EDMONTON — Alberta’s teachers union was back in court today seeking an injunction against the province’s back-to-work legislation last fall.
If granted, the injunction would allow teachers to once again take job action, but Alberta Teachers’ Association president Jason Schilling says that doesn’t necessarily mean it’s a step educators would take.
Schilling says the injunction would put teachers in the same position as they were before the Alberta government shut down the strike and imposed a contract by using the Charter’s notwithstanding clause.
The hearing is expected to wrap up Thursday, but the union says it doesn’t expect the judge to issue a decision until later this month.
Lawyers for the union are arguing that the government didn’t invoke the notwithstanding clause properly, especially since it was used retroactively to impose the four-year contract that teachers had already rejected.
The government has said it had no choice but to end the strike as it was affecting students’ and parents’ well-being.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published March 4, 2026.
Jack Farrell, The Canadian Press