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B.C. substitute teachers who catch COVID not eligible for sick day pay

BC Teachers鈥 Federation president says it will be an issue included in bargaining this year
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April Lavine, a Nelson substitute teacher, contracted COVID-19 earlier this month. Like other subs, she鈥檚 not eligible for sick pay. Photo: Submitted

A substitute teacher in Nelson says she should have received sick pay after contracting COVID-19.

April Lavine tested positive for the virus on Jan. 17. She isn鈥檛 sure where she was infected, but the week prior she was working at two local schools while full-time teachers were away with COVID-19.

While full-time teachers are eligible to accrue 1.5 days per month of paid sick days under the current collective bargaining agreement, substitute teachers like Lavine aren鈥檛. That meant she was forced to stay home recovering from COVID-19 at her own cost.

Substitutes, or Teachers Teaching On-Call (TTOC) as they are also referred to, can apply for Employment Insurance, but that only covers up to a maximum amount of $638 per week.

They are also excluded from the , which this month made it mandatory for employers to provide a minimum of five days sick pay to workers.

鈥淚t鈥檚 just so unfortunate because what you can get from EI is like half the amount what you could make if you鈥檙e relying on work to make a living,鈥 said Lavine. 鈥淚t doesn鈥檛 make sense to me.鈥

BC Teachers鈥 Federation (BCTF) president Teri Mooring agrees with Lavine and believes the Ministry of Education needs to reconsider the importance of substitute teachers, especially as COVID-19 leads to functional closures across the province.

The current collective bargaining agreement is set to expire July 1. Mooring said the issue will be included in upcoming negotiations with the province.

鈥淲e have a huge shortage of TTOC across the entire province and the work just isn鈥檛 valued like we would like to see it valued, especially when we are so dependent on the few TTOC that we have right now,鈥 said Mooring.

BCTF represents about 46,000 employees. Mooring couldn鈥檛 say how many of those are TTOC, but did say she believed there is a shortage in the province that is leading to several issues in schools.

Some school districts, Mooring said, are relying on retired teachers when no substitutes are available. Others are asking counsellors or education assistants to fill in.

鈥淲hen TTOC aren鈥檛 available, there鈥檚 a profound impact on student learning, and it鈥檚 the most vulnerable students who are the most negatively impacted.鈥

Dispatch systems that contact substitutes also vary across school districts. Trish Smillie, superintendent for School District 8 that includes Nelson and Creston area schools, declined to provide details on the district鈥檚 system but did say being sick doesn鈥檛 impact when substitutes get their next call for work.

But without sick pay, Lavine said the system leads to a moral quandary for substitutes 鈥 risk going to work while they are still potentially contagious, or stay home and lose money.

鈥淭here鈥檚 just no motivation to stay home when we鈥檙e sick.鈥

Mooring characterizes the situation as 鈥渘either fair nor equitable.鈥 If substitute teachers are risking their health to keep classrooms open, she said, that should mean they are eligible for the same benefits full-time teachers receives.

鈥淚t鈥檚 difficult to attract people to be TTOC when they don鈥檛 have the same rights as other teachers, and one of those rights certainly, we believe, ought to be access to sick leave. Especially during a pandemic.鈥

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| tyler.harper@nelsonstar.com
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Tyler Harper

About the Author: Tyler Harper

I鈥檓 editor-reporter at the Nelson Star, where I鈥檝e worked since 2015.
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