Gill said the ads speak to issues any parent can identify with – classroom support. In one video, a noisy classroom is in chaos until an Educational Assistant enters the room and calms things down. In the second video, young students talk about what they need to succeed, with one child pointing to “my Abigail,” his educational support person.

Ads direct viewers to visit www.helpstudentssucceed.ca where they can send a letter to their MLA.

“Alberta has the lowest per student education funding of any province in Canada,” said Gill. “Students are being impacted by classroom vacancies, overworked staff, and lack of resources.”

“The Alberta government has to act, and act soon, or this campaign and these strikes will expand and spread,” said Gill.

Gill said most education support staff have not had a wage increase in ten years, a period of 30% inflation. The average education support worker makes just $34,500 per year.

Video #1 – Education support staff help the entire classroom: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_y8Nqjx3u6Y

Video #2 – What do I need to succeed?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EYT9jGLiq_4

:sz/cope 491

Contacts

Lou Arab, Communications Representative
larab@cupe.ca 780.271.2722

Canadian Union of Public Employees


Release Versions

Contacts

Lou Arab, Communications Representative
larab@cupe.ca 780.271.2722

More News From Canadian Union of Public Employees

CUPE condemns Senate attempt to roll back workers' Charter rights at ports and in rail sector

OTTAWA--(BUSINESS WIRE)--CUPE is condemning a report released Thursday by a Senate committee that calls for the government to dramatically scale back the ability of workers at ports and in the rail sector to exercise their Charter right to strike. "The government should put this Senate report where it belongs – straight into the trash bin," said CUPE National President Mark Hancock. "We aren’t going to build a stronger economy by Americanizing our labour laws and stripping Canadian workers of t...

CUPE LTC Lead Table Ratifies New Tentative Agreement

HALIFAX, Nova Scotia--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Long term care workers at St. Vincent’s Nursing Home, represented by Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE) 1082, have ratified their new tentative agreement as of late last night. CUPE 1082 acts as the Lead Table for CUPE’s long term care sector bargaining, and they are responsible for negotiating terms that impact other bargaining tables, including setting the economic pattern for the entire sector. “I’m incredibly proud of the work the Lead Table bar...

Oxfam Canada Workers on Strike After Employer Refuses to Address Equity and Fair Wage Increases

OTTAWA, Ontario--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Members of CUPE 2722 at Oxfam Canada are officially on strike after the employer failed to reach a fair collective agreement that reflects the organization's stated commitments to feminist principles, equity, and social justice. The strike comes after over a year of negotiations in which workers sought to protect key workplace rights and maintain language that supports fairness and dignity for all employees. Outstanding issues include leave provisions for gende...
Back to Newsroom