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Manitoba

Manitoba Teachers' Society troubled by 'toxic work environment,' external investigation and staff on leave

The Manitoba Teachers' Societyis being dogged by allegations of a"toxic work environment" that's led to an independentinvestigationand a number of employees taking a leave from the workplace.

Union says it takes complaints seriously, will work to resolve issues

Students are seen in the hallway of a school.
The Manitoba Teachers' Society, the union representing Manitoba's roughly 16,000 teachers, is facing some internal challenges stemming from allegations it is running a "toxic work environment." People who've spoken to CBC News say an external investigation was called and some staff are on leave. (CBC)

The Manitoba Teachers' Societyis being dogged by allegations of a"toxic work environment" that's led to an independentinvestigationand a number of employees taking a leave from the workplace.

Teamsters Local Union 979, which represents70 support and administrative workers at MTS, is taking specific grievances involving somemembers to arbitration, "which include allegations related toviolations of our collective agreementand a toxic work environment," the union wrote in an email to CBC News.

The turmoilreported at MTShasresulted in someemployees taking medicalleave from their work, others being burned outand schoolteacherswho pay dues to MTSnot getting adequate service because of insufficient staffing levels, according to a number ofpeople with knowledge of the situation who spoketo CBC News on the condition they not be named, as they feared repercussion.

They saysome senior leaders at the union would confront staff who raised complaints, making them feel intimidated,according to various people who weren't authorized to speak publicly.

Teamsters, which represents theseMTSworkers, declined to elaborate on the concerns of its members, after "careful consultation with our legal team and given the sensitive nature of the ongoing proceedings," a spokesperson said in an email.

MTS seeks to find solutions

MTSpresident Nathan Martindale and interim executive director Roland Stankeviciussaid in a prepared statement it takes the concerns of its workers seriously.

"Our leadership team remains committed to better understanding any concerns our employees may have and to creating solutions that will enable us to move forward together," the email said.

Martindale and Stankeviciuswouldn't answerhow many employees are on leave, but people who spoke to CBC News said at least 10people have been offwork.

Last year, Teamsters surveyed its members to "gaina deeper understanding of the workplace climate and culture concerns that had been informally communicated by staff members over the past year," according to a letter sent to administrative and support staff at MTS.

A man sits in a chair, surrounding by others, opening up a folder with his speech inside.
Nathan Martindale, president of the Manitoba Teachers' Society, is seen in this 2023 file photo. He said in a prepared statement the union takes the complaints of its staff seriously and will work to address them. (Ian Froese/CBC)

At the time, more than 57 per cent of survey respondents said theyconsidered their workplace psychologically unsafe.

When respondents were asked to rate the psychological health and safety climate of their workplace, "toxic" was the most frequently chosen descriptor.

Nearly 32 per cent ofemployees pickedthat word,followed by "poor" and "not so good," each receiving 12.8 per cent of the selections,according to the memo and alist of all survey responses, both of which were obtained by CBC News.

Somesurvey respondents blamedsenior management. Nearly six in 10 people reported they feared negative consequences from the senior managementteam.

The union memo, signed by Teamsters Local Union 979 president and business managerPaul Frias, statedthere's a"high degree of confidence" the findings are representative of the workplace at large because most staff responded.

Forty-seven people answered the survey, which equals a response rate of 65 per cent, MTS said in a statement.

Frias's letter is undated, but references the survey results being distributed tomembers in spring 2023 and a meeting to discuss the results held lastSeptember.

It also says Teamsters tried to schedule meetings with anMTSexecutive about the results on several occasions, but "these meetingrequests were declined, and it appeared that emails were left unanswered."

After the survey and complaints were filed, MTSbrought on Michelle McHale as itshuman resources director last September, according to an email to MTS staff at the time.

Independent investigation called

Under her tenure, an external human resources firm, People First, was brought in to conduct an independent investigation. MTS says the results of the investigation was shared with Teamsters, "as is the standard process."

McHaleis no longer with the organization and said she is unable to comment.

Earlier this month, an Instagram account under the name "teacherunioncorruption" was created that alleged various complaints. The account was deleted after MTS's lawyers threatened legal action, according to a since-deleted post.

Manitoba Workplace Safety and Health said it received tips in January that harassment concerns at MTSweren't properly investigated.

The province said improvement orders were issued for the development and implementation of a harassment prevention policy and for the policy to be posted. The government said those orders have since been complied with.

MTS represents 16,000 public school teachers in the province.