Parents and students rally over education funding - Action News
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Montreal

Parents and students rally over education funding

A day after a strike involving 34,000 French-language teachers, parents and students are holding "human chain" protests outside schools across the province.

More than 300 schools slated to participate in demonstration against austerity

Parents and students formedhuman chains around Quebec public schools Thursdayto protest againstcompressions in education.

This comes a day after French-language school teachers held a one-day strike.Thestrike involved34,000 teachers and affectedroughly 275,000 students across Quebec.

Teachers and support staff members joined in as well.

Stphanie Richard says that compressions to public schools directly impact the students. (Elias Abboud/CBC)
StphanieRichard, the head of the governing board at coleSaint-Lon-de-Westmount, said the cutshave a direct impact on students.

"Three quarters of the population atthe school doesn't have French as a mother tongue so it has a great impact if we are reducing the services in linguistic support as well as in overall professional services," said Richard.

Everything 'is getting stretched,' parent says

About 200 parents and their children stood arm-in-arm in front of the school. Parent Mike Lee said that resources are being cut across the board.

"Class sizes are getting bigger.The school is getting kind of crowded, with less resources availablecomputers and other resources," said Lee.

Everything "is getting stretched," he added.

More than 300 schools saidthey wouldparticipate in human chains organized by the non-profit groupJeprotgemoncolepublique.

English-language schools are expected to hold their first strike day in late October.

Quebec teachers have been without a contract since April.

Main points of contention:

  • Province wants to increaseteacher-student ratio.
  • Province wants to eliminatefunds allocated toward schools' programs for special-needs children.
  • Province wants to cut 800 resource-teacher and special-education teacher jobs.
  • A salary freeze for two years (teachers are asking for 13.5 per cent over three years).
  • Cuts to employee pension plans.