As Liberals back off teacher contract bill, their MLAs stay mum
Provincial government sets aside teacher contract legislation and reopens schools
Government House leader Michel Samson deflected questions Monday morning about the public outcry over the province's decision to close schools.
Samson spoke with reporters to announce the government was pressing pause on legislation set to be tabled that would force a contract on Nova Scotia's 9,300 teachers.
Hours later, Education Minister Karen Casey said schools will reopen Tuesday after her department reached a consensus with the Nova Scotia Teachers Union over work-to-rule job action and the safety of students.
Party staffers at Province House shepherded Liberal MLAs away from reporters trying to ask their thoughts on the legislation.
Liberal MLA Bill Horne would only offer: "I don't like the way it's going."
When the House recessed in the morning, Liberal MLAs left without speaking to reporters. Tory Leader Jamie Baillie noted Premier Stephen McNeil wasn't among them.
"Obviously the government is in chaos, the government MLAs are freaking out and their leader is not even here to lead them in this effort," Baillie said.
NDP Leader Gary Burrill said the government has made a mistake and it's time for them to admit it.
Large crowd outside Province House this morning in support of teachers <a href="https://twitter.com/hashtag/nspoli?src=hash">#nspoli</a> <a href="https://t.co/haw2umI3tX">pic.twitter.com/haw2umI3tX</a>
—@SabrinaCBC_RC
On Saturday, Casey announced schools would be closed to students, citing safety concerns, until the contract legislation passed. Teachers were required to report to work.
Teachers announced last week they would begin work-to-rule job action Monday, following the latest breakdown in contract talks.
The union has said teachers would only perform duties spelled out in the current collective agreement, which expired in July 2015, but that the first priority would be student safety.
Union president Liette Doucet confirmed work-to-rule will begin Tuesday.
Casey would not say if the legislation would come on a later date. She said it serves as protection for the education system in the event strike action went beyond the Education Act.
CBC reporters live blogged the latest developments with the legislation: