Salaries in new contract for teachers ‘astronomical’

Manitoba’s first mega-contract for public school teachers will raise general wages by more than 12 per cent and establish a standardized salary scale for 2026-27.

By the end of the historic agreement, which combines 37 division-specific contracts and spans July 1, 2022 to June 30, 2026, the province’s most veteran and highly trained educators will earn upwards of $125,000, regardless of where they work.

“These salary figures are astronomical. Manitoba teachers are now among the highest-paid in the country, and Canada is already known for being relatively generous when it comes to teacher salaries,” Cameron Hauseman, an associate professor of educational administration at the University of Manitoba, said.

MIKAELA MACKENZIE / FREE PRESS FILES The Manitoba Teachers’ Society building on Portage Avenue. The society said its members can expect an overall salary increase of 12.85 per cent.

MIKAELA MACKENZIE / FREE PRESS FILES

The Manitoba Teachers’ Society building on Portage Avenue. The society said its members can expect an overall salary increase of 12.85 per cent.

Hauseman said the new contract should entice more people to enter the teaching workforce at a time when schools are grappling with staffing shortages.

The Manitoba Teachers’ Society rallied its anglophone members — who have been without a contract for the last two school years — to vote on a new tentative collective agreement between Aug. 1 and Wednesday.

Ninety-five per cent of voters cast ballots in favour of the deal. The turnout rate was nearly 70 per cent.

Teachers endorsed annual salary hikes of 2.5 per cent, 2.75 per cent, three per cent, and three per cent with an additional “retention adjustment” of one per cent during the final year.

MTS said members can expect an overall increase of 12.85 per cent. Substitute rates are being topped up accordingly.

The public sector union has long advocated for provincial bargaining to harmonize salaries and working conditions. The former Progressive Conservative government introduced legislative changes in 2020 to lay the groundwork for a singular, all-encompassing contract.

“When the extra one per cent came onto the salary offer from the employer’s organization, along with eventual harmonization of the collective salaries — those things sealed the deal for us,” lead negotiator Arlyn Filewich told teachers during a virtual briefing last month.

Filewich said staff members concluded binding arbitration was likely to yield a similar or worse deal, owing to a recent pattern in public sector negotiations that does not include a “retention adjustment.”

An impasse in salary negotiations led union and employer representatives to schedule arbitration hearings for this fall. The parties continued to meet in the hopes of resolving an agreement beforehand. A deal on the now-official contract was reached July 11.

The deal covers all educators except employees of the Division scolaire franco-manitobaine and those who belong to MTS federal bargaining units in Sandy Bay Ojibway First Nation and Nelson House.

Its expiration will coincide with the September 2026 rollout of a new provincewide teacher salary schedule.

Under the harmonized grid, new hires with a bachelor’s degree in education will make more than $70,000 annually. Within a decade, those employees will earn six-figure salaries, even without additional credentials.

Teachers in the Frontier, Flin Flon and Kelsey school divisions will receive an additional $3,000 northern allowance.

Educators who teach at least 12 per cent of the time in an Indigenous language will be compensated with a $500 allowance.

The agreement’s non-salary articles include a 5.5-hour limit on instructional days and an increase in the minimum preparation time so teachers are entitled to 210 minutes of prep every cycle (typically a six-school day rotation) in 2025-26.

A single day off is to be credited for 50 hours of voluntary extracurricular activity, up to a maximum of three days.

Divisions will have to recognize professional development over the summer months.

The contract guarantees paid leave for up to three days for traditional Indigenous ceremonial, cultural and spiritual observances.

Up to two days of personal leave per year and the reimbursement of sick time, as well as up to $1,000 for costs after an on-the-job injury, are included in the new deal.

maggie.macintosh@freepress.mb.ca

Maggie Macintosh

Maggie Macintosh
Education reporter

Maggie Macintosh reports on education for the Free Press. Originally from Hamilton, Ont., Maggie was an intern at the Free Press twice while earning her degree at Ryerson’s School of Journalism (now Toronto Metropolitan University) before joining the newsroom as a reporter in 2019. Read more about Maggie.

Funding for the Free Press education reporter comes from the Government of Canada through the Local Journalism Initiative.

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