Teachers upset about reporting to empty classrooms during COVID-19 pandemic: union - Action News
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Manitoba

Teachers upset about reporting to empty classrooms during COVID-19 pandemic: union

Some teachers in the city's largest school division are upset they are required to report toempty classrooms while all classes are cancelled as the COVID-19 pandemic escalates, according to the Winnipeg Teachers' Association.

Requests to work from home are being decided by Winnipeg School Division on case-by-case basis

A row of high school lockers are pictured.
The Winnipeg School Division is now saying teaching staff won't have to report to schools while classes are suspended during the COVID-19 pandemic. (CBC)

Some teachers in Winnipeg's largest school division are upset they may be required to report toempty classrooms once all classes are suspended as the COVID-19 pandemic escalates.

The president of the Winnipeg Teachers' Association said its members in the Winnipeg School Division are being asked to "jump through quite a few hoops" to get approval to work remotely.

"We are hearing anger, frustration, hurt, disappointment, just a lot of very unhappy teachers,"Michelle Wolfe told Nelly Gonzalez in an interviewWednesday on CBC Radio's Up To Speed.

Manitoba's Minister of Education Kelvin Goertzenannounced last Friday all schools in the province are suspending classes for students for three weeks, including spring break, starting on March 23.

In the meantime, the school division has been encouraging students stay home from schools, if possible, to prevent spread.

Wolfe said she has lost track of all the calls and emailsshe has received over the last 48 hours from educators who fear they are being putat "unnecessary risk" of exposureto the novelcoronavirus at work and bringing it home to their loved ones.

"I'm surprised in that it doesn't seem to align with all of the public health advice that we've been hearing over the last while regarding social distancing," Wolfe said.

Teachers are required to go in, she said.Requests to stay home will be ruled on acase-by-case basis.

Wolfe said the province left the choice open for individual divisions to demand teachers report to schools for work.

Child care has been identified as a valid reason to work from home. "[Teachers]would need to be ableto inform the division that there is no other child care option available to them," Wolfe said.

A letter to staff indicates all decisions for work-from-home will be made by the senior administration of the division.

"We are being mindful of statutory rights and obligations applicable in situations related to COVID-19," the letter said, including employees' rights to family responsibility leave for the care or health of a child or immediate family member, protections against discrimination and the duty to accommodate, privacy and those that fall under the Manitoba Workplace Safety and Health Act.

Payroll staff are allowed to work from home to ensure everyone gets paid, Wolfe said, adding human resourcesstaff work in closer quarters than teachers.

"It isn'treflective of the messaging that's been given to teachers," she said.

The teachers' association saideducators should have the right to work from home and follow the advice from provincial public health officials about social distancing during the pandemic.

"Teachers, too, are following the advice that everyone else inCanada andin factin the world is receiving tosocially distance themselves to avoid contact with others and to flatten the curve and slow the spread of this illness," Wolfe said.

Winnipeg School Division did not provide an interview, and its rationale is not explicit inits online pandemic plan. In a statement, the school division said it isfollowing the direction of the education minister.

With files from Kim Kaschor and Nelly Gonzalez