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More than 740,000 students head back to class in Alberta after teacher strike ends

The government ordered 51,000 teachers back to work after a three-week strike, affecting over 740,000 students, citing irreparable harm and using the notwithstanding clause.

  • Premier Danielle Smith's government ordered 51,000 striking teachers back to work, ending the three-week strike and allowing more than 740,000 students in Alberta to resume classes Wednesday.
  • The dispute tied to teacher demands focused on wages, class sizes and supports for special needs students, while the bill invoked the Charter's notwithstanding clause to prevent legal challenges.
  • Legislators resumed the fall sitting and stayed up until 2 a.m. to pass the back-to-work bill with one-hour limits on debate, including fines up to $500 a day for individuals and $500,000 for the union, while some districts cancelled athletic events up to Friday.
  • The Alberta Teachers' Association protested the order but said it will comply, while Jason Schilling, head of Alberta's teachers' union, urged reconsidering volunteer activities such as drama productions and cross-country coaching.
  • Across Alberta, schools and boards worked Tuesday to ready students on a day's notice, with Edmonton Catholic Schools postponing professional development days through Nov. 17 and Calgary boards warning of delays or cancellations.
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Los Ángeles Press broke the news in on Tuesday, October 28, 2025.
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