-

Ontario’s Students Deserve Better: the Ontario School Board Council of Unions Calls on the Ford Government to Immediately Address the Understaffing and Funding Crisis in Public Education Ahead of the Release of the Provincial Budget

TORONTO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--There is a crisis in public education in Ontario.

Classrooms are frequently evacuated because of violent episodes, completely disrupting the learning environment for students. Educational Assistants are overburdened with work and students are not provided the supports they need. Libraries are closing for days at a time because school boards do not have the funds to keep libraries open. Our schools are not being cleaned properly because there are nowhere near enough custodians to keep up with the mounting workload. Too many Kindergarten students are denied the support of a Designated Early Childhood Educator in their classroom.

And it’s Ontario’s students who are suffering the most. They are being failed by a system that does not support them because of a chronic understaffing crisis created by consistent underfunding by the provincial government.

Today, the Ontario School Board of Unions (OSBCU) is calling on the Ford government to immediately address the ongoing funding crisis in public education and:

  • Commit to increase real per-pupil funding (including the restoration of all funding cuts due to inflation and enrolment growth) to improve student and staff supports;
  • Commit to increase staffing in all education worker classifications to meet all student needs (including Educational Assistant support for all students who need it, Designated Early Childhood Educators in every classroom with kindergarten students, adequately staffed school offices and libraries, and clean and well maintained buildings);
  • A meaningful plan to address the violence epidemic in schools;
  • A plan to make schools accessible and inclusive for all students.

The school board sector has been defunded by over $2.3 billion in the 2024-25 school year alone, due to spending not keeping pace with inflation and enrolment growth. This number grows to $10.66 billion since the Ford government formed government, and $14.44 billion since 2012-2013. It is clear that Ontario has the resources to fund schools sufficiently to meet student needs and restore the world class education system Ontario students and parents deserve.

Public education in Ontario is at a breaking point. We can no longer allow our students and staff to deal with these conditions. We need an immediate surge in funding, we need properly staffed schools, and we need it now.

Our students deserve better, our parents and communities deserve better, and education workers deserve better.

The OSBCU represents more than 57,000 education workers in Ontario.

kl/cope491

Contacts

For more information, contact:
Shannon Carranco
CUPE Communications
scarranco@cupe.ca
514-703-8358

CUPE


Release Versions

Contacts

For more information, contact:
Shannon Carranco
CUPE Communications
scarranco@cupe.ca
514-703-8358

More News From CUPE

CUPE Ontario's Health care workers coordinating committee to hold round table discussions at Queen’s Park

Toronto, ON.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Workers from CUPE Ontario’s Health care workers coordinating committee (HCWCC) will be holding round table discussions with MPPs on Monday, April 20th. The discussions will focus on the challenges facing Long Term Care and Retirement Home workers in Ontario. The Covid-19 Pandemic shone a light on Ontario’s Long-Term Care and Retirement Home sector in a way that nothing else was able to before. The clear pitfalls of understaffing, lack of necessary resources, and h...

Valley View Villa Joins the Strike

HALIFAX, NS--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Long term care workers at Valley View Villa, represented by Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE) Local 2330, will hit the picket line this morning, joining 24 other long term care homes province wide. They will form picket lines with Maritime Odd Fellows workers at 739 E River Rd, New Glasgow. “Even 4 days into a province-wide strike, Minister Adams is insistent that their offer is strong and competitive. I think over 2,000 striking workers, with more to come,...

WSIB fix falls short: union leader says workers deserve full restoration

TORONTO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--The Ford government’s move to restore one of several longstanding cuts to Workplace Safety and Insurance Board (WSIB) benefits is welcome, but far from enough to make up for years of cuts for injured workers, says a CUPE leader. Harry Goslin, president of CUPE 1750, the Ontario Compensation Employees Union (OCEU), is urging the government to reverse the rest of the nearly 30‑year‑old cuts that continue to disadvantage injured and ill workers. These include the cap on i...
Back to Newsroom