/
/
/
/
/
Central Okanagan school support workers vote in favour of strike

Central Okanagan school support workers vote in favour of strike

January 17, 2023

KELOWNA – School support workers in Central Okanagan Public Schools have voted overwhelmingly in support of a strike or other job actions. Members of CUPE 3523, who provide crucial services in and outside of Central Okanagan classrooms voted 99 percent in favour of taking job action – such as a strike – in a vote held this past weekend.

“For months, the school district has offered nothing to CUPE 3523 members but disrespect,” says David Tether, a Central Okanagan Public School support worker and president of CUPE 3523. “Students and families depend on our members every day – schools run on the services we provide. But the school district in undermining those services by pushing concessions that would erode working conditions and job security of school support workers.”

With the strong mandate from school support workers, CUPE 3523 can take job action such as a strike with 72-hour notice. The Local’s bargaining committee has not set a strike deadline and is committed to reaching a fair collective agreement at the bargaining table.

“Since we started bargaining in October, School District 23 has been unwilling to put in the work to reach a fair deal. They have cancelled bargaining sessions, come unprepared to have serious discussions, and refused to agree on any proposals,” says Tether, who is a member of the CUPE 3523 bargaining committee. “CUPE 3523 is serious about reaching a fair agreement that respects school support workers and will let us keep serving Central Okanagan public school students. Time is running out for School District 23 to show they are serious too.”

CUPE 3523 represents over 1400 members supporting Central Okanagan Public Schools (School District 23) students in Peachland, West Kelowna, Kelowna, Lake Country, and the Regional District of Central Okanagan. They work in 46 schools and other learning environments as education assistants, grounds workers, Indigenous support workers, bus drivers, custodians, trades, clerical workers, maintenance workers, information technology support, administrative support, noon-hour supervisors, SWIS workers, library assistants, early childhood educators and Strong Start facilitators.

Share this

Education (K-12) News

Bulletin – Bargaining continues for Provincial Framework Agreement

Bulletin – Bargaining continues for Provincial Framework Agreement

October 21, 2025
Your K-12 sector provincial bargaining committee was back at the negotiation table late last week for our 5th session with the B.C. Public Schools Employers’ Association (BCPSEA). Over the 2…
Your K-12 sector provincial bargaining committee was back at the negotiation table late last week for our 5th session with the B.C. Public Schools Employers’ Association (BCPSEA). Over the 2...

Big step forward for public childcare

Big step forward for public childcare

October 9, 2025
The B.C. government has introduced legislation to empower school districts to expand delivery of childcare on public school grounds. Last Tuesday, the BCNDP government tabled Bill 19, the school amendment…
The B.C. government has introduced legislation to empower school districts to expand delivery of childcare on public school grounds. Last Tuesday, the BCNDP government tabled Bill 19, the school amendment...

BC Ombudsperson needs to hear from you

BC Ombudsperson needs to hear from you

September 16, 2025
B.C.’s Ombudsperson, Jay Chalke, is investigating concerns of students in public schools being asked or told to not attend schools. The investigation will assess whether these practises are fair for…
B.C.’s Ombudsperson, Jay Chalke, is investigating concerns of students in public schools being asked or told to not attend schools. The investigation will assess whether these practises are fair for...