

Historic teachers strike in Alberta has begun
Oct 7, 2025
Sean Amato, an Alberta politics reporter for CityNews, dives into the historic strike involving 51,000 teachers, highlighting the closure of 2,500 schools and its impact on over 700,000 students. He discusses the underlying funding disputes between the Alberta Teacher's Association and the government, emphasizing the call for systemic change beyond just wage increases. Amato also explores public opinion, noting the split between urban and rural support, and details government initiatives to assist families during the strike.
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Funding Clash Over Low Taxes
- The strike reflects a fundamental clash over how much Alberta should invest in public education versus keeping low taxes.
- The ATA argues Alberta has the lowest per-capita education funding despite low taxes benefiting the province.
Beyond Salaries: Structural Demands
- The union seeks not only wages but structural, generational changes to fix class sizes and staffing shortages.
- The province offered 4,500 new positions and a multi-year pay increase, but the ATA called it insufficient.
Large Public Rallies Back Teachers
- Massive rallies across Edmonton and Calgary showed strong public backing for teachers during the strike.
- Sean found many city residents saying teachers work hard, lack resources, and deserve better pay.