PM and ministers refusing to engage - PPTA
PM and ministers refusing to engage - PPTA
As secondary teachers prepare to discuss escalating industrial action in 2011, the prime minister and government MPs are closing their doors to them.
Throughout the collective agreement negotiations government MPs countrywide have been refusing to meet with secondary teachers who live in their electorates negotiations and now the prime minister appears to be following suit.
John Key has refused to meet with
PPTA president Kate Gainsford to discuss stalled
negotiations, despite being prepared to step in for movie
moguls and failed finance companies.
“It is deeply
disturbing that New Zealand’s education system is not
important enough to warrant the prime minister’s time,”
Gainsford said.
Gainsford had also heard many reports from PPTA members throughout the country who were being stonewalled by their local government MPs.
“It’s not about political parties or ideology - it is about public education and public money. These are issues that affect most New Zealanders. It is New Zealand’s education system, New Zealand’s class sizes and New Zealand’s supply of secondary specialists,” she said.
The minister of
education had also been notably absent when it came to
addressing these issues, Gainsford said.
“Anne Tolley
has never seen fit to engage regularly around these
important matters. If you want change in the sector, you
have to work with teachers,” she said.
PPTA members
have put forward a range of intensified actions for 2011 and
are now considering these. Proposed actions are broken up
into three main areas – goodwill bans,
curriculum/assessment bans and strike actions.
A package
will be put together of the actions with the highest level
of support from members. This will be voted on by members in
a secret ballot during paid union meetings in February.
Attached is the list of proposed actions members will be voting on.
ENDS